RESUMO
During a 1974 foodborne outbreak of viral hepatitis type A among Navy recruits, we evaluated clinical and laboratory features prospectively in 130 affected persons. The ratio of anicteric to icteric persons identified during the outbreak was 1:3.5 but illness was relatively mild in this population of young adults. Infrequently reported in association with type A hepatitis, rash and arthralgias (but not arthritis) were reported by 14 and 10% of affected persons, respectively. Fourteen weeks after onset of acute illness, 8.5% of patients had persistently elevated aminotransferase activities and underwent percutaneous liver biopsy. Morphologic features included piecemeal necrosis, but clinical, biochemical, and histological evidence of disease resolved within five months to one year after the outbreak. Fecal shedding of hepatitis A virus began during the preicteric stage, did not persist beyond the second day of jaundice (even in patients with protracted illness), and was not detected in anicteric patients. Feces and serum obtained during the late incubation period, but not urine, were infectious in chimpanzees. Antibody to hepatitis A virus developed during convalescence, and serum anticomplementary activity was noted during acute illness. Failure of T-lymphocytes to bind sheep erythrocytes and form rosettes was observed, was found to be modulated in several cases by an intrinsic lymphocyte defect and in others by the presence in serum of an extrinsic immunoregulatory serum lipoprotein, "rosette inhibitory factor," which persisted in patients with slow resolution.
Assuntos
Surtos de Doenças , Contaminação de Alimentos , Hepatite A/transmissão , Adulto , Animais , Hepatite A/diagnóstico , Hepatite A/imunologia , Humanos , Masculino , Medicina Naval , Estudos Prospectivos , Formação de Roseta , Testes SorológicosRESUMO
We are moving into an era when U.S. military forces will be called upon frequently to perform military civic action (MCA) projects. Such projects, have been used successfully and unsuccessfully, primarily in the areas of medicine and engineering, to enhance the standing of military forces with indigenous populations. However, the available criteria for planning and assessing MCA projects are not widely known. These related and overlapping criteria are supported by facts, interpretative data, anecdotes, and common sense, but none can be considered absolute. Selected criteria are defined, reviewed, and illustrated with examples of past successes and failures.
Assuntos
Medicina Militar , Humanos , Estados UnidosAssuntos
Guerra Biológica , Guerra Química , Medicina Militar , Violência , Botulismo/etiologia , Humanos , Medicina Naval , Estados UnidosAssuntos
Surtos de Doenças/epidemiologia , Gastroenterite/epidemiologia , Hidroquinonas/efeitos adversos , Medicina Naval , Toxinas Biológicas/isolamento & purificação , Poluição Química da Água/análise , Abastecimento de Água/análise , Gastroenterite/etiologia , Humanos , Masculino , Navios , Estados UnidosAssuntos
Hepatite A/epidemiologia , Hepatite B/epidemiologia , Militares , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Estudos Prospectivos , Fatores de Risco , Estados UnidosRESUMO
Immune electron microscopy, which can detect hepatitis A antigen and antibody (anti-HA), was used to study a foodhandler-associated outbreak of hepatitis among 136 naval recruits. In stool specimens collected during the acute phase of illness, 27-nm viruslike hapatitis A antigen particles were shown, but only in patients with icteric hepatitis. Detection was possible in stools collected as early as 10 days before peak serum aminotransferase activity and up to the time of peak enzyme activity, but not thereafter. The immunologic similarity of these viruslike particles to those found in acute phase stools of volunteers inoculated with the MS-1 strain of hepatitis A virus was determined, and an increase in anti-HA was shown between acute and convalescent serums from 25 of the recruits. These data support the view that the MS-1 strain of hepatitis A virus is serologically related to naturally acquired type A hepatitis.
Assuntos
Manipulação de Alimentos , Hepatite A/imunologia , Hepatovirus/imunologia , Antígenos Virais , Fezes/imunologia , Hepatite A/etiologia , Hepatovirus/ultraestrutura , HumanosRESUMO
In a prospective evaluation of antibiotic prophylaxis against gonorrhea, 1080 men were given 200 mg of oral minocycline or placebo after sexual intercourse with prostitutes in a Far Eastern port. Later, at sea, gonococcal infection was detected in 57 of 565 men given placebo and 24 of 515 men given minocycline (P less than 0.001). Minocycline prophylaxis completely prevented infection by gonococci susceptible to 0.75 microgram or less of tetracycline per milliliter, reduced the risk of infection or prolonged the incubation period in men exposed to gonococci susceptible to 1.0 to 2.0 micrograms per milliliter, but did not prevent infection or prolong incubation in men exposed to gonococci resistant to 2.0 micrograms. Minocycline did not increase the proportion of asymptomatic infections. Minocycline prophylaxis would probably have limited effectiveness as a public-health measure because of the tendency to select resistant gonococci.
Assuntos
Gonorreia/prevenção & controle , Minociclina/uso terapêutico , Medicina Naval , Tetraciclinas/uso terapêutico , Administração Oral , Coito , Avaliação de Medicamentos , Resistência Microbiana a Medicamentos , Ásia Oriental , Gonorreia/tratamento farmacológico , Humanos , Masculino , Minociclina/administração & dosagem , Minociclina/efeitos adversos , Minociclina/farmacologia , Neisseria gonorrhoeae/efeitos dos fármacos , Trabalho Sexual , Tetraciclina/farmacologia , Fatores de Tempo , Estados Unidos , Uretrite/etiologia , Uretrite/prevenção & controleRESUMO
In October 1974, a large foodborne outbreak of hepatitis occurred among naval personnel undergoing basic training at the Naval Training Center, San Diego, California. Of the 2781 recruits eating at the implicated dining hall on the day disease transmission occurred, 133 developed clinical or laboratory evidence of hepatitis for an attack rate of 47.8/1000. The epidemiologic investigation suggested that hepatitis A virus was the etiologic agent, and this was subsequently confirmed by laboratory examination. The index and source case was a recuit food-handler who experienced prodromal symptoms of hepatitis while preparing salads and fresh fruit 32 days prior to the outbreak. A food preference questionnaire implicated tossed salad and fresh grapefruit as the specific vehicles of transmission.
Assuntos
Surtos de Doenças/epidemiologia , Hepatite A/epidemiologia , Antígenos Virais/análise , California , Contaminação de Alimentos , Manipulação de Alimentos , Hepatite A/imunologia , Hepatite A/transmissão , Hepatovirus/imunologia , Humanos , Masculino , Medicina NavalRESUMO
Reliable data on the risk of transmission of N. gonorrhoeae would enhance our understanding of the importance of host defenses against gonorrhea and would aid in the evaluation of prophylactic measures. This paper examines the risk of transmission of gonorrhea from infected female to male and the role that variables such as race, prophylaxis and amount of exposure play in the development of gonococcal urethritis. Volunteer crew members of a large naval vessel were followed prospectively as a cohort to study their risk of acquiring gonococcal infection during a four-day liberty period in the Far East. At the same time the prevalence of N. gonorrhoeae was determined in a population of females to whom the sailors were exposed. The calculated risk of transmission per exposure with an infected partner was .19 for whites and .53 for blacks. A statistically significant relationship was noted between the risk of transmission of gonorrhea and both the number of partners and the frequency of sexual intercourse. Further, the increasing infection rate with increasing numbers of exposures in men who had a single sex partner suggests that the majority of men are in fact susceptible to gonorrhea if the quantity of exposure is sufficient.