Browse publications by year: 1996

  1. Thong KL, Passey M, Clegg A, Combs BG, Yassin RM, Pang T
    J Clin Microbiol, 1996 Apr;34(4):1029-33.
    PMID: 8815078
    Molecular characterization of a total of 52 human isolates of Salmonella typhi from Papua New Guinea was performed by using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) after digestion of chromosomal DNA with three restriction endonucleases, XbaI (5'-TCTAGA-3'), AvrII (5'-CCTAGG-3'), and SpeI (5'-ACTAGT-3'). Of the 52 isolates tested, 11 were obtained from patients with fatal typhoid fever and 41 were obtained from patients with nonfatal disease. The 52 isolates showed limited genetic diversity as evidenced by only three different PFGE patterns detected following digestion with XbaI (patterns X1 to X3; F [coefficient of similarity] = 0.86 to 1.0), four patterns detected following digestion with AvrII (patterns A1 to A4; F =0.78 to 1.0), and two patterns detected following digestion with SpeI (patterns S1 and S2; F = 0.97 to 1.0). Of the 52 isolates, 37 were phage typed, and all belonged to phage type D2. All 11 isolates obtained from patients with fatal typhoid fever were identical (F = 1.0) and possessed the PFGE pattern combination X1S1A1, whereas the 41 isolates from patients with nonfatal typhoid fever had various PFGE pattern combinations, the most common being X2S1A2 (39%), X1S1A1 (24%), and X1S1A2 (15%). Thus, all the isolates from patients with the fatal disease had the X1 and A1 patterns, whereas the majority of the isolates from patients with nonfatal typhoid fever possessed the X2 and A2 patterns. The data suggest that there is an association among strains of S. typhi between genotype, as assessed by PFGE patterns, and the capability to cause fatal illness. Analysis of blood and fecal isolates of S. typhi from the same patient also indicated that some genetic changes occur in vivo during the course of infection.
    MeSH terms: Base Sequence; DNA Restriction Enzymes; DNA, Bacterial/genetics; DNA, Bacterial/isolation & purification; Genotype; Humans; Molecular Biology; Papua New Guinea; Salmonella typhi/genetics*; Salmonella typhi/isolation & purification*; Salmonella typhi/pathogenicity; Typhoid Fever/microbiology*; Genetic Variation; Virulence; Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field
  2. Keng SB, Foong KW
    Int Dent J, 1996 Apr;46(2):103-7.
    PMID: 8930682
    In the absence of pre-extraction records, investigators have used various methods to aid in the selection and placement of artificial teeth for complete dentures. Natural tooth position and size provide the dentist with an optimal guide. A study was conducted on a group of ethnic Chinese subjects where direct measurements were made of the arch size and width of the maxillary central incisor on stone casts. The anterior arch width represented by the inter-canine cusp tip distance was 35.74 +/- 2.17mm. The mesiodistal diameter of the maxillary central incisor was 8.85 +/- 0.59mm with a range of 7.60mm to 11.20mm. The results of this study was discussed against other findings on the Caucasian, Nigerian and Malay groups. The significance of artificial tooth selection for dentures was highlighted in relation to the results obtained from the study for the group of Chinese and other races.
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Cephalometry; China/ethnology; Cuspid/anatomy & histology; Dental Arch/anatomy & histology*; Dental Models; Denture Design*; Denture, Complete*; Ethnic Groups*; Female; Humans; Incisor/anatomy & histology*; Malaysia/ethnology; Male; Maxilla/anatomy & histology*; Nigeria/ethnology; Odontometry; Singapore; Tooth, Artificial; African Continental Ancestry Group; European Continental Ancestry Group; Asian Continental Ancestry Group
  3. Ko SM, Tan SL, Leong B
    Singapore Med J, 1996 Apr;37(2):168-71.
    PMID: 8942256
    In a prospective study of fifty consecutive outpatients (30 men and 20 women) attending the Behaviour Therapy Clinic at a general hospital, the commonest conditions were obsessive compulsive disorders (n = 16), phobic disorders (n = 11) and generalised anxiety disorders (n = 9). Three-quarters of the referrals were from psychiatrists and family physicians. The patients received between 2 to 10 sessions of behaviour treatment; most had 4 to 6 sessions with a mean of 4.7, SD 1.82. The commonest behavioural techniques administered were exposure therapy with response prevention and relaxation therapy. Initially, treatment was therapist-aided, but subsequently self-help was encouraged with regular reviews of the patient's homework. After one month, 42 patients (84%) were assessed to have improved somewhat, with 20 (40%) showing moderate improvement. After three months, 41 (82%) continued to improve, with 33 (66%) showing moderate to great improvement. Nine patients were considered to have failed in therapy-six defaulted and three were non-responders. The reasons for defaulting treatment were unwillingness to bear with the discomfort involved in exposure therapy, lack of motivation or returning to own hometown in Malaysia. Sixteen patients (n = 32%) were treated solely with behavioural techniques while the rest had a combination of behaviour therapy and drugs, especially anxiolytics and antidepressants. However, at the end of treatment, the dosages of most medications were reduced or else discontinued completely.

    Study site: Behavior therapy clinic at a general hospital
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Mental Disorders/diagnosis; Mental Disorders/therapy*; Cross-Sectional Studies; Evaluation Studies as Topic; Female; Hospitals, General; Hospitals, University; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Outpatient Clinics, Hospital; Outpatients; Prospective Studies; Singapore; Treatment Outcome
  4. George J
    Singapore Med J, 1996 Apr;37(2):181-3.
    PMID: 8942259
    This study evaluates the usefulness of measuring gastric antral thickness on conventional ultrasonography as a means of suggesting gastric antral pathology. Normal and abnormal appearances of the gastric antrum are reviewed.
    MeSH terms: Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Pyloric Antrum/pathology; Pyloric Antrum/ultrasonography*; Reference Values; Sensitivity and Specificity; Stomach Neoplasms/pathology; Stomach Neoplasms/ultrasonography*
  5. Ramanathan M
    Singapore Med J, 1996 Apr;37(2):218-9.
    PMID: 8942269
    This report deals with a 54-year-old man with loss of memory. His impaired memory was found to be due to the atenolol he was on and he made a complete recovery on withdrawing the beta-blocker. This patient's experience stresses the need to consider beta-blockers as a potentially reversible cause of memory impairment.
    MeSH terms: Adrenergic beta-Antagonists/adverse effects*; Adrenergic beta-Antagonists/therapeutic use; Amnesia/chemically induced*; Amnesia/diagnosis; Atenolol/adverse effects*; Atenolol/therapeutic use; Diagnosis, Differential; Humans; Hypertension/drug therapy; Male; Middle Aged
  6. Lai FM, Jayakumar CR, Saw L, Kumar G
    Singapore Med J, 1996 Apr;37(2):226-8.
    PMID: 8942272
    Primary tumours of the liver are uncommon in childhood. Of these, more than two-thirds are malignant. As such, benign hepatic tumours are often not considered in the differential diagnosis of a hepatic mass in childhood. We report a case of hepatic mesenchymal hamartoma, a rare benign tumour, in a 10-month-old infant. This tumour is characterised by an admixture of ductal structures within a copious loose connective tissue stroma. Only approximately 160 cases had been reported in the literature. Awareness of the ultrasound (U/S) and computed tomography (CT) features, although not diagnostic, is helpful in distinguishing it from the more common malignant tumours. A correct preoperative diagnosis is important as surgical excision is often curative.
    MeSH terms: Diagnosis, Differential; Hamartoma/diagnosis*; Hamartoma/radiography; Hamartoma/ultrasonography; Humans; Infant; Liver Diseases/diagnosis*; Liver Diseases/radiography; Liver Diseases/ultrasonography; Male; Mesoderm/pathology; Tomography, X-Ray Computed
  7. Wong AK, Teoh GS
    Anaesth Intensive Care, 1996 Apr;24(2):224-30.
    PMID: 9133197
    The quality of laryngoscopy and tracheal intubation with propofol augmented by alfentanil was investigated as an alternative technique for rapid tracheal intubation. 119 patients aged between 18 and 60 years (ASA 1 and 2) undergoing elective surgery were prospectively studied in a randomized double-blind controlled fashion. Tracheal intubation facilitated by suxamethonium 1.0 mg/kg alfentanil 15 mu g/kg alfentanil 30 mu g/kg or saline control was compared after propofol induction. The quality of laryngoscopy and intubation were graded according to jaw relaxation, ease of insertion of the endotracheal tube and coughing on intubation. Failure to intubate occurred in 4% and 17% with alfentanil 15 mu g/kg and saline control respectively Tracheal intubation was successful in all patients with alfentanil 30 mu g/kg and suxamethonium 1.0 mg/kg. Alfentanil 15 mu g/kg was not statistically significantly different from saline (P = 0.112). Alfentanil 30 mu g/kg provided similar overall intubating conditions (P = 0.5) to suxamethonium 1.0 mg/kg. Alfentanil in both dosages effectively attenuated the haemodynamic responses to laryngoscopy and tracheal intubation.
    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Adult; Cough/etiology; Double-Blind Method; Female; Hemodynamics; Humans; Intubation, Intratracheal/instrumentation; Intubation, Intratracheal/methods*; Laryngoscopy; Male; Mandible/physiology; Masticatory Muscles/physiology; Middle Aged; Muscle Relaxation; Neuromuscular Depolarizing Agents/administration & dosage; Placebos; Prospective Studies; Sodium Chloride; Succinylcholine/administration & dosage; Propofol/administration & dosage*; Alfentanil/administration & dosage*; Elective Surgical Procedures; Anesthetics, Intravenous/administration & dosage*
  8. Ong LC, Dhillon MK, Selladurai BM, Maimunah A, Lye MS
    J Paediatr Child Health, 1996 Apr;32(2):173-6.
    PMID: 9156530
    OBJECTIVE: To determine the type and outcome of early post-traumatic seizures in children and the factors associated with it.

    METHODOLOGY: A prospective observational study on all consecutive children with head injuries at the General Hospital Kuala Lumpur between November 1993 and December 1994. The onset, type and frequency of seizures occurring within the first week of injury were documented. Using inpatients as a cohort, logistic regression analysis was used to determine clinical and radiological variables significantly associated with seizures. The outcome 6 months post-injury was assessed using the Glasgow Outcome Scale.

    RESULTS: Fifty-three of 966 children (5.5%) developed seizures within the first week of trauma. Seven (13.2%) occurred within 1 h of injury, 30 (56.6%) between 1 and 24 h and 16 (30.2%) after 24 h. Factors significantly associated with early post-traumatic seizures were female sex, age less than 2 years, loss of consciousness for more than 24h and acute subdural haematoma (P<0.01). Children with seizures had a poorer outcome (death or severe disability) than inpatients without seizures (21/53 vs 19/182, P<0.001). The outcome was worst in children with recurrent partial seizures, who had a longer injury-seizure interval and were more likely to have focal neurologic deficits compared to those with sporadic or generalized seizures.

    CONCLUSIONS: Anticonvulsant prophylaxis to minimize the adverse effects of early seizures in head injury should be considered for young children (less than 2 years old) with subdural haematoma and a prolonged duration of coma. Prompt and effective control of recurrent seizures is recommended.

    MeSH terms: Adolescent; Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Craniocerebral Trauma/complications*; Humans; Infant; Malaysia; Male; Prognosis; Prospective Studies; Radiography; Risk Factors; Seizures/classification; Seizures/etiology*; Time Factors; Glasgow Coma Scale; Incidence; Logistic Models
  9. Ariffin WA, Karnaneedi S, Choo KE, Normah J
    J Paediatr Child Health, 1996 Apr;32(2):191- 3.
    PMID: 9156534
    Between January 1985 and June 1992, the Paediatric Department of Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia has diagnosed congenital dyserythropoietic anaemia in three children, two of whom were siblings. The age of onset ranged from 1 to 3 years. All of them became transfusion-dependent before the age of 4 months. One of them was successfully treated with bone marrow transplantation.
    MeSH terms: Anemia, Dyserythropoietic, Congenital/blood; Anemia, Dyserythropoietic, Congenital/classification; Anemia, Dyserythropoietic, Congenital/diagnosis*; Anemia, Dyserythropoietic, Congenital/genetics; Anemia, Dyserythropoietic, Congenital/therapy; Blood Transfusion; Female; Humans; Infant, Newborn; Jaundice, Neonatal/etiology; Male; Bone Marrow Transplantation
  10. Chung FJ
    J Ethnopharmacol, 1996 Apr;51(1-3):201-4.
    PMID: 9213617
    Sarawak, on the island of Borneo, is known internationally for its rich rain forests, flora and fauna. Its rain forests, occupying two-thirds of its geographical area shelters 2500 tree species, 5500 flowering plants and over 20 000 different kinds of animals and insects. Such abundance of plants, and in particular, in the variety thereof, have attracted the attention of scientists involved in the field of research into their potential medicinal value. Recent discovery that two species of Calophyllum tree in the rain forests of Sarawak produce active anti-HIV agents, has, no doubt, intensified interest in the State's plant resources for scientific research.
    MeSH terms: Antiviral Agents/isolation & purification; Conservation of Natural Resources/legislation & jurisprudence*; Drug Industry/legislation & jurisprudence; Pharmaceutical Preparations/isolation & purification; Humans; Malaysia; Patents as Topic/legislation & jurisprudence; Pharmacognosy/legislation & jurisprudence*; Plants, Medicinal*; Public Policy; Trees; HIV Infections/drug therapy; Forestry/legislation & jurisprudence; Guidelines as Topic; Ecosystem; Intellectual Property*
  11. Madulid DA
    J Ethnopharmacol, 1996 Apr;51(1-3):205-8.
    PMID: 9213618
    In October, 1993, 16 months after the United Nations approved the International Convention on Biodiversity held in Rio de Janeiro, June, 1992, the Philippine Congress ratified and adopted the Convention. This is a manifestation of the full support of the Philippines for the principles and policies adopted by the UN body on the conservation of biodiversity, sustainable development of biological resources and equitable sharing of benefits between users and owners of biodiversity resources. The Philippine scientific community has long recognized the need for and importance of a national guideline and policy with regard to the collection of plants and animals in the Philippines for scientific or commercial purposes. A series of consultative meetings were held by representatives of government agencies, non-government organizations, private organizations, academic and private persons concerned with biodiversity conservation to formulate national guidelines that regulate the collection of plant and animal specimens in the country. Guidelines were unanimously adopted by various government agencies and academia and a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) was signed on September 28, 1990. Very recently a new document was drafted, specifically to serve as a guideline for those who desire to undertake sample collecting in the Philippines for biodiversity prospecting. The document is now being reviewed by government departments and agencies and will be presented to the President of the Philippines for signing as an Executive Order (EO). Once signed, this EO will serve as a national policy for bioprospecting in the country. The Philippines is one of the countries in Southeast Asia that has endorsed the adoption of regional guidelines on the collection of plant and animal organisms for drug development. The ASEAN Agreement on the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (1985). The Manila Declaration (1992) and lately, the Melaka Accord (1994), all of which were signed by various countries in Asia, are manifestations of this interest.
    MeSH terms: Ethics; Expeditions/legislation & jurisprudence*; Government Agencies; International Cooperation*; Licensure/legislation & jurisprudence*; Pharmacognosy/legislation & jurisprudence*; Philippines; Plants, Medicinal; Public Policy; Research/legislation & jurisprudence; Specimen Handling
  12. J Ethnopharmacol, 1996 Apr;51(1-3):307-8.
    PMID: 9213625
    MeSH terms: Animals; Animals, Wild; Commerce/legislation & jurisprudence; International Cooperation*; Plants; Ecosystem*
  13. J Ethnopharmacol, 1996 Apr;51(1-3):315-6.
    PMID: 9213628
    MeSH terms: Asia; International Cooperation*; Pharmacognosy/legislation & jurisprudence; Pharmacognosy/standards; Public Policy; United Nations; Ecosystem*
  14. MacDuff B
    Int Hist Nurs J, 1996;1(3):55-60.
    PMID: 11619078
    In the concluding part of her war diary, Brenda MacDuff, a nurse with the Colonial Nursing Service in Malaya, tells of her final incarceration, eventual freedom and reunion with her husband.
    MeSH terms: Concentration Camps*; Great Britain; Japan; Malaysia; Nursing*; Prisoners*; Warfare*; Colonialism*; History, 20th Century
  15. Sirat HM, Rahman AA, Itokawa H, Morita H
    Planta Med, 1996 Apr;62(2):188-9.
    PMID: 17252439
  16. Kandar MZ, Bhari IB
    Mutat Res, 1996 Apr 13;351(2):157-61.
    PMID: 8622709
    The usefulness of peripheral human lymphocytes as a bioindicator for ionizing radiation effect was tested in a survey of Malaysian workers in two industries producing technologically enhanced naturally occurring radioactive material (TENORM). Workers in amang processing plants who have been with the plant for an average of 12.9 years and who were exposed to radioactive dust showed significantly higher frequencies of chromosomal aberration compared to control and even ilmenite-processing workers. Such frequency was not significantly different between workers in ilmenite-processing plant and control. The differences in duration of employment, occupational hygiene, together with the difference in the percentage of 'old' and 'new' aberrations among the groups sampled were used to explain the high chromosomal aberration frequency among amang workers. The presence of significantly high chromosome damage (dicentrics and fragments) in workers who were chronically exposed to doses below 50 mSv per year or 20 mSv per year averaged over 5 years (ICRP, 1991) provided additional experimental data on the dose-effect relationship at these low-dose ranges. The results confirm the usefulness of using human lymphocytes as a bioindicator for chronic exposure to ionizing radiation and in cases where physical radiation detectors are not available.
    MeSH terms: Adult; Chromosome Aberrations*; Female; Humans; Iron/adverse effects; Lymphocytes/radiation effects*; Malaysia; Male; Metallurgy*; Metals*; Middle Aged; Mining*; Radioactive Pollutants/adverse effects*; Tin/adverse effects; Titanium/adverse effects; Occupational Exposure*
  17. Poidinger M, Hall RA, Mackenzie JS
    Virology, 1996 Apr 15;218(2):417-21.
    PMID: 8610471
    The Japanese encephalitis (JE) serocomplex of flaviviruses comprises 10 members, 9 of which: Alfuy (ALF); Koutango (KOU); Kokobera (KOK); Kunjin (KUN); Murray Valley encephalitis (MVE); JE; Stratford (STR); Usutu (USU); and West Nile (WN) have been isolated from Africa, southern Europe, Middle East, Asia, and Australia. The tenth member, St. Louis encephalitis (SLE) virus, is confined to North, Central, and South America. For ALF, KOK, KOU, STR, and USU, no sequence data have as yet been reported, and little molecular phylogeny has been determined for this complex as a whole. Using a rapid, one-step RT-PCR and universal primers, we have amplified and sequenced a 450-600 base pair region of the virus genome encompassing the N terminus of the nonstructural protein NS5 and the 5' end of the 3' noncoding region, for several strains of all of these viruses, except USU and SLE viruses. These data, as well as published sequence data for other flaviviruses, were analyzed with the ClustalW and Phylip computer packages. The resultant phylogenetic data were consistent with some of the current flavivirus serological classification, showing a close relationship between ALF and MVE viruses and between KOK and STR viruses, but suggested that KOK and STR are distantly related to the other viruses and should perhaps be reclassified in their own serocomplex. The data also confirmed the close relationship between KUN and WN viruses and showed that an isolate of KUN virus from Sarawak may represent a "link" between these two virus species. In addition, the primary sequence data revealed a polymorphic region just downstream of the stop codon in the 3' end of the viral genomes.
    MeSH terms: Amino Acid Sequence; Base Sequence; Disease Outbreaks; Encephalitis, Arbovirus/virology; Humans; Molecular Sequence Data; Phylogeny*; RNA, Viral/genetics; Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid; Sequence Alignment; Sequence Analysis, DNA; DNA Primers; Encephalitis Viruses, Japanese/genetics*
  18. AIDS Wkly Plus, 1996 Apr 22.
    PMID: 12290908
    MeSH terms: Asia; Asia, Southeastern; Developing Countries; Diagnosis; Singapore; AIDS Serodiagnosis*; Clinical Laboratory Techniques*
  19. Myint S, Daud WR, Mohamad AB, Kadhum AA
    J Chromatogr B Biomed Appl, 1996 Apr 26;679(1-2):193-5.
    PMID: 8998560
    An ethanolic extract of cloves was analyzed by gas chromatography directly to identify eugenol and other major phenolic compounds without previous separation of other components. Separation was performed on a fused-silica capillary column of 30 m x 0.53 mm I.D., 0.53 microns film thickness. The detector was a flame ionization detector. Helium gas at a flow-rate of 3 ml/min was used as a carrier gas. The analysis were performed with linear temperature programming. Nine components were detected and special attention was given to the major phenolic compound, eugenol.
    MeSH terms: Ethanol/chemistry*; Chromatography, Gas/methods; Eugenol/analysis*; Flame Ionization/methods; Helium; Phenols/analysis; Spices/analysis*
  20. Fan Z, Dahal G, Dasgupta I, Hay J, Hull R
    J Gen Virol, 1996 May;77 ( Pt 5):847-54.
    PMID: 8609480
    The DNA genomes of isolates of rice tungro bacilliform virus from Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand were cloned and compared with that of the type isolate from the Philippines. Restriction endonuclease maps revealed differences between the isolates and cross-hybridization showed that they fell into two groups, those from the Indian subcontinent and those from south-east Asian countries. The genomes of isolates from the Indian subcontinent contained a deletion of 64 bp when compared with those from south-east Asia. The implications of this variation are discussed.
    MeSH terms: Base Sequence; Chromosome Mapping; Cloning, Molecular; Molecular Sequence Data; Plant Viruses/genetics*; Oryza/virology*; Blotting, Southern; Polymerase Chain Reaction; Genome, Viral*
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