Browse publications by year: 1984

  1. Diong KI
    Family Practitioner, 1984;7:53-5.
    MeSH terms: Sick Leave
  2. Daljit SN
    Family Practitioner, 1984;7:22-26.
    MeSH terms: Malaysia; Occupational Diseases; Skin Diseases
  3. Da Costa JL
    Family Practitioner, 1984;7:15-16.
    MeSH terms: Diagnosis; Tuberculosis
  4. Da Costa JL
    Family Practitioner, 1984;7:17-21.
    MeSH terms: Malaysia; Occupational Diseases
  5. Chua WT
    Family Practitioner, 1984;7(1):29-33.
    MeSH terms: Gout*; Humans; Hyperuricemia*
  6. Chong CS, Lam ES
    Family Practitioner, 1984;7:48-52.
    MeSH terms: Industry; Malaysia; Occupational Diseases
  7. Chee CS
    Family Practitioner, 1984;7:9-14.
    MeSH terms: Communicable Diseases; Malaysia
  8. Bosco JJ
    Family Practitioner, 1984;7:21-24.
    MeSH terms: Connective Tissue Diseases
  9. Beh C
    Family Practitioner, 1984;7(1):21-24.
    MeSH terms: Arthritis, Juvenile*; Humans
  10. Rajakumar MK
    DOI: 10.1007/978-94-011-6731-4_13 ISBN: 978-94-011-6731-4
    Citation: Rajakumar MK. Practising Primary Care in Developing Nations. In: Fabb W, Fry J (ed). Principles of Practice Management. Springer; 1984:230-238
    MeSH terms: Developing Countries; Primary Health Care; Seasons; Natural Springs
  11. Rajakumar MK
    Family Practitioner, 1984;7(1):58-61.
    MeSH terms: Malaysia; Physicians; Primary Health Care; Rural Health*
  12. Rodelli MR, Gearing JN, Gearing PJ, Marshall N, Sasekumar A
    Oecologia, 1984 Mar;61(3):326-333.
    PMID: 28311057 DOI: 10.1007/BF00379629
    The ratio of stable carbon isotopes (δ(13)C) in plants and animals from Malaysian mangrove swamps, coastal inlets, and offshore waters was determined. Vascular plants of the swamps were isotopically distinct ( x±s.d.=-27.1±1.2‰) from plankton (-21.0±0.3‰) and other algae (-18.7±2.2‰). Animals from the swamps (-20.9±4.1‰) and inlets (-19.8±2.5‰) had a wide range of isotope ratios (-28.6 to-15.4‰), indicating consumption of both mangrove and algal carbon. Several commercially important species of bivalves, shrimp, crabs, and fish obtained carbon from mangrove trees. Mangrove carbon was carried offshore as detritus and was isotopically distinguishable in suspended particulate matter and sediments. Animals collected from 2 to 18 km offshore, however, showed no isotopic evidence of mangrove carbon assimilation, with ratios (-16.5±1.1‰, range-19.1 to-13.1‰) virtually identical to those reported for similar animals from other plankton-based ecosystems. Within groups of animals, isotope ratios reflected intergencric and interspecific differences in feeding and trophic position. In particular, there was a trend to less negative ratios with increasing trophic level.
  13. Rajakumar MK
    Singapore Med J, 1984 Feb;25(1):1-5.
    PMID: 6463657
    Dr Rajakumar delivered this lecture at the 14th SMA National Medical Convention on 16.4.1983
    Republished in: Republished in: Teng CL, Khoo EM, Ng CJ (editors). Family Medicine, Healthcare and Society: Essays by Dr M K Rajakumar, Second Edition. Kuala Lumpur: Academy of Family Physicians of Malaysia, 2019: 83-90
    MeSH terms: Abortion, Criminal; Brain Death; Ethics*; Fertilization in Vitro; Physicians; Sperm Banks; Technology*; Terminal Care
  14. Armstrong RW
    Geogr Med, 1984;14:49-64.
    PMID: 6207076
    MeSH terms: Developing Countries; Environmental Exposure; Ethnic Groups; Female; Humans; Industry; Malaysia; Male; Nasopharyngeal Neoplasms/etiology; Sex Factors; Time Factors; Tropical Climate
  15. Yong HS
    Comp. Biochem. Physiol., B, 1984;78(2):321-3.
    PMID: 6236032
    Seven natural populations of Dacus dorsalis were analysed for phosphoglucomutase by means of horizontal starch-gel electrophoresis. The electrophoretic phenotypes were governed by four codominant Pgm alleles. The commonest allele in all the seven population samples was PgmB which encoded an electrophoretic band with intermediate mobility. The distributions of PGM phenotype were in accordance with Hardy-Weinberg expectations. There was geographic variation in the distribution of Pgm alleles.
    MeSH terms: Alleles; Animals; Diptera/enzymology; Diptera/genetics*; Gene Frequency; Heterozygote; Male; Phenotype; Phosphoglucomutase/genetics*
  16. Hii JL, Kan S, Foh CK, Chan MK
    Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg, 1984;78(2):281-2.
    PMID: 6380019
    MeSH terms: Animals; Anopheles/parasitology*; Filariasis/transmission*; Humans; Insect Vectors*; Malaysia; Wuchereria bancrofti
  17. Wang F, Looi LM
    Q. J. Med., 1984;53(210):209-26.
    PMID: 6463196 DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.qjmed.a067794
    Thirty-one patients with systemic lupus erythematosus had membranous lupus nephropathy (MLN). They were divided into two groups. Group I consisted of 13 patients who had pure MLN but the patients in Group 2 had segmental proliferation in up to 35 per cent of their glomeruli. The rest of the glomeruli had purely membranous change. The patients of Group 2 were no different from the other MLN patients in terms of age, sex and race. The extrarenal disease in both groups was extensive and severe. The renal disease was usually associated with the nephrotic syndrome or oedema but was asymptomatic throughout in one patient. Both renal and extrarenal features responded to treatment initially but relapses were frequent and often severe. Relapses often occurred as treatment was discontinued or medication reduced. Survival at six years in Group I was 62 per cent and in Group 2 was 50 per cent. Only one patient died with renal failure although five patients had impaired renal function at death. The chief causes of death were disease of the central nervous system and infection.
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Child; Female; Glomerulonephritis/complications*; Glomerulonephritis/drug therapy; Glomerulonephritis/mortality; Glomerulonephritis/pathology; Humans; Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/complications*; Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/drug therapy; Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/mortality; Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/pathology; Malaysia; Prednisolone/therapeutic use
  18. Laderman C
    Soc Sci Med, 1984;19(5):547-59.
    PMID: 6484640 DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(84)90050-9
    A study of food ideology and eating behavior in a Malay village demonstrates that the relationship between belief and action is complex and not always predictable. Over-reliance upon stated beliefs, and generalizations derived from particular ecological settings, have influenced investigators into making universal and logical statements about Malay eating behavior and its health consequences--a logic which, however, does not always jibe with reality. Food ideology, like any other portion of a belief system, is subject to innovation, interpretation and rationalization, and contains within it 'rules to break rules' which assure the continued integrity of the symbolic system by patterning what might otherwise be seen as rifts in its fabric. An understanding of eating behavior must be based both on a knowledge of the subsidiary, as well as primary, clauses of food ideology, and on direct observation of the behaviors elicited by these beliefs and modified by the setting, the situation and the individual.
    MeSH terms: Adult; Attitude to Health*; Culture; Diet*; Feeding Behavior*; Female; Humans; Malaysia; Male; Medicine, Traditional; Postnatal Care; Pregnancy; Prenatal Care; Taboo
  19. Bhattacharyya SP, Saha N
    Hum. Hered., 1984;34(6):393-5.
    PMID: 6510935
    Mitochondrial malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.40; MEM) was examined by starch-gel electrophoresis on post-mortem brain samples from 453 unrelated subjects of either sex comprising 161 Chinese, 150 Indians and 113 Malays and 29 from other racial groups. The estimated gene frequencies of MEM1 were found to be 0.7111, 0.6100 and 0.6769 in Chinese, Indians and Malays, respectively. No significant deviation from the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium was observed in Chinese and Malays. However, there was a significant deviation with a deficiency of heterozygotes among Indians. MES did not show any polymorphism.
    MeSH terms: Brain/enzymology; China/ethnology; Ethnic Groups*; Female; Gene Frequency; Humans; India/ethnology; Malate Dehydrogenase/genetics*; Malaysia/ethnology; Male; Polymorphism, Genetic; Singapore
External Links