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Therapeutic Methods and Therapies TCIM
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1.
Arch Pediatr ; 29(8): 624-625, 2022 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36283886

ABSTRACT

Infant Shoshin beriberi is an acute life-threatening condition for which the diagnosis is frequently delayed. Therefore, rapid recognition of right heart failure with lactic acidemia is a crucial element in the diagnosis and therapeutic management. We present the case of a 2-month-old girl with bronchiolitis, right heart failure, and lactic acidosis, who quickly and favorably responded to thiamine supplementation. Thiamine deficiency was established through laboratory tests. We present a brief review of the literature with the different thiamine dosages proposed in emergencies and provide an emergency protocol in cases of clinical suspicion, since thiamine supplementation could help to speed up recovery in infants with Shoshin beriberi.


Subject(s)
Acidosis, Lactic , Beriberi , Heart Failure , Thiamine Deficiency , Infant , Female , Humans , Beriberi/complications , Beriberi/diagnosis , Beriberi/drug therapy , Thiamine/therapeutic use , Comoros , Thiamine Deficiency/complications , Thiamine Deficiency/diagnosis , Thiamine Deficiency/drug therapy , Heart Failure/diagnosis , Heart Failure/drug therapy , Heart Failure/etiology , Acidosis, Lactic/diagnosis , Acidosis, Lactic/drug therapy , Acidosis, Lactic/etiology , Acute Disease
2.
Soc Sci Med ; 258: 113073, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32480185

ABSTRACT

Owing to a growing policing of borders, healthcare professionals become increasingly involved in the biopolitical management of migrants' mobility. While their presence on sites of migration control and detention is necessary to ensure migrants' access to healthcare, their role risks being instrumentalized to ensure the sustainability of detention and swiftness of deportations. This article analyses the practice and ethics of midwives' medical expertise in processes of migration control in the French overseas department of Mayotte in the Indian Ocean. Midwives in this setting are required to assess the health of pregnant women intercepted at sea by the police in order to determine whether they can be detained. The article traces how midwives come to be invested with a power to police patients' mobility. In the face of such unwelcome responsibilities, midwives resorted to emotional distancing while suspicion on both sides impeded the possibility of genuine relations of care. The article analyses how midwives framed the ethical dilemmas at hand and examines how they perceived their decision-making responsibility. I argue that midwives are socialized into the logics of border enforcement and gradually brought to implement a minimal version of care as a result of migration control's inroads into care. The article thus questions the function and meaning of biopolitics within migration control and aims at initiating a conversation around the necessary conditions for ensuring medical personnel's independence in these extraordinary care settings. The article draws on a three-months fieldwork completed in Mayotte between mid-April and mid-July 2017 during which I conducted 40 interviews with healthcare professionals in perinatal health services and 15 interviews with officers from stakeholder organizations, from local and international NGOs to health institutions. This article draws in particular on interviews with the medical team that was required to attend to migrant women intercepted at sea by the police.


Subject(s)
Deportation , Midwifery , Ethics, Medical , Female , Humans , Indian Ocean , Pregnancy , Pregnant Women
3.
Bull Soc Pathol Exot ; 111(2): 81-83, 2018.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30789247

ABSTRACT

A traditional treatment by plants with Acalypha indica L. can induce an intravascular haemolysis in patients with a glucose-6-phosphate-dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency. This information is poorly diffused in areas where the plant grows, where it is consumed for ethnomedicinal purpose and where G6PD deficiency prevalence is high; as a consequence, the probability of haemolytic accidents is presumably underestimated. It seems frequent in Mayotte according to local recent data reporting. Such accidents were previously only, and on a rare basis, reported in Sri Lanka. It seems necessary, at least in Mayotte, to inform patients, or the patients' relatives, about the potential risk in case of using traditional medicine by plants, in addition to all other circumstances able to induce haemolysis in G6PD deficiency.


Une phytothérapie traditionnelle par des remèdes contenant Acalypha indica L. est susceptible d'induire un accident hémolytique intravasculaire, potentiellement grave, chez les patients déficitaires en glucose-6-phosphate-déshydrogénase (G6PD). La toxicité potentielle de cette plante est connue, mais peu diffusée. Dans les régions où elle pousse et où coexistent un recours fréquent à la médecine traditionnelle et une prévalence élevée du déficit en G6PD, elle devrait être systématiquement recherchée. La situation semble fréquente à Mayotte, et n'avait jusqu'alors été signalée que rarement au Sri Lanka. Il semble indispensable que dans ces régions, les patients ou leurs parents soient systématiquement informés du risque potentiel en cas de recours à une médecine traditionnelle par les plantes, en plus des facteurs déclenchants habituellement recherchés.


Subject(s)
Acalypha , Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency/epidemiology , Hemolysis/drug effects , Medicine, African Traditional/adverse effects , Phytotherapy/adverse effects , Plant Extracts/adverse effects , Acalypha/adverse effects , Acalypha/chemistry , Adult , Child , Comoros/epidemiology , Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency/blood , Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency/complications , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Medicine, African Traditional/methods , Medicine, African Traditional/statistics & numerical data , Phytotherapy/methods , Phytotherapy/statistics & numerical data , Plant Extracts/therapeutic use , Prevalence
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