Displaying publications 21 - 40 of 76 in total

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  1. Chiang GL, Samarawickrema WA, Mak JW, Cheong WH, Sulaiman I, Yap HH
    Ann Trop Med Parasitol, 1986 Feb;80(1):117-21.
    PMID: 2873797
    Field observations were made on Coquillettidia crassipes during a study of Mansonia in a swamp forest ecotype in Tanjong Karang. There was an increase in abundance in July consistent with the increase in abundance of Mansonia and an increase in rainfall. The biting cycle showed a dramatic early peak during the period 1900-2000 hours. The probability of daily survival through one day for the first three gonotrophic cycles was 0.770, 0.722 and 0.759. Two of the 54 Cq. crassipes dissected were infective, with two and 25 L3 larvae of Brugia. Both subperiodic B. malayi and B. pahangi developed into L3 larvae in laboratory bred Cq. crassipes. The index of experimental infection was higher for B. pahangi. Mansonia bonneae and Ma. uniformis showed higher indices of experimental infection than Cq. crassipes for subperiodic B. malayi. It is concluded that in an endemic area with a high density of Cq. crassipes it could act as a secondary vector of Brugian filariasis.
  2. Khoo KK
    Ann Trop Med Parasitol, 1981 Dec;75(6):591-5.
    PMID: 7325735 DOI: 10.1080/00034983.1981.11687489
    One hundred and nine (9·8%) out of 1103 malaria patients examined in Sabah were deficient in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD). Sixty-nine of these G6PD-deficient patients were randomly allocated to one of three treatment regimes with (a) chloroquine, (b) chloroquine and primaquine or (c) sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (Fansidar). No haemolysis was observed in group (a); except for a single mild case, no haemolysis was seen in group (c). However, in the primaquine group (23 patients), haemolysis occurred in seven of the 16 patients who had complete G6PD deficiency. Of these seven, five required blood transfusion and the other two developed acute renal failure, one requiring peritoneal dialysis. In the Fansidar group (c), four of the 22 patients took more than 15 days to clear the parasitaemia. Chloroquine resistance to falciparum infection was common in the patients given this anti-malarial.
    Study site: Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Kola Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia
  3. Yen PK, Mak JW
    Ann Trop Med Parasitol, 1978 Apr;72(2):157-62.
    PMID: 666387
    Histochemical demonstration of acid phosphatase activity in microfilariae gives sufficiently characteristic and consistent results for the differentiation of even closely related species. No difference could be detected among nocturnally periodic, nocturnally subperiodic and diurnally subperiodic Brugia malayi, but they could readily be distinguished from B. pahangi. Similarly, Dirofilaria repens could be readily distinguished from D. immitis and B. booliati from B. sergenti. The enzyme distribution pattern of a Malaysian rural strain of Wuchereria bancrofti was different from those of other regions.
  4. Peck CC, Lewis AN, Joyce BE
    Ann Trop Med Parasitol, 1975 Jun;69(2):141-5.
    PMID: 1155986
    Serum was collected from six adults participating in a field trial of sulfadoxine and pyrimethamine in combination which was being administered once monthly for malaria suppression. Samples were drawn during each of two consecutive months three hours, and 7, 14 and 28 days following a dose of 1 500 mg sulfadoxine. Serum sulfadoxine concentration was measured using the method of Bratton and Marshall (1939). Initial serum concentrations averaged 19-9 plus or minus 2-4 (SD) mg/100 ml and decayed to 6-2 plus or minus 2-8 mg/100 ml at 14 days. Serum sulfadoxine concentrations were still detectable at 28 days following a dose (2-1 plus or minus 1-5 mg/100 ml). Elimination half-time averaged 195 plus or minus 44 hours. The presistent serum concentrations of sulfadoxine following monthly doses documented here during field-use of this drug are in agreement with the successful clinical results reported for such a regimen (Lewis and Ponnampalam, 1974; O'Holohan and Hugoe-Mathews, 1971; Wolfensberger, 1971).
  5. Lewis AN, Ponnampalam JT
    Ann Trop Med Parasitol, 1975 Mar;69(1):1-12.
    PMID: 1092276
    A trial of suppression of malaria by administration of combined sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine tablets every 28 days was undertaken in West Malaysia during 1972. One thousand subjects were followed over a 10-month period, including control groups on placebo and on weekly chloroquine. Subjects were examined monthly for parasitaemia, drug reactions, leucopenia, teratogenicity and haemolysis among the subjects deficient in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Rates of new infections in the placebo group were 8.0% with Plasmodium falciparum and 6.2% with P. vivax; in the group receiving weekly chloroquine, 5.1% P. falciparum and 0.3% P. vivax; and in the group receiving monthly sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine, 0.3% P. Falciparum and 1.0% P. vivax. The effective rate of cure of new infections with P. falciparum by a single suppressive dose of combined sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine given the following month was 88.7%. No serious side effects were observed.
  6. Platt GS, Way HJ, Bowen ET, Simpson DI, Hill MN, Kamath S, et al.
    Ann Trop Med Parasitol, 1975 Mar;69(1):65-71.
    PMID: 235907
    Thirty isolations of Tembusu virus and four of Sindbis virus were obtained from approximately 280 000 mosquitoes collected between October 1968 and February 1970 in Sarawak, particularly from K. Tijirak, a Land Dyak village 19 miles South of Kuching. Twenty-two isolations of Tembusu virus and two of Sindbis virus were from Culex tritaeniorhynchus; two of Tembusu virus and two of Sindbis virus came from Culex gelidus. Tembusu virus was active throughout the year at K. Tijirak, the highest infection rates in C. tritaeniorhynchus being in January-March and May-August, when the C. tritaeniorhynchus population was declining and ageing. These results confirm that C. tritaeniorhynchus is the principal arthopod host of Tembusu virus in Sarawak. Antibody studies suggest that birds, particularly domestic fowl, are probably vertebrate maintenance hosts of Tembusu and Sindbis viruses in Sarawak.
  7. McClatchie S, Sambhi JS
    Ann Trop Med Parasitol, 1971 Jun;65(2):207-10.
    PMID: 4326239
  8. WHARTON RH, EYLES DE, WARREN M, CHEONG WH
    Ann Trop Med Parasitol, 1964 Mar;58:56-77.
    PMID: 14147666
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