RESUMO
From July through September 1984, acute convulsions caused by endrin poisoning occurred in the subdistrict of Talagang, Attock District, Punjab province, Pakistan. Eighteen of the 21 affected villages were surveyed; 70% of the cases for which ages were known (106 of 152) were in children 1 to 9 years of age; 9.8% of all affected persons (19 of 194) died. The outbreak occurred in villages on the main roads of the subdistrict and peaked in early September. Endrin was detected in the blood of 12 of 18 patients with a history of convulsions but was not found in the blood of four hospitalized control patients. One composite sugar sample taken from the homes of three persons had an endrin level of 0.04 ppm. Because of the high toxicity, repeated association with large-scale outbreaks of neurologic illness, and the difficulties of monitoring distribution, endrin should not be used for agricultural purposes.
Assuntos
Surtos de Doenças , Endrin/intoxicação , Contaminação de Alimentos , Convulsões/induzido quimicamente , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Carboidratos da Dieta , Humanos , Lactente , PaquistãoRESUMO
In order to assess the frequency of occurrence of facial pockmarks after recovery from variola minor, 175 subjects from 5 localities in Somalia were carefully examined a year after recovery from variola minor infections. Only 7% had facial pockmarks (the usual criteria for "positive" classification in facial pockmark surveys). Thus, pockmark surveys cannot be considered useful for evaluating the past smallpox situation in areas where variola minor has been prevalent. A number of other subjects had discolorations of the skin on their faces or bodies, but these are of dubious value for survey purposes.
Assuntos
Dermatopatias/etiologia , Varíola/epidemiologia , Humanos , Varíola/terapia , Somália , Vacinação/efeitos adversosRESUMO
To assess the prevalence of persistent facial scars after recovery from chickenpox (varicella), 250 subjects in Somalia in whom the diagnosis had been confirmed by electron microscopic identification of varicella virus were examined in 1979, a year after their illness; 2.4% had five or more facial scars indistinguishable from those seen among smallpox (variola major or variola minor) victims, with a higher percentage among males (2.7%) than females (1.9%). The highest proportion of those with five or more residual facial scars (8.3%) was found among young adults 20-29-years-old. The low proportion of varicella cases who had five or more facial scars contrasts with the 6.8% of cases of variola minor who were similarly scarred one year later (Somalia, 1978), and to an even greater degree with the situation after variola major, where the proportion varied from 65% for vaccinated subjects to 85% among unvaccinated persons (India, 1976). Pockmark surveys are a valid method for determining the past occurrence of variola major but cannot be relied on in areas were variola minor has occurred. However, varicella must be considered when making such a retrospective diagnosis.