Browse publications by year: 1987

  1. Gopal P
    Family Practitioner, 1987;10:26-30.
    MeSH terms: Tuberculosis
  2. Da Costa JL
    Family Practitioner, 1987;10:18-21.
    MeSH terms: Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive*
  3. Chua WT
    Family Practitioner, 1987;10(2):36-41.
    Night calls at the doctor's residence are part of the family physician's service to the community. not all night calls are emergencies. Many of the cases can be managed at home if they keep simple remedies at home or they are properly instructed by the doctor. But because some of the calls are medical, surgical or gynaecolofical emergencies, the doctor must respond to all night calls. Some common illnesses necessitating night calls are identified and a list of drugs either to be stocked in the house clinic or in the doctor's emergency bad are identified. Reduction in night calls can be achieved by educating our patients regarding self-management of minor illnesses, use of hospital emergency services, setting up of group practices, a private hospital with emergency service or a community night clinic.
    MeSH terms: Emergencies; Humans; Malaysia; Physicians, Family
  4. Ch'ng SL, Chandrasekharan N
    Family Practitioner, 1987;10<I> </I>:12-13.
    MeSH terms: Electrophoresis
  5. Chin K
    Family Practitioner, 1987;10:42-44.
    MeSH terms: Coronary Disease; Review
  6. Cheong I
    Family Practitioner, 1987;10(2):7-11.
    MeSH terms: Humans; Clinical Medicine; Urinalysis*
  7. Beh CC
    Family Practitioner, 1987;10:34-35.
    MeSH terms: Family Practice; Laboratories
  8. Cotton RE
    Malays J Pathol, 1987 Aug;9:49-55.
    PMID: 3330746
    MeSH terms: Forecasting; Humans; Pathology/history*; History, 18th Century; History, 19th Century; History, 20th Century
  9. Siar CH, Ng KH, Murugasu P
    Singapore Med J, 1987 Apr;28(2):180-9.
    PMID: 3629275
    This paper represents a reappraisal of the gross and histological features of 45 cases of adenomatoid odontogenic tumours as observed under conventional light and fluorescence microscopy. The findings conformed largely to those of previous studies. Usage of the term adenomatoid odontogenic tumour in preference to its old name 'adenoameloblastoma' is emphasized. The differential diagnosis of this entity from the ameloblastoma and salivary gland tumours is discussed.
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Ameloblasts/pathology; Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Jaw Neoplasms/pathology; Male; Odontogenic Tumors*
  10. Rajakumar MK
    J R Coll Gen Pract, 1987 Feb;28(187):91-95.
    PMID: 702426
    MeSH terms: Humans; Primary Health Care*; Review
  11. Laderman C
    Soc Sci Med, 1987;24(4):293-301.
    PMID: 2436303 DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(87)90148-1
    In his article, 'The Effectiveness of Symbols,' Lévi-Strauss contends that the details of a Cuna birth incantation evoke specific physiological responses from parturient women, aiding them through difficult labors. His argument, which analyzes the incantation as a text divorced from its social setting, has drawn criticism from students of Cuna society on a number of substantive points, primarily centering around the difficulties that the special linguistic form of ritual language would present to a non-adept. If the patient lacks a thorough comprehension of the mythic details, how can the incantation change her physiological processes? In an attempt to evaluate the effect of myth upon a woman in labor, this article calls upon Cuna and Malay ethnographic data, and presents a Malay birth incantation as interpreted by the ritual practitioner who recited it. Following a discussion of the non-semantic aspects of the incantation and the extent to which the patient shares the interpretation of the healer in both the Malay and Cuna societies, recent biomedical studies are cited in support of hypotheses concerning the physiological and biochemical effects of myth in the management of childbirth.
    MeSH terms: Anthropology, Cultural; Female; Folklore; Humans; Indians, Central American; Language; Malaysia; Male; Medicine, Traditional*; Pregnancy; Symbolism*
  12. Perkins ID
    Aust Vet J, 1987 Jan;64(1):17-20.
    PMID: 2439062
    Some insecticides to control and prevent screw-worm fly strike by Chrysomya bezziana in calves and adult cattle were tested in field trials on cattle in Sabah, East Malaysia. Ivermectin injected subcutaneously in newborn calves at 200 mu/kg provided 10 days protection from screw-worm fly strike, which allowed navels to dry. Ivermectin, 1% dichlofenthion plus gentian violet and 3% lindane plus pine oil smear were all effective in preventing re-strike of treated wounds in adult cattle. A single subcutaneous injection of ivermectin at 200 mu/kg was effective, whereas it was necessary to re-apply the dichlofenthion and lindane smear preparations every 48h.
    MeSH terms: Animals; Australia; Lindane/administration & dosage; Cattle; Cattle Diseases/parasitology; Cattle Diseases/prevention & control*; Drug Evaluation/veterinary; Insect Control/methods*; Insecticides/therapeutic use*; Ivermectin/administration & dosage; Male; Myiasis/veterinary*; Organothiophosphorus Compounds/administration & dosage; Screw Worm Infection/parasitology; Screw Worm Infection/prevention & control; Screw Worm Infection/veterinary*; Time Factors
  13. Awaluddin AB, Jacobs JJ, Bourne DW, Maddalena DJ, Wilson JG, Boyd RE
    Int J Rad Appl Instrum A, 1987;38(8):671-4.
    PMID: 2822626
    Potential tumor imaging radiopharmaceutical agents have been prepared by attaching a cisplatin derivative to a ligand capable of forming a stable complex with 99mTc. Three new organometallic compounds, with iminodiacetic acid as the 99mTc chelating group and 2,3-diaminopropionamide as the platinum complexing group, have been prepared and characterized. Preliminary biodistribution studies in tumor bearing mice support the utility of this approach.
    MeSH terms: Animals; Female; Humans; Indicators and Reagents; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Radionuclide Imaging; Structure-Activity Relationship; Technetium*; Tissue Distribution; Mice
  14. Yadav MS, Malliga N, Ablashi DV
    Microbiologica, 1987 Jan;10(1):29-35.
    PMID: 3033449
    The pattern of seroconversion to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) was determined in 98 Malaysian children aged 2 weeks to 12 years. Maternal IgG antibodies to EBV viral capsid antigen, ranging between 1:10 to 1:160 titer, were found in 70.6 percent of infants less than three months old, and dropped to 26 percent by seven to nine months. Primary infection, as denoted by emergence of EBV-IgM antibody, occurred at 4 to 6 months, and by eight years all children were seropositive. Maternal antibody titers to EBV nuclear antigen were detected in 52.9 percent of infants less than 3 months old, declined to undetectable levels by 4 to 12 months, and then increased to 40 percent by the age of 12 years. The IgA antibody to viral capsid antigen was absent in all but one infant aged one year; the child also had IgG anti-early antigen, The IgG antibody to EBV early antigen were present in 17.7 percent of the infants aged 3 months or less. This seroconversion to EBV in early life explains the absence of infectious mononucleosis in the Malaysian population. The data suggest that a subunit vaccine to protect against EBV-associated diseases, most notably nasopharyngeal carcinoma, commonly observed in Malaysians would have to be administered to infants 6-12 months of age.
    MeSH terms: Age Factors; Antibodies, Viral/analysis; Antibodies, Viral/biosynthesis*; Antigens, Viral/immunology*; Cell Line; Child; Child, Preschool; Herpesvirus 4, Human/immunology*; Herpesviridae Infections/immunology*; Humans; Immunoglobulin A/analysis; Immunoglobulin G/analysis; Immunoglobulin M/analysis; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Malaysia; Epstein-Barr Virus Nuclear Antigens; Capsid Proteins*
  15. Lie-Injo LE, Lopez CG, Latu J, Lim ML, Balasegaram M
    Cytobios, 1987;50(201):101-6.
    PMID: 3036422
    Hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA in the serum of 31 patients with histologically confirmed primary hepatocellular carcinoma (PHC) from Malaysia and Indonesia was quantitated by densitometric scanning of autoradiograms obtained by Southern blot DNA hybridization, after electrophoresis using a 32P DNA cloned into plasmid pBR325 as a probe. This quantitation after electrophoresis is more informative than the usual spot hybridization technique. Five of the 31 sera were positive for HBV DNA. Levels ranged between 1.36 pq and 143.18 pq per ml of serum, and the levels of HBsAg, anti-HBs, anti-HBc, HBeAg and anti-HBe in the serum were serologically determined. All five sera positive for HBV DNA were also positive for HBsAg. Three of the five positive for HBV DNA were positive for HBeAg and negative for anti-HBe. Two of the sera positive for HBV DNA were negative for HBeAg but positive for anti-HBe. All sera negative for HBV DNA were also negative for HBeAg. Many sera which were negative for HBV DNA and HBeAg were positive for HBsAg. Of the 31 sera from PHC patients, 23 had at least one HBV marker positive (74.2%).
    MeSH terms: DNA, Viral/blood*; Hepatitis B Antigens/analysis; Hepatitis B virus/genetics*; Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/genetics; Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/microbiology*; Humans; Liver Neoplasms/genetics; Liver Neoplasms/microbiology*
  16. Lacombe C, Arous N, Pontet F, Blouquit Y, Bardakdjian J, Riou J, et al.
    Hemoglobin, 1987;11(2):173-6.
    PMID: 3114176
    MeSH terms: Adult; Amino Acids/analysis; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Female; Glutamine/metabolism; Hemoglobins, Abnormal/analysis*; Hemoglobins, Abnormal/genetics; Humans; Isoelectric Focusing; Lysine/metabolism; Malaysia
  17. Saha N, Wong HB
    Biol. Neonate, 1987;52(2):93-6.
    PMID: 3115319
    The mortality from coronary artery disease (CAD) in Indians is more than three times that in the Chinese and Malays of Singapore. Serum total and HDL cholesterol as well as apolipoprotein (Apo) AI, AII and B levels were determined in a group of 349 newborns (cord blood) from both sexes in these three ethnic groups in order to examine if a trend is reflected at birth. Both serum LDL cholesterol and Apo B levels were low in the newborn, while HDL cholesterol and Apo AII levels were almost the same as in adults. Serum Apo AI levels were also low in newborns. No consistent difference as to ethnic group or sex was observed in any of the parameters investigated, except that the females had significantly higher levels of serum Apo AI in all the ethnic groups. Serum total and HDL cholesterol levels in Singapore newborns were comparable to those reported in Caucasians and Asians. The trends of incidence of CAD were not reflected in the lipid profiles studied at birth.
    MeSH terms: Apolipoproteins A/blood*; Apolipoproteins B/blood*; China/ethnology; Cholesterol/blood; Coronary Disease/ethnology; Coronary Disease/genetics; Ethnic Groups; Female; Humans; India/ethnology; Infant, Newborn/blood*; Cholesterol, HDL/blood*; Malaysia/ethnology; Male; Reference Values; Risk Factors; Singapore; Apolipoprotein A-I; Apolipoprotein A-II
  18. Ho KB, Mak JW, Ramadas M
    Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg, 1987;81(2):257-9.
    PMID: 3303483
    Plasmodium falciparum drug sensitivities to chloroquine and mefloquine were assessed with WHO in vitro microtechnique test kits in 5 localities near the border with Thailand in Peninsular Malaysia. 105 of 113 (92.9%) parasite isolates were successfully tested and 103 (98.1%) showed resistance to chloroquine with parasite growth even at greater than or equal to 5.7 pmol of the drug. All these isolates were sensitive to mefloquine, parasite growth being inhibited at less than or equal to 11.3 pmol of the drug.
    MeSH terms: Antimalarials/pharmacology*; Chloroquine/pharmacology*; Drug Resistance; Humans; Malaria/epidemiology; Malaysia; Parasitology/methods*; Plasmodium falciparum/drug effects*; Quinolines/pharmacology*; Mefloquine
  19. King J, Ashworth A
    Soc Sci Med, 1987;25(12):1307-20.
    PMID: 3324358 DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(87)90129-8
    Prolonged lactation and early supplementation have been traditional practices among low-income mothers in Malaysia, the Caribbean, Nigeria and Zaire. Early supplementation is still the norm but there have been some substantial changes in the types of supplement offered. Thus, except in Zaire, there is now widespread use of processed milks as supplements for very young infants. The use of processed milks began in the 1920s in Malaysia and the Caribbean, but not until the 1960s in Nigeria. Processed milks are, as yet, rarely used in Zaire. The use of processed milks has not, however, led to the abandonment of traditional paps. The latter are still given as supplements to young infants in Nigeria and to older infants in Malaysia and the Caribbean. Breast-feeding duration has declined in Malaysia and the Caribbean although initiation is almost universal. In Nigeria and Zaire most low-income mothers continue to breast-feed for at least 12 months. The changes in the types of supplements used and in breast-feeding duration are analogous to the changes observed in industrialised countries from the mid-19th century, and many of the associated factors are similar: urbanisation; female participation in the labour force; increased availability of processed milks and their promotion both by companies and the health sector; and the regimentation of breast-feeding. This review highlights the negative role played by the health sector in the past, and discusses its future role in promoting and supporting breast-feeding.
    MeSH terms: Breast Feeding*; Developing Countries*; Female; Great Britain; Humans; Infant; Malaysia; Nigeria; West Indies; Women, Working; Democratic Republic of the Congo; History, 18th Century; History, 19th Century; History, 20th Century
  20. Cattani JA, Gibson FD, Alpers MP, Crane GG
    Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg, 1987;81(5):705-9.
    PMID: 3329776
    Ovalocytosis, an hereditary condition in which most erythrocytes are oval in shape, is a polymorphism that occurs in up to 20% or more of the population in Papua New Guinea and Malaysia. Due to the geographical correlation of the trait with endemic malaria, the possibility of a selective advantage in resistance to malaria has been raised. In a study of 202 individuals with greater than or equal to 50% oval red cells matched by age, sex and village of residence with controls having less than or equal to 30% oval cells, ovalocytic subjects had blood films negative for Plasmodium vivax (P = 0.009), for P. falciparum (P = 0.044), and for all species of malaria parasites (P = 0.013), more often than controls. Among individuals parasitaemic at any time there were no clear differences in density of parasitaemia. However, in children 2 to 4 years old, parasite densities of both species were lower in ovalocytic subjects than in controls (0.01 less than P less than 0.025). The differential susceptibility to malaria infection suggested by this study has implications for the evaluation of interventions, including possible future vaccine field trials, in populations where high-frequency ovalocytosis is present.
    MeSH terms: Animals; Disease Susceptibility; Elliptocytosis, Hereditary/immunology*; Elliptocytosis, Hereditary/epidemiology; Female; Humans; Immunity, Innate; Malaria/immunology*; Malaria/epidemiology; Male; Papua New Guinea; Plasmodium falciparum/immunology; Plasmodium vivax/immunology
External Links