Twenty-six infants and children aged 2-24 months suffering from diarrhoea for more than 2 weeks were studied in the ICDDRB's Dhaka Treatment Centre. They presented with watery diarrhoea and the majority had moderate dehydration. A stool pathogen was isolated in only one infant. Systemic infections co-existed in half of the subjects. Subjects between 4 and 12 months of age were moderately malnourished. The remainder were severely malnourished. A range of therapeutic diets were given according to the clinical progress of the subjects. Three children improved with a milk-based diet, two with a soya-based proprietary diet, eight with a rice-based diet, 12 with comminuted chicken, and one with yoghurt. Response to various diets appeared to be age related. Body weight of 21 subjects deteriorated before cessation of diarrhoea. Case fatality rate was 11 per cent due to septicaemia and bronchopneumonia. Most persistent diarrhoea patients without severe concurrent systemic infections were effectively treated using various locally prepared diets.
Background: The objective was to define murine histologic alterations resembling asthma in a BALB/c OVA model and to suggest grading criteria. Identified were six salient histologic findings in lungs with putative allergic inflammation: 1) bronchoarterial space inflammation; 2) peri-venular inflammation; 3) inflammation about amuscular blood vessels; 4) inter-alveolar space inflammation, not about capillaries; 5) pleural inflammation; and 6) eosinophils within the inflammatory aggregates. An initial study comprised six groups of twelve mice each: 1) stressed, control; 2) stressed, sensitized; 3) stressed, challenged; 4) not physically stressed, control; 5) not physically stressed, sensitized; 6) not physically stressed, challenged. A second study comprised four experimental groups of twenty mice each: 1) stressed, control; 2) stressed, challenged; 3) not physically stressed, control; 4) not physically stressed, challenged. A third study evaluated two grading criteria, 1) the proportion of non-tracheal respiratory passages with inflammatory aggregates and 2) mitoses in the largest two non-tracheal respiratory passages, in five groups of five mice each, evaluated at different times after the last exposure.
Aspirin intolerance is the hallmark of aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease (AERD). Overproduction of cysteinyl-leukotrienes (Cys-LTs) has been implicated as major mediators of AERD; however, the LT receptor antagonist montelukast is only partially effective in inhibiting aspirin responses. Several studies have documented the importance of cytokine production by T lymphocytes in asthma. Peripheral blood lymphocyte (PBL) cytokine expression and its relation to aspirin desensitization in aspirin-sensitive patients with asthma have not been studied. This study was performed to examine PBL cytokine expression in aspirin-sensitive patients who have asthma before and after aspirin desensitization. A 42-year-old white woman with a history of severe asthma, nasal polyps, aspirin sensitivity, and chronic sinusitis was treated with aspirin desensitization. Blood was taken before and after aspirin desensitization, and PBL cytokine expression was studied by flow cytometry. Aspirin desensitization differentially affects interferon (IFN) gamma expression. This effect results in an increase in IFN-gamma expression by CD4(+) lymphocytes and a decrease in IFN-gamma expression by CD8(+) lymphocytes. Aspirin desensitization in an aspirin-sensitive patient with asthma resulted in an increase in IFN-gamma expression by CD4(+) lymphocytes and a decrease in IFN-gamma expression by CD8(+) lymphocytes, the significance of which needs additional investigation.
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