A 57-year-old black male patient was admitted with flatulence and post-prandial fullness a month ago. No other gastrointestinal complaints. He had history of arterial hypertension, medicated with nifedipine 30mg/day and hydrochlorthiazide 50mg/day, and had been diagnosed and treated for malaria a week before admission.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDisseminated or military tuberculosis (TB) is defined as the presence of at least two non-contiguous sites of , occurring as a result of progressive primary infection, reactivation and spread of a latent focus or due to iatrogenic origin. Disseminated TB represents a life-threatening condition, especially in at-risk children and when diagnosis and treatment are delayed. We report on a case of a 3-year old boy who presented with long-lasting unrecognised disseminated TB that was successfully managed in a low-resource setting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSetting: Improved HIV monitoring and evaluation (M&E) is urgently needed to help close gaps in inpatient infant provider-initiated testing and counseling (PITC) and pediatric case identification. A revised reporting system was piloted on the Breastfeeding Ward at Hospital Central de Maputo in Maputo, Mozambique.
Objective: To demonstrate how a simplified reporting system designed for pediatric inpatient ward registers can be used to easily calculate key PITC indicators, including testing coverage, HIV status, linkage to antiretroviral therapy, maternal testing, and point-of-care nucleic acid testing.