Showing posts with label public health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public health. Show all posts

Monday, September 5, 2011

New Discovery Gives Hope For Malaria Treatment and Vaccines

An investigation into the mysterious inner workings of the malaria parasite has revealed that it survives and proliferates in the human bloodstream thanks in part to a single, crucial chemical that the parasite produces internally.


Ellen Yeh, MD, PhD, a pathologist from Stanford Medical School, and UCSF biochemist Joseph DeRisi, PhD, have made a fundamental discovery about malaria parasites that gives new hope for future drugs and vaccines.
According to scientists at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) and Stanford Medical School, reporting today in the journal PLoS Biology, this insight immediately provides a powerful new tool for discovering and designing drugs to treat malaria, which infects hundreds of millions of people around the world each year and claims about a million lives – mostly children.


Ellen Yeh, MD, PhD, a pathologist from Stanford Medical School, and UCSF biochemist Joseph DeRisi, PhD, have made a fundamental discovery about malaria parasites that gives new hope for future drugs and vaccines.



The work also gives researchers a hypothetical new vaccine to test: a weakened version of the parasite, which the scientists grew in the test tube by supplying it with the chemical it needed to live while at the same time treating it with drugs to eliminate its ability to produce that chemical on its own.

“It’s as if we designed a ticking time bomb inside the parasite that’s ready to go off – and when it does, the parasite dies,” said Joseph DeRisi, PhD, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at UCSF and vice chair of the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, who led the work.

In theory, health officials could inoculate people living in areas where malaria is common with a similar “attenuated” form of the parasite. If it works, the modified parasite would not make those people sick but would give them resistance to the pathogen if they were later exposed to it – although that approach would need to be tested in clinical trials to determine whether it would work.

“It is an intriguing possibility that must be explored,” said Ellen Yeh, MD, PhD, the co-author of the study. Yeh is a postdoctoral researcher at UCSF and also on the faculty of the Pathology Department at Stanford University.

Slow, Brutish and Incomplete: A Short History of Malaria Control
Few diseases in history have been as widely spread, poorly understood and fruitlessly fought as malaria. The name itself evokes centuries of misunderstanding – a misnomer that comes from an old Italian construction that means “bad air.” People once thought it was caused by swamp gasses, since it seemed to be prevalent in wet, marshy places.

Progress Fighting Malaria:
A Timeline

Since the dawn of modern microbiology research, beginning in the 19th century, scientists have known that the disease is actually caused by a microscopic parasite called Plasmodium, which is spread by mosquitoes common to wet, marshy places. Two of the earliest Nobel prizes went to the scientists who made these basic discoveries, and at the dawn of the 20th century, the situation had never seemed brighter. The possibility that malaria would be eliminated or eradicated was exciting and real then. History proved otherwise.

Full malaria eradication was a major public health effort in the first half of the 20th century and was intensively pursued after World War II. Since that effort was launched, 108 countries have eliminated malaria from within their borders, with another 39 countries en route to that goal. Despite those efforts, malaria remains a major cause of illness in many parts of the world. Today almost half the world’s population lives in places where the disease is common.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 1,500 cases of malaria still occur in the United States each year, but most are imported when people travel abroad. The real problem exists in several Asian and sub-Saharan African countries, where malaria is both a major leading cause of death and a significant drain on the economy. The World Health Organization estimates that the disease eats up nearly half of all public health expenditures and measurably lowers the gross domestic product of countries where it is common.


Several new approaches to controlling malaria have become available in the last few decades, like insecticide-treated bed nets, but there remains a dire need for new drugs and for effective vaccines to control it.

Hope for Vaccine Lies in the Parasite Itself
The Plasmodium parasite leads a strange and complicated life, crisscrossing between two “host” species – humans and mosquitoes. Within the short span of just a few weeks, the organism cycles through a half dozen radically different sizes and shapes and alternatively makes its home in the human liver, a person’s bloodstream, the insect stomach, and a mosquito’s spit.

For years scientists knew that the most fruitful way to fight the parasite would be to target the form in which it exists in the bloodstream, since that is where the majority of clinical symptoms occur. Existing drugs, like quinine and artemisinin, both target the parasite in the blood.

About 15 years ago, scientists discovered a potential new source of drug targets in a tiny, factory-like enveloped organelle called an apicoplast that exists within the parasite. It was unlike anything found normally in the human body, which suggested that drugs designed to interfere with it might kill the parasite while essentially leaving people unharmed.

“It was a very exciting discovery,” DeRisi said, “but in the years since, the prospect of finding drugs to target it has been frustrating and disappointing in many respects.”

In the last decade, the evolutionary history of this strange organelle has unfolded. The apicoplast is the strange remnant of collisions between competing cells far back in evolutionary history. Scientists reason that through the course of evolution, the apicoplast arose from its origin as a standalone bacterium into its current form through a series of at least two endosymbiotic events, in which one cell engulfs and permanently acquires genetic material and cellular machinery of another for its own benefit.

The discovery of this strange organelle in modern Plasmodium immediately suggested that there might be ways to target it with new drugs. However, even after extensive research revealed the genes of this apicoplast, efforts to raise new drugs against it were mostly fruitless – largely because nobody knew what the organelle actually did while the parasite was inside the human bloodstream.

Now DeRisi and Yeh have shown that the sole essential function of the apicoplast while the parasite is in the blood is to produce a single chemical known as isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP), a necessary building block the parasite uses to construct a variety of other molecules.

They discovered this by growing samples of Plasmodium falciparum within red blood cells in the test tube. If they treated the parasite with antibiotic drugs that kill the apicoplast, the parasites would all die. If they fed the parasites IPP at the same time, they lived – even though the parasites lost the organelle completely over time.

The work provides a new tool for probing the basic biology of the Plasmodium parasite, and it also suggests a new way of discovering promising new drugs to fight malaria. While many previous drug-screening efforts have identified multitudes of compounds that appear to inhibit growth of the parasites, most are without a known target within the parasites. Knowing the target of a drug greatly enables the necessary process of medicinal chemistry, in which the compound is optimized with respect to the target. Now, DeRisi and Yeh’s discovery has provided a simple tool to determine whether any particular drug candidate targets the apicoplast.

The attenuated form of the parasite also provides an intriguing hypothetical vaccine candidate – and one that would be relatively cheap to produce, DeRisi said. However, he cautioned, the history of malaria control is filled with failed efforts, and several past vaccines have fallen short. Only time and clinical trials will tell if this is a viable solution to the problem.

“This parasite has clearly evolved to be an immune system escape artist,” DeRisi said. “It’s no surprise that the simple approaches have not worked.”

The article, “Chemical Rescue of Malaria Parasites Lacking an Apicoplast Defines Organelle Function in Blood-stage P. falciparum” by Ellen Yeh and Joseph L. DeRisi appears in the August 30, 2011 issue of the journal PLoS Biology. After 5:00 p.m. ET on 8/30/2011, the article will be available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001138

This work was funded by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

UCSF is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care.

Photo by Jason Bardi

Slideshow by Kevin Eisenmann

Monday, July 25, 2011

MSF Fight Measles Epidemic In Malawi

FIGHTING MEASLES IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD

MSF are fighting a measles epidemic in Malawi. Click here to see how.


MEASLES

Every minute a child dies of measles. Even though a safe and effective vaccine exists, outbreaks occur in many parts of the world because routine immunisation programs are not in place or efficient. In many places Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams are confronted with outbreaks and have to organise emergency immunisation campaigns, which represent a complex logistical challenge.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), out of the 30 million children affected by measles every year, about half a million die. Most of those deaths occur in Africa and Asia. This contrasts sharply with the Western world where measles cases have become extremely rare thanks to universal routine immunisation. This leads many people to forget that measles is a major killer.
Measles is highly contagious. Symptoms like runny nose, cough, eye infection, and rash appear about 10 to 14 days after exposure to the virus. There are different levels of severity, and deaths following measles infection are usually due to measles-related complications like diarrhoea, dehydration, and respiratory infections (pneumonia, croup). Those deaths can occur weeks after the acute disease and are not always attributed to measles. Mortality can reach 5 percent to 20 percent of measles cases. Initial health condition, access to health care, and proper treatment provision are factors influencing mortality.

2011 International Symposium on Reducing Child Mortality: Thinking outside the hospital for effective medical care

15/07/2011
In the lead-up to the 7th World Congress of the World Society for Paediatric Infectious Diseases held in Melbourne, Australia, Médecins Sans Frontières and Epicentre are hosting a one-day satellite symposium to re-think...
Category: Upcoming Events (Events), Lectures & Seminars

Médecins Sans Frontières welcomes initiative by UNICEF to make vaccine prices public

31/05/2011
Geneva, 27 May 2011— In a bid to increase transparency and stimulate competition to bring down the prices of vaccines needed in the developing world, UNICEF has decided to publish the prices it pays to vaccine manufacturers.
Category: Press releases

Zambia: Measles vaccination campaign underway to immunise 600,000 children

24/05/2011
Mansa, Zambia – Médecins Sans Frontières teams are currently working alongside the Zambian health authorities to carry out a measles vaccination campaign with a target of almost 600,000 children. Médecins Sans Frontières launched...
Category: Field news

Treating measles in a remote province of the Democratic Republic of Congo

17/05/2011
In March, the measles epidemic that has raged in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) for more than six months reached the remote province of Maniema. Despite the logistical challenges, Médecins Sans Frontières teams are...
Category: Field news

Medical and humanitarian emergency continues as violence persists in Ivory Coast

27/04/2011
21 April 2011: The medical and humanitarian emergency in Ivory Coast persists as violence rages in several neighbourhoods in Abidjan, and security in the west of the country remains critically unstable, with populations hiding in...
Category: Field news


DR Congo: “Measles epidemic spiralling out of control” according to Médecins Sans Frontières
28/03/2011
Over the past six months a measles epidemic has been sweeping through the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Médecins Sans Frontières is raising the alarm and calling for concerted action to halt the spread of the disease.
Category: Press releases
Visit Doctors Without Borders and fight Malaria - 

Monday, July 18, 2011

Headlice Treatment Answer to Malaria?

Head lice drug may stem spread of malaria

By Daniela Hernandez, Los Angeles Times
July 16, 2011

U.S. researchers in Senegal have found that ivermectin helps kill off disease-carrying mosquitoes that feed from people with the drug in their system.

The drug, ivermectin, has been used in Africa for more than 15 years to treat river blindness, a parasitic disease that often leaves its victims blind and is common in the same regions where malaria is contracted.

Researchers have hit upon a potential new tool to fight the spread of malaria — a drug commonly used to treat head lice and heartworm.
The Colorado State University scientists made the discovery while in Senegal during malaria season in August 2008 and August 2009.

The drug, ivermectin, has been used in Africa for more than 15 years to treat river blindness, a parasitic disease that often leaves its victims blind and is common in the same regions where malaria is contracted. With the assistance of the Senegalese Ministry of Health, the team traveled to three villages where people were receiving ivermectin and collected mosquitoes from inside huts before and two weeks after they had been treated with a single dose of the drug.

The scientists reported in the July issue of the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene that the number of malaria-carrying mosquitoes fell by 80% two weeks after the residents had received ivermectin. In untreated villages, the percentage of malaria-laden mosquitoes jumped more than twofold during that same period.
Ivermectin paralyzes mosquitoes if they feed from a person who has been treated with the medication, killing the bloodsuckers before they can infect their next victim. As long as it's in the bloodstream, the drug acts as a 24/7 insecticide that targets mosquitoes that manage to bite.

"There is reason for cautious optimism," commented David Sullivan, a microbiologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health who was not involved in the study. However, he added that the results will need to be repeated to confirm that the drug is an effective tool to control malaria, which kills approximately 1 million people each year, many of them children.

Ivermectin is a particularly attractive anti-malaria strategy because much of the infrastructure to get the drug to affected areas is already in place, experts said.
One complication is that it is typically not given to children younger than 5, which might give mosquitoes "a refugee population in which to hide," said Tom Unnasch, a microbiologist at the University of South Florida who also was not involved in the study.
The study's lead author, Brian Foy, a microbiologist at Colorado State University, said he and his team are seeking funding to study whether monthly administration of the drug could have longer-term effects and to show that cases of malaria — not just numbers of disease-carrying mosquitoes — decline with the treatment.
"We need bigger and better studies," he said.
daniela.hernandez@latimes.com

Source and Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times

Sunday, July 17, 2011

"The UN declared a 2nd disease eradicated off the face of the earth, surprised to read which one." Source @ Bill Gates

Rinderpest, Scourge of Cattle, Is Vanquished


F. Paladini
BEGONE Dr. William P. Taylor, in 1987 in Sudan, examined a cow for rinderpest. The United Nations is announcing this week that the disease has been wiped off the face of the earth.



On Tuesday in a ceremony in Rome, the United Nations is officially declaring that for only the second time in history, a disease has been wiped off the face of the earth.
Multimedia
 The Takeaway: Donald McNeil Talks About Rinderpest
G. R. Thomson
FIELD OF DEATH Cattle carcasses littered a pasture in South Africa in 1900 during a rinderpest epidemic.
HEADING HOME A herd in India in 2006. Rinderpest ended there in the '90s.

Readers’ Comments

Share your thoughts.
The disease is rinderpest.
Everyone has heard of smallpox. Very few have heard of the runner-up.
That’s because rinderpest is an epizootic, an animal disease. The name means “cattle plague” in German, and it is a relative of themeasles virus that infects cloven-hoofed beasts, including cattle, buffaloes, large antelopes and deer, pigs and warthogs, even giraffes and wildebeests. The most virulent strains killed 95 percent of the herds they attacked.
But rinderpest is hardly irrelevant to humans. It has been blamed for speeding the fall of the Roman Empire, aiding the conquests of Genghis Khan and hindering those of Charlemagne, opening the way for the French and Russian Revolutions, and subjugating East Africa to colonization.
Any society dependent on cattle — or relatives like African zebu, Asian water buffaloes or Himalayan yaks — was vulnerable.
As meat and milk, cattle were and are both food and income to peasant farmers, as well as the source of calves to sell and manure for fields. Until recently, they were the tractors that dragged plows and the trucks that hauled crops to market. When herds die, their owners starve.
The long but little-known campaign to conquer rinderpest is a tribute to the skill and bravery of “big animal” veterinarians, who fought the disease in remote and sometimes war-torn areas — across arid stretches of Africa bigger than Europe, in the Arabian desert and on the Mongolian steppes.
“The role of veterinarians in protecting society is underappreciated,” said Dr. Juan Lubroth, chief veterinary officer of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, at whose headquarters Tuesday’s ceremony is being held. “We do more than just take care offleas, bathe mascots and vaccinate Pooch.”
The victory is also proof that the conquest of smallpox was not just an unrepeatable fluke, a golden medical moment that will never be seen again. Since it was declared eradicated in 1980, several other diseases — like polio, Guinea worm, river blindness, elephantiasis, measles and iodine deficiency — have frustrated intensive, costly efforts to do the same to them. The eradication of rinderpest shows what can be done when field commanders combine scientific advances and new tactics.
In 1998, a longtime leader of the effort, Sir Gordon R. Scott of the Center for Tropical Veterinary Medicine at the University of Edinburgh, wrote an article saying he had reluctantly concluded that it would fail.
“The major obstacle,” he wrote, “is man’s inhumanity to man. Rinderpest thrives in a milieu of armed conflict and fleeing refugee masses. Until world peace is secured, the nays win the argument.”
He cited Somalia, Sudan, Sri Lanka, Yemen and Kurdish parts of Iraq and Turkey as areas where war drove animals and their owners over borders and life was risky for vaccinators.
Dr. Scott will not be in Rome for the ceremony; he died in 2004. Yet perhaps without realizing it, he did outlive rinderpest. The last known case was in a wild buffalo tested in Mount Meru National Park in Kenya in 2001.
An Ancient Battle
The modern eradication campaign began in 1945, when the Food and Agriculture Organization was founded. But it became feasible only as vaccines improved. An 1893 version made from the bile of convalescent animals was replaced by vaccines grown in goats and rabbits and finally in laboratory cell lines; a heat-stable version was developed in the 1980s.
How long the ancient battle went on is uncertain. Although cattle die-offs did affect all the historical events mentioned above, there is uncertainty about which were from rinderpest and which were something else, like anthrax.
Death from rinderpest is rapid and nasty. Animals get feverish; their eyes and noses run. Their digestive tracts are inflamed from mouth to anus, and they die of diarrhea and protein loss.
But other diseases have overlapping symptoms, and a rapid diagnostic test that could be used next to a dying animal was not developed until the 1990s.
Until recently, it was assumed the disease existed as long ago as 10,000 B.C., when cattle were domesticated in the Indus Valley in what is now Pakistan. It was blamed for an epidemic in Egypt in 3,000 B.C. (the fifth plague of Moses fell on the pharaoh’s herds) and for the widespread die-offs that starved the Roman Empire in the face of fourth-century invaders. In the ninth century, it was the chief suspect in the “mortality upon the horned animals” in the British Isles.
Last year, however, Japanese geneticists studying rinderpest’s mutation patterns estimated that until about A.D. 1000, it was virtually identical to measles — making it likely that pandemics that killed only animals before that time had other causes, like anthrax or possibly an ancestor virus from which both measles and rinderpest evolved.
Some experts now believe the disease arose in the gray oxen of the Central Asian steppes and was swept forward in the trains of baggage and beasts that followed the Mongol armies in the 1200s as they conquered Eurasia from China to Poland. (The Mongols are also suspected of importing bubonic plague from South Asia in flea-bitten rats hiding in grain sacks.)
Like smallpox, rinderpest settled into a pattern of irregularly recurring pandemics, sometimes touched off by imports of Russian steppe cattle, in which the disease smoldered but rarely killed. The longer between waves, the more victims died.
With the exception of a brief, contained outbreak in Brazil in 1920, it did not reach the Americas. It touched Australia in 1923, but the authorities there stamped it out by slaughtering 3,000 animals.
Despite its proximity to Eurasia, Africa was spared until 1887, when the Italian Army, struggling to conquer Abyssinia, imported Indian cattle for food and draft power.
From the port of Massawa in present-day Eritrea, the virus exploded so fast that it reached South Africa within a decade (and is considered one of the factors that impoverished Boer farmers as war with the English approached). It doomed East Africa’s wandering herders, subsisting on milk mixed with cow blood. Historians believe a third of them or more starved to death.
The disease was still leaping water barriers as late as the 1980s, when Indian peacekeepersin Sri Lanka imported sick goats. Until 1999, war-torn Sri Lanka was one of the world’s last pockets of rinderpest.
Finding a Vaccine
As rinderpest advanced and receded over the centuries, it led to some important scientific advances.
In 1713, when it threatened the papal herds, Pope Clement XI asked his personal physician, Dr. Giovanni Maria Lancisi, to stop it. Dr. Lancisi was familiar with the work ofDr. Bernardino Ramazzini, a scholar at the University of Padua who accurately deduced that rinderpest spread by the “virulently poisoned breath of an ox” and its excretions and hide — not by fogs, astrology or other popular theories.
According to Dr. Scott, Dr. Lancisi prescribed quarantine measures that were nearly as brutal to humans as to cattle.
Charlatan “cures” were banned; priests were ordered to stop relying on prayer alone and to preach from the pulpit that all herds with any sick members were to be slaughtered and buried in lime, while healthy herds were to be kept isolated. Any layman who resisted or cheated was to be hanged, drawn and quartered. Any disobeying priest was to be sent to the galleys for life.
Within nine months, the outbreak in the Papal States was snuffed. In the rest of Europe — where Protestants disdained papal orders — it persisted for a century and killed 200 million cattle.
By the 1750s, dairymen in England and the Netherlands were experimenting with a crude early form of inoculation: soaking a cloth in a diseased cow’s mucus, then sewing it into a cut in a healthy cow. It did not always protect, and sometimes killed.
(This was 50 years before Dr. Edward Jenner became famous for preventing smallpox by vaccinating a boy with pus from a milkmaid’s cowpox blister. But Dr. Jenner was not the first; he got the credit because he successfully repeated the vaccination 23 times and published his results.)
In 1761, the first school of veterinary medicine was founded in Lyon, France, specifically to fight rinderpest.
In 1924, a new and devastating European outbreak was the impetus for creating theWorld Organization for Animal Health, the veterinary equivalent of the World Health Organization.
In that decade, the new Soviet Union finally realized the old czarist goal of eradicating rinderpest among steppe cattle.
Under Mao, China followed in the 1950s, relying on quarantine and slaughter measures like Dr. Lancisi’s (except that uncooperative farmers were only imprisoned).
India, however, struggled until 1995.
“You can’t slaughter cows in India,” said Dr. William P. Taylor, a rinderpest expert and technical adviser to that nation. But India did so well at vaccination that near the end it became a problem for global surveillance because health officials were reluctant to stop long enough to prove the disease was gone. (Vaccinated animals test positive despite theirimmunity.)
The Last Frontier
The intractable problem was Africa. The disease was in 32 countries there, and many had pastoralist tribes like the Fulani, Masai, Dinka and Afar, who lived on the borderless fringes and drove cattle up to 50 miles a day, having virtually no contact with governments and getting no veterinary bulletins.
“In the ’60s and ’70s, the biggest problem we had was to convince farmers to bring in their animals,” said Dr. Protus Atang, a former director of the African Union’s veterinary institute. “They believed vaccination brought disease.”
Others had a traditional prevention method — smearing feces from infected animals in the mouths of healthy ones.
Just reaching them was hard. Land Rovers broke down, gasoline and cash ran short. Vaccine was packaged with salt so it could be dissolved in saline, but in remote areas salt was so valuable that it would be stolen.
Announcing vaccination days “was advertising to rustlers where the herds would be that day,” said John Anderson, former chief of laboratory testing for the eradication drive. African veterinary officers were paid so poorly that they survived only through second jobs like breeding chickens or mending watches.
Despite all the drawbacks, by 1979 the effort looked successful, and was ended. By the mid-’80s, rinderpest returned.
“I think they just stopped too early to celebrate,” Dr. Anderson said. “No one’s exactly sure where it came back from.”
Smallpox eradication boosted morale, Dr. Atang said, and a second effort was mounted in 1986, followed by a third in 1998.
A crucial advance was a new vaccine that survived a month without refrigeration. That let herders who could be recruited do their own vaccinating. An education campaign using comic books, flip charts and lecturers who spoke local languages was begun.
“The way we previously did it was really mindless,” said Dr. Peter L. Roeder, who directed the final eradication drive after working on the two earlier ones. “We’d get up before dawn to drive long distances. We’d be wrestling the animals to the ground, it’d get stinking hot, and pretty soon the locals would get fed up and walk away.”
The cattle were nervous and hard to handle, and no wonder, he said: They lived day and night with their owners and now were being roped and tackled by white men wearing khaki and reeking of unfamiliar soaps and deodorants.
“But someone local, dressed as a local, with mutton fat rubbed in his hair, could walk among them and stick in a needle and barely be noticed,” Dr. Roeder said. “We’d be lucky to get 20 percent immunity in a herd; our local guys could get 90, 95 percent.”
His “Paul on the road to Damascus moment” he said, took place in 1991, as Ethiopia’s civil war ended and he could finally drive north.
“We were driving up the edge of the Rift Valley, dropping down into the bottom to meet the Afar people,” Dr. Roeder said, “and almost everywhere we found rinderpest and people crying out for vaccination.
“Later, sitting in a bar drinking smuggled Peroni beer, it came to us: It wasn’t necessary to constantly be doing mass vaccinations. We were trying to get 30 million cattle and never getting more than nine million. We needed to concentrate on these lowland areas where the virus was persistent. We could vaccinate two million and do better.”
While the upland had large, visible outbreaks, he explained, between them the virus lurked in the lowland herds as it had centuries before in steppe oxen. Since the older animals were all survivors and the 1-year-olds were protected by maternal antibodies, he reasoned, only the 2- to 3-year-olds were vulnerable, and their age could be estimated by looking at their teeth. If all members of that group were vaccinated, the virus would slowly disappear.
A later crucial development was the rapid diagnostic test.
In the same way presidents denied that their citizens had AIDS, they denied that their citizens’ cattle had rinderpest. Dr. Roeder said he once loaded a dead cow onto his pickup and drove it to the capital to insist it be tested. (He declined to name the country.)
The new tests, similar to pregnancy kits, but using an eye swab instead of urine, empowered local veterinary officials, said Dr. Anderson, their inventor. Officials in the capital could no longer just dismiss reports as misdiagnoses.
Even though the last known case was in 2001, officials waited 10 years to declare success, since surveillance is harder with animal diseases. Even in Somalia, where the last smallpox case was found, a dying child would be rushed to a hospital. A dying cow would just be left behind.
The whole campaign, from 1945 to the present, cost about $5 billion, the United Nations has estimated.
“At first I thought, that’s quite a lot,” Dr. Roeder said. “Then I thought, that last royal wedding cost $8 billion. This was cheap.”

Sunday, April 3, 2011

AMEDEO HIV Infection: Your April 2011 Journal Article Summary



This E-mail is produced by AMEDEO through an unrestricted educational grant from Boehringer Ingelheim

1. AMEDEO HIV Infection

2011-04-04

2. The 2011 Short Guide to Hepatitis C (128 pages, PDF + ePub)

The book is available for download at www.FlyingPublisher.com .

If you are an expert in your field, please consider publishing a Flying Publisher Guide and reach out to a worldwide audience:

If not, start recommending your colleagues:


3. Free Books + 2000 Free Journals


Best regards,

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________________ ** New articles **  _________________


1. PRAPARATTANAPAN J, Tragoolpua Y, Pathom-Aree W, Kotarathitithum W, et al.
Current Molecular Epidemiology and Recombination of HIV-1 Subtypes in Northern Thailand.
AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses. 2011.
ABSTRACT available


2. VERNON LT, Babineau DC, Demko CA, Lederman MM, et al.
A Prospective Cohort Study of Periodontal Disease Measures and Cardiovascular Disease Markers in HIV-Infected Adults.
AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses. 2011.
ABSTRACT available


3. MINHAS V, Crabtree KL, Chao A, Wojcicki JM, et al.
The Zambia Children's KS-HHV8 Study: Rationale, Study Design, and Study Methods.
Am J Epidemiol. 2011.
ABSTRACT available


4. TRABOULSI RS, Mukherjee PK, Chandra J, Salata RA, et al.
Gentian Violet Exhibits Activity against Biofilms formed by Oral Candida isolates
Obtained from HIV-infected Patients.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2011.
ABSTRACT available


5. GOVENDER NP, Patel J, van Wyk M, Chiller TM, et al.
Trends in Antifungal Drug Susceptibility of Cryptococcus neoformans Obtained
Through Population-based Surveillance, South Africa, 2002-2003 and 2007-2008.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2011.
ABSTRACT available


6. WANG L, Sun R, Eriksson S.
The Kinetic Effects on Thymidine Kinase 2 by Enzyme Bound dTTP May Explain
Mitochondrial Side Effects of Antiviral Thymidine Analogs.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2011.
ABSTRACT available


7. CLAVEL C, Peytavin G, Tubiana R, Soulie C, et al.
Raltegravir Concentrations in the Genital Tract of HIV-1 infected Women Treated
with a raltegravir containing Regimen : DIVA 01 study.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2011.
ABSTRACT available


8. LAM AM, Espiritu C, Murakami E, Zennou V, et al.
Inhibition of Hepatitis C Virus Replicon RNA Synthesis by PSI-352938, a Cyclic
Phosphate Prodrug of
{beta}-D-2'-Deoxy-2'-{alpha}-Fluoro-2'-{beta}-C-Methylguanosine.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2011.
ABSTRACT available


9. HATHERILL M.
Prospects for elimination of childhood tuberculosis: the role of new vaccines.
Arch Dis Child. 2011.
ABSTRACT available


10. LIU Y, Timani K, Mantel C, Fan Y, et al.
Tip110/p110nrb/SART3/p110 regulation of hematopoiesis through c-Myc.
Blood. 2011.
ABSTRACT available


11. HODDER SL, Justman J, Haley DF, Adimora AA, et al.
Challenges of a hidden epidemic: HIV prevention among women in the United States.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2010;55 Suppl 2:S69-73.
ABSTRACT available


12. MILLETT GA, Crowley JS, Koh H, Valdiserri RO, et al.
A way forward: the National HIV/AIDS Strategy and reducing HIV incidence in the
United States.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2010;55 Suppl 2:S144-7.
ABSTRACT available


13. RABKIN M, El-Sadr WM, Mugyenyi P, Ramatlapeng MK, et al.
Lessons from Africa.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2010;55 Suppl 2:S141-3.
ABSTRACT available


14. NOWAK RG, Gravitt PE, Morrison CS, Gange SJ, et al.
Increases in Human Papillomavirus Detection During Early HIV Infection Among
Women in Zimbabwe.
J Infect Dis. 2011;203:1182-91.
ABSTRACT available


15. JAIN V, Sucupira MC, Bacchetti P, Hartogensis W, et al.
Differential Persistence of Transmitted HIV-1 Drug Resistance Mutation Classes.
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16. SPEARMAN P, Lally MA, Elizaga M, Montefiori D, et al.
A Trimeric, V2-Deleted HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Vaccine Elicits Potent
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J Infect Dis. 2011;203:1165-1173.
ABSTRACT available


17. KROWN SE, Dittmer DP, Cesarman E.
Pilot study of oral valganciclovir therapy in patients with classic kaposi
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ABSTRACT available


18. HAUT LH, Ratcliffe S, Pinto AR, Ertl H, et al.
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20. TOMITA Y, Noda T, Fujii K, Watanabe T, et al.
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Long-term care of AIDS and non-communicable diseases.
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23. LOURES L.
The fight is far from over.
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24. MOSCOSO CG, Sun Y, Poon S, Xing L, et al.
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25. NAVER L, Albert J, Belfrage E, Flamholc L, et al.
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26. YUAN Y, Maeda Y, Terasawa H, Monde K, et al.
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27. MOSZYNSKI P.
More needs to be done to tackle the "double cruelty" of HIV and TB in Africa,
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29. BOYD SD, Maldarelli F, Sereti I, Ouedraogo GL, et al.
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30. YOUNG B, Fransen S, Greenberg KS, Thomas A, et al.
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31. WELZEN ME, van den Berk GE, Hamers RL, Burger DM, et al.
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32. ARENAS-PINTO A, Grant A, Bhaskaran K, Copas A, et al.
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33. THIBAULT V, Stitou H, Desire N, Valantin MA, et al.
Six-year follow-up of hepatitis B surface antigen concentrations in tenofovir
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Antivir Ther. 2011;16:199-205.
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34. POLSKY S, Floris-Moore M, Schoenbaum EE, Klein RS, et al.
Incident hyperglycaemia among older adults with or at-risk for HIV infection.
Antivir Ther. 2011;16:181-8.
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35. SEVINSKY H, Eley T, Persson A, Garner D, et al.
The effect of efavirenz on the pharmacokinetics of an oral contraceptive
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Antivir Ther. 2011;16:149-56.
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36. HURT CB.
Transmitted resistance to HIV integrase strand-transfer inhibitors: right on
schedule.
Antivir Ther. 2011;16:137-40.
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37. Abstracts of the 17th Annual Conference of the British HIV Association (BHIVA).
April 6-8, 2011. Bournemouth, United Kingdom.
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38. DE SOCIO G, Ricci E, Bonfanti P, Quirino T, et al.
Waist circumference and body mass index in HIV infection.
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