Displaying publications 41 - 60 of 83 in total

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  1. Manson P
    Br Med J, 1909;1(2521):1007-1009.
    [Malaya in full text]
  2. Bailey CA, Jumeaux CV
    Br Med J, 1950;1:271-273.
    Five cases of generalized peritonitis secondary to perforating lesions of the gastro-intestinal tract were benefited by treatment with aureomycin. Four of these received the drug postoperatively: the fifth recovered withoLut surgical intervention.
  3. Ellis WG
    Br Med J, 1903;2(2237):1268-1269.
  4. Field JW
    Br Med J, 1929;1:707-708.
  5. Ryrie GA
    Br Med J, 1938;2:39-40.
  6. Wilson T, Marsden ATH
    Br Med J, 1957;2:1242.
  7. Wilson T, Edeson JFB
    Br Med J, 1953;1:731.
    A letter from Drs. G. I. Robertson, D. G. Davey, and Sir Hamilton Fairley (December 6, 1952, p. 1255) reported that a proguanil-resistant strain of Plasmodium falciparum from Malaya had proved to be resistant also to pyrimethamine (" daraprim "). Proguanil-resistance in Malayan strains of P. falciparum has been recognized since 19491; and if a true cross-resistance exists, this might-as implied by Dr. J. S. K. Boyd (February 7, p. 337)-go far to explain the pyrimethamine failures described in our paper (January 31, p. 253). Proguanil has been so widely used throughout Malaya for the past six years that there can be few strains of parasite which have not yet come into contact with it; thus there is little chance of deciding now how the "parent" strains (without previous contact with proguanil) might have responded to pyrimethamine. We have not, however, been able to confirm that there is any consistent cross-resistance between these two drugs in naturally acquired falciparum malaria since pyrimethamine was first used in Malaya in 1951. Pyrimethamine failures have been successfully treated with normal doses of proguanil, and proguanilresistant infections have responded readily to pyrimethamine. In some of these cases an interval of several days was allowed to elapse between treatments, so the possibility of a combined action of the two drugs should have 'been small. We consider that these apparently conflicting results can best be explained by assuming that some present-day strains of P. falciparum in Malaya possess a " natural" resistance to pyrimethamine, whether or not any particular strain is also demonstrably resistant to proguanil. With this species of parasite, a true cross-resistance has still to be proved. REFERENCE 1 British Medical Journal, 1950. 1, 147.
  8. Reid HA
    Br Med J, 1955;2:908-909.
  9. Heisch RB
    Br Med J, 1956;2:669.
    DOI: 10.1136/bmj.2.4994.669
    The zoonoses, which are defined as infections of man naturally acquired from other vertebrates, are treated as a problem in ecology. This entails studying the interrelation between man, animals, a causative organism, the environment, and sometimes arthropods. Such an approach is holistic or synecological—wholes being regarded as more important than parts. Holism is a dynamic not a static conception. The evolution of the zoonoses is discussed, particularly in relation to plague, relapsing fever, and leishmaniasis. The most important reservoirs of zoonoses and other parasitic infections are usually resistant or relatively insusceptible animals rather than highly susceptible ones. Plague and Chagas's disease illustrate this. Resistant and unduly susceptible animals occupy different “niches“ in nature. By “niche“ is meant the place of an animal in its biotic environment. Zoonoses often have a “focal distribution“ in nature. Thus wild rodents infected with plague may occur in “ pockets,” and the vector mites of scrub typhus congregate in “typhus islands.” An unstable environment often favours the transference of zoonoses to man and animals. Examples are the plague-infected plain of Rongai, in Kenya, the typhus-infected forest clearings in Malaya, and the yellow-fever infected forest edges in Uganda. Ecologically unstable areas are termed “ ecotones.” Zoonoses can also be transmitted in or near relatively stable sites such as huts, rodent burrows, caves, and termite hills. These are known as “habitat niches.” Animals and arthropods in a community are linked by food, and the importance of what are known as “food chains“ and “food cycles“ is discussed in relation to the transference of zoonotic infections from one host to another. Reference is also made to the fluctuations in numbers of various animals in nature, and how this affects the incidence of zoonotic disease. Certain highly susceptible rodents are periodically decimated by plague; this breaks the link with man, and human infections cease for the time being. © 1956, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
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