29 patients with amebic liver abscess were evaluated in a study to examine clinical picture, laboratory data, epidemiology, radiologic methods, and therapy. Since the clinical picture was unspecific a considerable amount of misdiagnoses occurred, and often originated from pulmonary symptoms. To establish diagnosis one should rely on the triad with positive amebic serology, intrahepatic scanning defects, and clinical picture with fever, right upper quadrant pain, and hepatomegaly. Nearly all patients had an exposure history of travel or immigration from endemic areas in the tropics. Medical therapy with metronidazole alone is highly effective and leads to defervescence and clinical improvement usually within 3-5 days. Invasive procedures, such as needle aspiration or surgical drainage of the abscess are rarely needed; these invasive methods neither shorten the course of the disease nor improve prognosis.
The clinical course and response to therapy of seven patients with cryptococcosis and AIDS were reviewed. One patient was still in the primary stage of cryptococcosis in AIDS, i.e. the stage that is characterized by the sole cultural detection of Cryptococcus neoformans in the respiratory tract. The other six patients were in the secondary stage, where C. neoformans can be detected from the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), blood, urine, faeces and other body sites. The main presenting features (headache, fever, nausea) were due to central nervous system involvement, although meningism and mental changes were rarely present, and CSF changes were very subtle. Treatment with amphotericin B and flucytosine was very effective, there being no more growth of fungi in cultures in most cases. Adverse reactions to the drugs used occurred frequently and consisted mainly of anaemia, hepatosis and fever. Diagnosis in the primary stage of cryptococcosis may improve the prognosis.
This study investigated travellers to tropical Africa with regard to prophylactic treatment of malaria. A total of 5703 travellers completed a questionnaire on their flights back to the Federal Republic of Germany; 4116 passengers (73.7%) had visited East Africa, while 808 (14.5%) had been to West Africa. The results indicate that 90.2% took a regular chemoprophylaxis against malaria. Nevertheless, 8.1% of the travellers used no antimalarials and in 9.3% chemoprophylaxis was inadequate due to inappropriate advice; for example, 7.5% still took pyrimethamine-sulfadoxine as prophylactic. Mefloquine was correctly taken by 38.9% of the travellers in East Africa; 12.6% used it in West Africa where it is not necessary. Antimosquito measures have a high priority for travellers to tropical Africa and dissemination of this fact must be improved since only 72.6% followed through on such advice.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.