Displaying publications 21 - 40 of 24136 in total

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  1. Rule EK
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia/ethnology
  2. Portelly J
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia/ethnology
  3. Bernard SM
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia/ethnology
  4. Pallister RA
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia/ethnology
  5. Cameron JAP
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia/ethnology
  6. Veerasingham KV
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia/ethnology
  7. Herre AWCT
    Science, 1935 Mar 8;81(2097):253-4.
    PMID: 17829102 DOI: 10.1126/science.81.2097.253
    On March 29, 1934, while working at the office of Dr W. Birtwistle, director of fisheries for the Straits Settleents and Federated Malay States, at Singapore, the captain of a coasting vessel came in for information. He had with him the picture and dimensions of a very large fish which he had seen at Labuan a few days before. No one there knew the fish, but I recognized it at once as a fine typical example of Rhineodon typus, the whale shark. The specimen was 25 feet long. [First paragraph: http://science.sciencemag.org/content/81/2097/253]
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia
  8. Samuel J
    Malayan Medical Journal, 1935;10:19-20.
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia/ethnology
  9. Goh KK
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia/ethnology
  10. Lewthwaite R, Savoor SR
    Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg, 1936;29:561-571.
    DOI: 10.1016/S0035-9203(36)90038-X
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia
  11. Field JW, Niven JC
    Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg, 1936;29:647-658.
    A comparison is made between atebrin-musonate and quinine bihydrochloride in the treatment of acute malaria. 286 cases of acute malaria due to Malayan strains of P. falciparum, P. vivax, and P. malariae, were treated in alternating sequence with one or other of these drugs. The rates at which the atebrin-musonate and the quinine case groups became trophozoite-free and fever-free are contrasted in a series of graphs. It is shown that there was a tendency for trophozoites to disappear from the peripheral blood and for temperatures to fall to normal somewhat earlier among cases treated with atebrin-musonate. No toxic effects of any importance were observed (but see footnote p. 657). Evidence is recorded which suggests that the minimal effective daily dose for an adult is 0·375 gramme (= atebrin 0·3 gramme). This dose when given either intramuscularly or intravenously on two successive days effected a rapid disappearance of parasites and fever. Intramuscular administration is regarded as the method of choice. It is noted that absorption of the drug from the muscles is very rapid, and that atebrin may be demonstrated in the urine within 10 minutes of an intramuscular injection of 0·3 gramme. A method of testing for the presence of atebrin in the urine which is sensitive to over one in a million is described. It was not possible to obtain precise data regarding the permanency of cure but an analysis of cases returning to hospital within 10 weeks of discharge suggests that relapses after atebrin-musonate treatment are probably fairly common.
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia
  12. Wolfe EDB
    Malayan Medical Journal, 1936;11:224-5.
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia/ethnology
  13. Oliveiro CJ
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia/ethnology
  14. Willliams CH
    Matched MeSH terms: Malaysia/ethnology
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