Displaying publications 1 - 20 of 210 in total

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  1. NUNN JF
    Lancet, 1954 Feb 13;266(6807):361-3.
    PMID: 13131861
  2. Williams CD
    Lancet, 1968 Oct 19;2(7573):868-9.
    PMID: 4175755
  3. Mahoney LE
    Lancet, 1968 Nov 23;2(7578):1139.
    PMID: 4177183
  4. Saenz AC, Assaad FA, Cockburn WC
    Lancet, 1969 Jan 11;1(7585):91-3.
    PMID: 4178014
  5. Lancet, 1970 Apr 11;1(7650):761-2.
    PMID: 4191257
  6. Burns-Cox CJ
    Lancet, 1970 Sep 26;2(7674):673-4.
    PMID: 4195819
  7. Fessas P, Eng LI, Na-Nakorn S, Todd D, Clegg JB, Weatherall DJ
    Lancet, 1972 Jun 17;1(7764):1308-10.
    PMID: 4113401
  8. Chen PC
    Lancet, 1973 May 05;1(7810):983-5.
    PMID: 4121603
  9. Hubble D
    Lancet, 1973 Jun 09;1(7815):1323-4.
    PMID: 4126117
  10. Williams CD, Casazza L
    Lancet, 1973 Aug 11;2(7824):318.
    PMID: 4124792 DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(73)90813-1
  11. Yadav M, Shah FH
    Lancet, 1973 Aug 25;2(7826):450-1.
    PMID: 4124938
  12. Reid HA
    Lancet, 1975 Mar 15;1(7907):622-3.
    PMID: 47960
    Among a series of 101 patients bitten by sea-snakes in Malaya in the years 1957-64, 80% were fishermen. Bathers and divers are occasionally bitten. Before sea-snake antivenom became available the mortality-rate (despite the high toxicity of sea-snake venom) was only 10%; however, of 11 with serious poisoning, 6 died. Subsequently 10 patients with serious poisoning received specific sea-snake antivenom; 2 patients, admitted moribund, temporarily improved but died, and 8 patients recovered dramatically. In serious poisoning the suitable dosage of intravenous sea-snake antivenom is 3000-10,000 units; in mild poisoning 1000-2000 units should suffice.
  13. Pearson JM, Rees RJ, Waters MF
    Lancet, 1975 Jul 12;2(7924):69-72.
    PMID: 49662
    An account is given of the first hundred consecutive proven cases of sulphone resistance in leprosy, detected in Malaysia between 1963 and 1974. Proof of resistance was clinical in eighty patients and was obtained by drug-sensitivity testing in mice in ninety-six patients; 76 cases were proved both clinically and experimentally, and there was no discrepancy between the two methods. Sulphone resistance was confined to patients with lepromatous-type leprosy--i.e., patients with a large bacterial population. Clinical evidence of relapse due to drug resistance appeared 5-24 years after the start of sulphone treatment. Low dosage favoured the appearance of resistance; therefore regular treatment of lepromatous leprosy with dapsone in full dosage is recommended. The attainment of "skin smears negative for leprosy bacilli" is no test of cure of lepromatous leprosy.
  14. Thin RN
    Lancet, 1976 Jan 3;1(7949):31-3.
    PMID: 54528 DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(76)92922-6
    Titres of melioidosis haemagglutinating antibodies of 1/40 or more were found in 18 of 905 British, Australian, and New Zealand soldiers serving in West Malaysia. Previous mild unsuspected melioidosis seemed to be responsible for these positive titres, which were more common in men exposed to surface water at work and during recreation. This accords with the current view that soil and surface water is the normal habitat of Pseudomonas pseudomallei, the causal organism. Pyrexia of unknown origin after arriving in Malaysia was significantly more common in men with titres of 1/40 or more than in the remainder. It is suggested that mild melioidosis may present as pyrexia of unknown origin. Pyrexias of unknown origin should be investigated vigorously in patients who are in or who have visited endemic areas.
  15. Balasegaram M, Burkitt DP
    Lancet, 1976 Jan 17;1(7951):152.
    PMID: 54670
  16. Kok A, Robinson MJ
    Lancet, 1976 Sep 18;2(7986):633.
    PMID: 61371
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