The present study investigates the antimalarial activity of 13 medicinal plants used in traditional medicine in S. Tomé and Príncipe (STP) islands in the Gulf of Guinea, aiming at identifying the most effective plants for further research. Fieldwork was carried out with the collaboration of 37 traditional healers from both islands, during an ethnobotanical study, which was conducted from 1993 to 1999. Our results indicate that the traditional healers in STP use several medicinal plants against fever and/or 'malaria' which reveal strong antiparasitic activity in vitro: four of the plant extracts have evident antiplasmodial activity against chloroquine resistant Plasmodium falciparum, with IC(50) values <10 microg/ml, and also revealed hepatic schizontocidal activity (<5-35 microg/ml). In vivo, the extracts caused partial reduction of Plasmodium berghei parasitaemia in mice.
We conducted a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial in Sao Tome and Principe to investigate the safety, tolerability and efficacy of chloroquine (CQ) combined with artesunate (AS) over CQ monotherapy. Four hundred children, aged 6-59 months, with acute uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria were randomized to receive a standard dose of CQ (25 mg/kg bodyweight) over 3 d or CQ + AS (4 mg/kg bodyweight) daily for 3 d. Children were followed-up for 28 d. The combined treatment was well tolerated and there were no serious drug-related adverse events. By day 2 parasite clearance was significantly faster for children treated with CQ + AS compared with CQ alone (29/194 [14.9%] vs. 168/190 [88.4%] still parasitaemic, P< 0.0001). Day 14 parasitological failure rates were 153/191 (80.1%) for CQ alone compared with 32/193 (16.6%) in the CQ + AS group (odds ratio [OR] =20.2, 95% CI 11.7-35.4, P< 0.001). Corresponding clinical failure rates were 128/161 (67.0%) and 12/193 (6.2%) (OR = 30.6, 95% CI 15.3-62.7, P< 0.001). By day 28 the parasitological failure rates (new infections excluded) were 155/191 (81.1%) in the CQ group and 63/194 (32.4%) in the CQ + AS group (OR = 8.9, 95% CI 5.4-14.7, P< 0.001). Symptoms resolved faster in children who received AS. They were also less likely to be gametocytaemic after treatment. The combination treatment was well tolerated and considerably improved treatment efficacy. However, the current levels of CQ resistance preclude its use in Sao Tome where CQ should be abandoned as first-line drug. However, CQ + AS may be an option in areas where CQ resistance is lower.
This work analyzed the pharmacotherapeutic problems identified by the clinical pharmacist in an intensive care unit (ICU) and the acceptance of pharmaceutical interventions in solving these problems. This is a descriptive cross-sectional retrospective study, carried out in the adult ICU of a public hospital. All patients hospitalized during the study period had their pharmacotherapy monitored and those whose stay at the ICU lasted less than 24 hours were excluded. The pharmacotherapeutic problems were classified according to type, cause, acceptability/implementation, mode of intervention, outcome and related pharmacotherapeutic group. 302 patients were followed up and 350 pharmacotherapeutic problems were identified. Most of them were classified as unnecessary drug-treatment (n=186; 53.1%). The most frequent causes were excessive drug administration (n=181; 97.3%), and antimicrobials was the main group of drugs associated to that type of problem. 350 pharmaceutical interventions were performed, highlighting "prescriber informed only" (n=178; 50.9%), with an average acceptability of 90.7%, with those carried out on site being more effective (93.4%). The number of pharmacotherapeutic problems that were totally solved was 282 (80.6%). Clinical pharmacy activities in the ICU identified, prevented and corrected pharmacotherapeutic problems, contributing to the optimization of pharmacotherapy in aspects related to the need, efficacy and safety of treatments.
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