Browse publications by year: 1986

  1. Brown RE
    Am J Public Health, 1986 Mar;76(3):238-40.
    PMID: 3946709
    MeSH terms: Breast Feeding*; Developing Countries; Female; Health Promotion*; Humans; Infant; Infant Food/standards; Infant, Newborn; Malaysia; United States
  2. Haaga JG
    Am J Public Health, 1986 Mar;76(3):245-51.
    PMID: 3946711
    Data from the Malaysian Family Life Survey show an increase in the percentage of infants breastfed, at least initially, from 75 per cent in 1970-74 to 79 per cent in 1975-77. Contrary to what would be expected if Malaysia were following the trends observed in the United States and Western Europe, the increase has occurred among poor and uneducated women as well as among the more fortunate. The increase was especially marked for infants born in hospitals and private clinics, which had very low rates of breastfeeding in the early 1970s. The change may be due partly to a shift in the practices and recommendations of health professionals. Trends in infant feeding practices in Malaysia during the whole period 1950-77 are reviewed. Reasons for thinking the increase in the mid-1970s an artifact of the survey are presented and provisionally rejected. The implications of these findings for child health policy in Malaysia and for theories of infant feeding trends in developing countries are discussed.
    MeSH terms: Breast Feeding*; Developing Countries; Educational Status; Ethnic Groups; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Malaysia; Population Surveillance*; Rural Population; Social Class; Time Factors; Urban Population
  3. Leete R, Kwok KK
    Popul Stud (Camb), 1986 Mar;40(1):83-100.
    PMID: 11611924
    MeSH terms: Demography*; Malaysia; Statistics as Topic/history*; History, Modern 1601-
  4. Law AT, Button DK
    Appl Environ Microbiol, 1986 Mar;51(3):469-76.
    PMID: 16347006
    Trace (microgram liter) quantities of either toluene or benzene injected into an amino-acid-limited continuous culture of Pseudomonas sp. strain T2 were utilized immediately with affinities of 2.6 and 6.8 liters g of cells h, respectively, and yielded large amounts of organic products, carbon dioxide, and cells. The immediate utilization of hydrocarbons by hydrocarbon-deprived organisms helps to establish the nutritional value of nonpolar substrates in the environment. The observation of small Michaelis constants for toluene transport led to tests of metabolic competition between hydrocarbons; however, competitive inhibition of toluene metabolism was not found for benzene, naphthalene, xylene, dodecane, or amino acids. Benzene and terpenes were inhibitory at milligram liter concentrations. Toluene was metabolized by a strongly inducible system when compared with benzene. The capacity of toluene to effect larger affinity values increased with exposure time and concentration. The kinetics of induction suggested saturation phenomena, resulting in an induction constant, K(ind), of 96 mug of toluene liter. Maximal induction of amino-acid-grown cells required about 80 h, with the affinity reaching 317 liters g of cells h.
    MeSH terms: Alkanes; Amino Acids; Benzene; Carbon Dioxide; Hydrocarbons; Kinetics; Naphthalenes; Nutritive Value; Pseudomonas; Terpenes; Toluene; Xylenes
  5. Chuah CH, Goh SH, Tho YP
    J Chem Ecol, 1986 Mar;12(3):701-12.
    PMID: 24306909 DOI: 10.1007/BF01012103
    Soldier defense secretions of the genus Hospitalitermes (Isoptera, Termitidae, Nasutitermitinae) were chemically analyzed by GC-MS and were found to contain volatile monoterpenes and polyoxygenated diterpenes. Interspecific and intraspecific chemical variations for H. umbrinus, H. hospitalis, H. flaviventris, and H. bicolor are described. Interspecific variations in monoterpene and diterpene structures and compositions were evident. A remarkable example of large intraspecific variation from a single species was observed inH. umbrinus, indicating that colonies of this species can be separable into two chemically distinct groups. The diterpenes found in one of these groups have unusually high molecular weights.
  6. Chiang GL, Samarawickrema WA, Eng KL, Cheong WH, Sulaiman I, Yap HH
    Ann Trop Med Parasitol, 1986 Apr;80(2):235-44.
    PMID: 2875691
    Surveillance methods for Coquillettidia crassipes were studied in an open housing estate near Kuala Lumpur using three types of traps Trinidad 10 trap, modified Lard can trap and IMR trap, each baited with chicken or pigeon. All traps attracted Cq. crassipes. There was no significant difference in the catches in the three traps. There was also no significant difference between chicken and pigeon as bait. Catches at heights of 1.5, 3, 4.5 and 6 m did not show any significant difference in density. Cq. crassipes was active at night with an early peak during the first hour of the night and a minor peak between 0100 and 0200 hours. The activity of the parous and nulliparous sections of the population was similar, except that a higher proportion of the parous females was active during the second peak compared with the nulliparous females. The parous rate was 22.3%, and the probability of survival through one day for two gonotrophic cycles was 0.711 and 0.650. The infection rate for Cardiofilaria was 29 out of 1052 (2.76%) and the infective rate (L3 larvae) was 13 out of 1052 (1.24%). 48.3% of the infected Cq. crassipes had a worm burden of more than ten larvae. One of the chickens in the traps was positive for microfilariae of Cardiofilaria four weeks after exposure as bait. Laboratory bred Cq. crassipes fed on this chicken produced infective larvae in ten days, and these were inoculated into clean chickens and pigeons. Microfilariae appeared in the chickens but not in pigeons. The adult worms recovered await identification.
    MeSH terms: Animals; Filariasis/transmission; Filarioidea*; Insect Vectors/parasitology*; Malaysia; Culicidae/parasitology*; Culicidae/physiology; Population Surveillance
  7. Paramarajah S
    Singapore Med J, 1986 Apr;27(2):114-9.
    PMID: 3489292
    The feasibility of using a computer database management system based on an 8·bit microcomputer for storing, retrieving and analysing patient data in a limited setting (oesophago·gastro-duodenoscopy records from a peripheral general surgical department over a 1 year period) is presented. A program developed by the author was used to enter the relevant records of 208 patients undergoing the above examination, and to retrieve and analyse any desired data. Compatible statistical and graphics software packages can be used to access and analyse the data and display or print out the results. The limitations and scope for further expansion of the system are discussed.
    MeSH terms: Adult; Aged; Computers*; Duodenoscopy*; Esophagoscopy*; Female; Gastrointestinal Diseases/diagnosis; Gastroscopy*; Hospitals, General; Humans; Malaysia; Male; Medical Records/standards*; Medical Records, Problem-Oriented/standards*; Microcomputers*; Middle Aged; Software*
  8. Meyer DR
    Stud Comp Int Dev, 1986;21(1):3-22.
    PMID: 12314582
    MeSH terms: Asia; Asia, Southeastern; China; Demography*; Developing Countries*; Economics*; Far East; Geography; Industry*; Korea; Malaysia; Population*; Social Planning*; Taiwan; Urban Population*; Urbanization*
  9. Sivanesaratnam V, Singh A, Rachagan SP, Raman S
    Med J Aust, 1986 Apr 14;144(8):411, 413-4.
    PMID: 3959969
    During the 10-year period 1974-1983, 68 patients with intraperitoneal haemorrhage as a result of the rupture of a corpus luteum were managed at the University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Most of the patients were aged between 18 and 35 years. In 63% of the patients the rupture occurred between the 14th and the 35th day of the menstrual cycle, and 10 patients had intraperitoneal bleeding severe enough (450-1500 mL) to require blood transfusion. The condition is often confused with other surgical emergencies such as appendicitis and ectopic pregnancy. An increased awareness of the problem in women of reproductive age and the use of laparoscopy, when indicated, will allow a more conservative approach to be adopted for those patients with minimal bleeding. The performance of an appendicectomy in the presence of blood in the peritoneal cavity did not appear to increase morbidity in those patients with a preoperative diagnosis of "appendicitis".
    MeSH terms: Abdomen, Acute/diagnosis*; Adolescent; Adult; Appendicitis/diagnosis; Corpus Luteum*; Diagnosis, Differential; Female; Hemoperitoneum/diagnosis; Hemoperitoneum/etiology*; Humans; Pain/etiology; Pregnancy; Pregnancy, Ectopic/diagnosis; Rupture, Spontaneous
  10. Lee YS
    Dis Colon Rectum, 1986 May;29(5):330-5.
    PMID: 3084185
    One thousand fourteen consecutive large intestines were removed at autopsy from persons over the age of 14 years and examined for diverticular disease. Diverticulosis was encountered in 194 patients (19 percent). The lesion appeared early in life, after the second decade. Men were affected more frequently than women before the age of 60 years. Chinese men had significantly more diverticular disease than Malayan men (P less than 0.01) and Indian men (P less than 0.02). Chinese men also had significantly more diverticular disease than Chinese women. There was a predominance of right colon involvement, with the disease affecting especially the ascending colon and cecum. This pattern was observed in all three major ethnic groups, and in both the Singapore-born and foreign-born Singaporeans. The cause of right-sided diverticulosis is unknown. It appears that, while adoption of the western diet may influence the prevalence of diverticular disease, the site of predilection is determined more by racial or genetic predisposition. All diverticula examined histologically were false, including 39 (20 percent) solitary diverticula. The distribution of solitary diverticula was similar to that of multiple diverticulosis. It is suggested that solitary and multiple diverticulosis are part of the spectrum of the same disease.
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Appendix/pathology; Autopsy; Cecal Diseases/epidemiology; Cecal Diseases/pathology; Cecum/pathology; China/ethnology; Diverticulum/epidemiology; Diverticulum/pathology*; Diverticulum, Colon/epidemiology; Diverticulum, Colon/pathology; Ethnic Groups; Female; Humans; India/ethnology; Intestinal Diseases/epidemiology; Intestinal Diseases/pathology*; Intestine, Large/pathology*; Malaysia/ethnology; Male; Middle Aged; Singapore
  11. Abdul Razak I, Nik Hussein NN
    Dent J Malays, 1986 May;9(1):23-8.
    PMID: 3270565
    Enamel defects were studied in a group of 11-12 year-old children in a fluoridated area using the DDE index. The mouth prevalence of this condition was 72.5 per cent with a tooth prevalence of 40.4 per cent. Enamel opacities accounted for 96.5 per cent of the total condition of which the diffuse patchy type predominates. The defects on the affected posterior teeth occurred most commonly on both the buccal and lingual/palatal surfaces, with most defects being located in the incisal one-half, gingival one-half and occlusal simultaneously. In the affected incisors, the highest proportion of defects affected the buccal surface only, with the most frequent location being the incisal one-half and gingival one-half simultaneously. In 20.9 per cent of the affected subjects, there was a 100 per cent tooth involvement.
    MeSH terms: Child; Female; Fluoridation*; Humans; Malaysia/epidemiology; Male; Fluorosis, Dental/epidemiology*
  12. DaVanzo J, Habicht JP
    Demography, 1986 May;23(2):143-60.
    PMID: 3709892
    This analysis has identified several factors contributing to the dramatic decline in infant mortality since World War II in Malaysia, as well as one factor that prevented the infant mortality rate from declining even more rapidly. Our main findings are the following: On average, mothers' education more than doubled over the study period, contributing to the decline in their infants' mortality. In addition, the beneficial effect of mothers' education on infant survival appears to have become stronger over the study period. Hence, further advances in education should lead to further improvements in infants' survival prospects. Another analysis of these data (Peterson et al. 1985) found that education is somewhat more influential in affecting child mortality in low-mortality, high-income areas than in the opposite type of areas. Therefore, socioeconomic development may have complemented, instead of substituted for, the the beneficial effect of mothers' education in promoting infant and child survival in Malaysia. Improvements in water and sanitation also contributed to the infant mortality decline, especially for babies who did not breastfeed. However, unlike education, these influences have become less important over time, especially for babies who are not breastfed. Hence, further improvements in water and sanitation, a goal of Malaysia's Rural Environmental Sanitation Programme, may have smaller relative effects on infant mortality than did previous improvements. Targeting such improvements on areas where women breastfeed little or not at all, however, will increase their effectiveness in promoting infant survival. The substantial reductions in breastfeeding that have taken place since World War II have kept the infant mortality rate in Malaysia from declining as rapidly as it would have otherwise. We estimate that, in our sample, the detrimental effects on infant survival of the decline in breastfeeding have more than offset the beneficial effects of improvements in water and sanitation. Unlike some other researchers (e.g., Palloni 1981), we find that changes in fertility levels and in the timing and spacing of births have had negligible effect in explaining the decline in infant mortality within the samples we have considered. We have excluded births to older women from our analysis, however; this exclusion may have led to an understatement of the influence of changes in the age pattern of childbearing.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Age Factors; Breast Feeding*; China/ethnology; Educational Status; Female; Humans; India/ethnology; Infant; Infant Mortality*; Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena; Malaysia; Sanitation; Socioeconomic Factors; Time Factors; Water Supply
  13. Hirschman C
    Demography, 1986 May;23(2):161-84.
    PMID: 3709893
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Age Factors; Birth Rate; China/ethnology; Educational Status; Female; Fertility*; Humans; India/ethnology; Malaysia; Middle Aged; Parity; Statistics as Topic; Time Factors
  14. Olson C
    Am J Hosp Pharm, 1986 May;43(5):1277-83.
    PMID: 3717183
    MeSH terms: China; Hong Kong; Malaysia; Pharmacy/trends*; Philippines; Travel*
  15. Madhavan HN, Ong KH, Anuar K
    PMID: 3024324
    During 1984-1985, a total of 838 sera obtained from individuals of different age groups, mostly blood donors and those whose sera were received for VDRL tests and other serological investigations. The sera were titrated for complement fixing antibodies against cytomegalovirus (Ad169 strain). Three hundred and fifty two (41%) out of 838 sera showed significant antibody titre. The incidence of this virus infection varied form 26% in the age group of 11-20 years to 59% of those above 50 years of age. Geometric mean titre (GMT) was highest (22) in age groups of 11-20 years and those over 50 years indicating active viral infection in these two age groups. GMT was also significantly higher in females in all age groups except in the age group of 21-30 years and those above 50 years, indicating that active viral infection is more common in females.
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Age Factors; Antibodies, Viral/analysis*; Child; Complement Fixation Tests; Cytomegalovirus Infections/immunology; Cytomegalovirus Infections/epidemiology*; Cytomegalovirus/immunology*; Female; Humans; Malaysia; Male; Middle Aged; Sex Factors
  16. Tan DS, Dimitrakakis M, Zaini Rahman M, Fang R, Collett D, Ooi BG, et al.
    PMID: 3024325
    Icteric patients with clinical and biochemical evidence of liver disease, admitted into various hospitals in Malaysia, were investigated to determine the cause of their infection. Of these patients, 11.0% (16/145) were found positive for IgM anti-HAV (EIA), 4.1% (6/145) for IgM anti-HBc (EIA), 1.0% (1/102) for IgM anti-CMV (ELISA), 17.2% (16/64) for rising titres of leptospiral agglutinin, and none for heterophile antibody of EBV. Hepatitis NANB accounted for 67.9% of cases. The mean serum transaminases (ALT and AST) values in patients with hepatitis A and B were higher (more than 500IU) than in patients with leptospirosis or non-A, non-B hepatitis, whereas serum bilirubin levels were higher in patients with hepatitis A and leptospirosis than in patients with hepatitis B.
    MeSH terms: Acute Disease; Alanine Transaminase/blood; Aspartate Aminotransferases/blood; Cytomegalovirus Infections/etiology; Hepatitis/enzymology; Hepatitis/etiology*; Hepatitis A/etiology; Hepatitis B/etiology; Hepatitis C/etiology; Humans; Infectious Mononucleosis/etiology; Leptospirosis/etiology; Malaysia
  17. Tan DS, Fang R, Collett D, Ooi BG
    PMID: 3538434
    Sera from 494 non-icteric patients admitted with illnesses other than overt hepatitis into the various hospitals in rural and urban Malaysia were tested for IgG antibody to hepatitis A virus. The overall antibody prevalence rate was 67.0% with rates increasing steadily from childhood 10 years old and under (39.4%) to middle-age and above (96.0%). No significant differences were noted between males (68.4%) and females (65.3%). The highest rate was in the Indians (80.6%), the lowest in the Chinese (55.9%) with Malays occupying intermediate position (70.3%). The rate in the rural patients (74.7%) was higher than that in the urban patients (65.5%) especially in the 21 to 40 year age-group where the rural patients had a rate of 96.7% compared with that in urban patients (61.1%). A comparison of antibody prevalence rates in different countries was made.
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Age Factors; Child; Female; Hepatitis A/epidemiology*; Hepatitis Antibodies/analysis*; Humans; Immunoglobulin G/analysis*; Immunoenzyme Techniques; Malaysia; Male; Middle Aged; Rural Population; Sex Factors; Urban Population; Hepatitis A Antibodies
  18. Tan DS, Zaini Rahman M, Fang R, Collett D, Ooi BG
    PMID: 3538435
    Sera were obtained from 494 non-icteric patients admitted with illnesses other than overt hepatitis into the medical wards of the rural and urban hospitals in Malaysia. They were tested for HBsAg, HBeAg, and anti-HBs by enzyme immunoassay. The overall HBsAg carrier rate was 18.0% ranging from 9.6% in children, (10 years and under), to a maximum of 23.5% in the adolescents (11 to 20 years), the rates decreasing subsequently to 16.5% and 20.8% in the adult and middle-age groups, respectively. The Chinese (18.6%) and Malays (19.9%) had similar HBsAg carrier rates but the rate in the Indians (9.0%) was distinctly lower. Similar rates were observed in the males (16.5%) and the females (19.8%). The carrier rate was 17.1% in rural patients compared with 21.4% in the urban ones. The 'e' antigen was found in 14 of the 89 HBsAg carriers (15.7%). The overall prevalence was 14/494 (2.8%) rising sharply from childhood (2.9%) to adolescence (5.3%), subsequently declining with advancing age. The Chinese had the highest rate (6.2%) followed by the Indians (1.5%) and the Malays (1.1%). Males had a rate of 3.3% compared to the females with 2.3%. Anti-HBs was found in 33.8% of the patients, increasing steadily from childhood (18.3%) to middle-age (46.4%). The Chinese had a higher prevalence rate (41.6%) than the Indians (32.8%) and the Malays (29.3%). The rates were similar for the males (35.6%) and the females (31.5%). Rural patients (46.1%) had a higher rate than urban patients (35.7%). Both areas showed rising prevalence with increasing age.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Age Factors; Alanine Transaminase/analysis; Aspartate Aminotransferases/analysis; Child; Female; Hepatitis B/enzymology; Hepatitis B/epidemiology*; Hepatitis B Antibodies/analysis*; Hepatitis B e Antigens/analysis*; Hepatitis B Surface Antigens/analysis*; Humans; Immunoenzyme Techniques; Malaysia; Male; Middle Aged; Rural Population; Urban Population
  19. Thambi Dorai CR
    Med J Malaysia, 1986 Jun;41(2):173-5.
    PMID: 3547051
    An infant with bilateral congenital ring constrictions in the legs presenting with ischaemic gangrene of one leg is reported. The ischaemia was precipitated by greenstick fracture, the constriction ring producing a 'tourniquet effect' on the swollen tissues. Prophylactic release of deep annular constrictions is advised to prevent complications.
    MeSH terms: Amniotic Band Syndrome/surgery*; Female; Gangrene; Humans; Infant; Ischemia/congenital*; Ischemia/surgery; Leg/blood supply*; Suture Techniques
  20. Jamal F, Yasin MS, Abdullah R, Mokhtar N
    J Diarrhoeal Dis Res, 1986 Jun;4(2):74-6.
    PMID: 3571875
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Agglutinins/analysis*; Antibodies, Bacterial/analysis*; Female; Humans; Malaysia; Male; Middle Aged; Salmonella/immunology*; Typhoid Fever/epidemiology*
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