Displaying publications 1 - 20 of 1365 in total

Abstract:
Sort:
  1. Galloway D
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group
  2. Barnsley A
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group
  3. Ryrie GA
    Lepr Rev, 1948 Jan;19(1):4-11.
    PMID: 18908067
    This is an interesting comparison between the types of leprosy seen among Chinese, Malays and Indians in Malaya, based on a large experience. The disease is most virulent among Chinese and least so among Indians, three-fourths of the cases among the latter being of mild tuberculoid disease with a tendency to self-healing, but among the Chinese only one-third are of the tuberculoid type. The climate of Malaya is of the hot humid type, in which leprosy flourishes. On the other hand, a higher standard of living than in India tends to hinder the spread of the disease. The age incidence is important. Among, the Chinese, early macules are commonly found in children of 5 to 15 years of age, most of which tend to clear up, but in about one-fourth tuberculoid lesions develop and may go on to the lepromatous condition, especially if the onset of the tuberculoid stage occurs early. When a reliable history is obtained in Chinese, in nearly every lepromatous case a tuberculoid stage was first observed, commonly in the age group 16-40. In a smaller number of persons of over 40 years of age, the proportion of tuberculoid cases is very much higher, but the tendency to become lepromatous is very much less. Major tuberculoid cases are more liable than minor to become lepromatous, but nerve thickening in tuberculoid leprosy is less evident in Chinese than in Indians and it is rare in children and in those over 40. In view of the foregoing peculiarity of the evolution of leprosy in tuberculoid cases in Chinese subjects, active treatment is necessary, in order to prevent them becoming lepromatous. For this purpose, intradermal injections are of little value and they tend to obscure any evolutionary changes. Hydnocarpus oil or esters (deep subcutaneous injections) should therefore be pushed to the limit of tolerance in doses of 1 cc. per 10 pounds body weight twice weekly, or 30 cc. per week, for a patient of 150 Ibs. as a minimum and increased by at least fifty per cent, in acute or reacting cases, when improvement may be expected within three months. Some years' experience of this intensive treatment as compared with weekly injections of 1-5 cc. has shown much more marked improvement and much less incidence of lepromatous change with the high doses. In lepromatous cases, reactions should be avoided, but dosage should be as high as possible short of producing increased erythrocyte sedimentation and plantar pain on heavy stroking. Surveys of school children are of great importance in finding the early macular stage and their discovery may lead to the detection of infective adults who require to be segregated. L. Rogers.
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  4. SAKIHARA H
    Jpn. J. Med. Sci. Biol., 1952 Dec;5(6):425-32.
    PMID: 13069136
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  5. KHOO FY
    Med J Malaya, 1955 Jun;9(4):281-3.
    PMID: 13253128
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  6. Simpson IA, Chow AY
    J Trop Pediatr (Lond), 1956 Jun;2(1):3-17.
    PMID: 24544028 DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.tropej.a057405
    (1) The use of the thiochrome method for the estimation of thiamine in human milk is discussed, with special reference to the possible production of an artefact, following the incubation of the milk with pepsin, in addition to the use of takadiastase (clarase). No evidence could be found to suggest that an artefact resembling thiamine was produced by the method of analysis described.
    (2) The thiamine content of 91 samples of full lactation human milk from apparently "normal" Malay, Chinese and Indian women in Malaya is recorded. The mean milk thiamine level of 11.3 ug/100 ml. found is considerably lower than the levels recorded for milk samples from apparently "normal " women in the United Kingdom and the U.S.A.; and slightly lower than that recorded in Australia. The results suggest that the dietary
    intake of thiamine in Malaya is inadequate to maintain optimum thiamine levels in the milk of lactating women.
    (3) No significant difference was found in the mean thiamine content of milk from women of the three principal racial groups in Malaya ; nor was any significant difference found to be associated with the parity or age of the women or, in the case of full lactation milks, with the time after parturition at which the sample was collected. No significant difference was found in samples collected from the same woman at different times of the day or before and after a main meal.
    (4) Marked differences were found in the thiamine content of samples of milk from individual women, and the possible reasons for this are discussed.
    (5) The examfnation of 48 samples of milk collected during the first month after parturition confirmed previous recorded observations that the thiamine content of such milks, initially low, gradually increases to reach "normal" levels towards the end of the first month of lactation.
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  7. VELLA F
    Med J Malaya, 1958 Jun;12(4):602-4.
    PMID: 13577152
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  8. MILLIS J
    Med J Malaya, 1958 Dec;13(2):145-52.
    PMID: 13632212
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  9. VELLA F, FIELD TE
    Med J Malaya, 1958 Dec;13(2):153-8.
    PMID: 13632213
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  10. VELLA F, SINGH RB
    Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg, 1959 Nov;53:534-5.
    PMID: 13841618
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  11. VELLA F, HART PL
    Med J Malaya, 1959 Dec;14:144-50.
    PMID: 13841616
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  12. MILLIS J
    Med J Malaya, 1960 Mar;14:177-80.
    PMID: 13770937
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  13. DAVIES TA, WILLSHER JD
    Med J Malaya, 1961 Mar;15:97-101.
    PMID: 13883856
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  14. Steinberg AG, Lai LYC, Vos GH, Singh RB, Lim TW
    Am J Hum Genet, 1961 Dec;13:355-71.
    PMID: 13916666
    The ABO, MN and Rh blood types, and the Hp, Tf, and Gm [Gm (a), Gm (x), Gm(b), and Gm-like] factors were determined for 128 unrelated Indians (parents of families, 63 with two parents tested and two with one parent tested), and 90 unrelated Chinese (parents of 46 families, 44 with two parents tested and two with one parent tested), and for the offspring from these families. The frequencies of the several blood types are presented. They were done primarily to aid in paternity testing. They compare favorably with the findings of previous studies. The allele Hp1 is rare in the Indian population (.09) and relatively infrequent in the Chinese (.29). Unfortunately, the data shed no light on the problem of the inheritance of the phenotype Hp O. Only Tf C was found among the Indians. About four per cent of the Chinese were heterozygous for Tf CD,, all other were Tf CC. The Indians have a high frequency of Gm(a) and of Gm (x), and a low frequency of Gm (b). They appear to have alleles Gma, Gmax, and Gmb in the following frequencies: .535, .234(5), and .230(5), respectively. Three families appear to have a GMxb allele, providing the offspring are not extra-marital. The Chinese appear to have the alleles Gm^ab, Gm^a, and Gm^ax in the following frequencies: .741, .231, and .028, respectively.
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  15. CHONG YH
    Med J Malaya, 1961 Dec;16:136-43.
    PMID: 13879161
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  16. LAU KS, LOPEZ CG, GAN OM
    Med J Malaya, 1962 Mar;16:184-92.
    PMID: 14462716
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
  17. Gwee AL
    Singapore Med J, 1963 Jun;4(2):68-80.
    PMID: 14046966
    A double-blind study with control was done to assess the effect of mono-amine-oxidase inhibitors and anticoagulant therapy in the mortality of acute myocardial infarction, in the first 4 weeks. The results show that no effect whether beneficial or adverse was seen with the use of monoamine inhibitor. On the other hand, there is a distinct decrease in mortality amongst cases not on anticoagulants. It is believed that the rarity of phlebothrombosis in local patients is the cause of the difference between local and foreign results so far as anticoagulant therapy goes. It is postulated too that one of the reasons for the difference may be due to the fact that patients are not on so strict a bed rest as elsewhere. There appears to be a definite increase of incidence in Indians, and also at least a third of myocardial infarction cases had low normal serum cholesterol readings.
    Matched MeSH terms: Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
Filters
Contact Us

Please provide feedback to Administrator (afdal@afpm.org.my)

External Links