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  1. Boey, C.C.M.
    JUMMEC, 2010;13(1):3-11.
    MyJurnal
    In the last three centuries, medicine has focused predominantly on the physical body as the source of disease, placing very little importance on the mind. However, the significance of mind-body interactions in medicine is now increasingly being recognised. True health must include both the physical body and the mind. This article traces our concepts of the relationship between mind and body since primitive times and explores its relevance to the maintenance of health.
  2. Lee, W.S., Boey, C.C.M., Koh, M.T.
    MyJurnal
    From November 1996 to December 1997, 24 infants with neonatal cholestasis were referred to the Department of Paediatrics, University of Malaya Medical Center, Kuala Lumpur for further investigations. Nineteen had neonatal hepatitis. There was considerable delay in referral of infants with cholestasis; the mean age of referral was 63.7 days. None had a positive family history of neonatal hepatitis. All infant had hepatomegaly and ten had splenomegaly. The stools were slightly pale in thirteen, persistently acholic in three and normally pigmented in three infants. Liver synthetic functions were normal in most of the infants. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) IgM antibodies were positive in seven but none were positive for toxoplasma or rubella. al - antitrypsin deficiency, hypothyroidism, and galactosaemia were excluded in all infants. DISIDA scans were performed in seventeen infants, being non-excretory in eight. Liver biopsies were performed in fifteen infants, showing neonatal hepatitis in fourteen, while histological features of large duct obstruction was seen in one. In majority of infants (eight out of ten) the jaundice disappeared by six months. Two infants had progressive jaundice and liver function impairment.
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