Publications by authors named "Attai E"

A retrospective study of donor blood availability and patterns of use from 1984 through 1988 was conducted in a 400-bed university teaching hospital in Nigeria by extraction of data from the master registers for blood donors and recipients. Blood transfusion requests, number of persons who underwent phlebotomy, number of crossmatches performed, and blood use increased each year during the period of study. Average wastage rate and crossmatch-to-transfusion ratio were 3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Haematological measurements were made in 198 Nigerian children aged three months to two years who received weekly malaria chemoprophylaxis with chloroquine from shortly after birth until the age of one or two years and in 185 age-matched control children. Children protected against malaria had a higher mean haemoglobin level and a higher packed cell volume than control children, and they showed fewer abnormalities of their red cells. Total and differential white blood cell counts, mean plasma folate and mean serum ferritin concentrations were similar in both groups of children.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Plasmodium falciparum and P. malariae were found less frequently in blood obtained from Nigerian children under the age of two years who had the haemoglobin genotype AS than in blood films obtained from those who had the genotype AA. However, differences between the two groups were statistically significant only for P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The efficacy of chloroquine and pyrimethamine as malaria chemoprophylactics was investigated in young Nigerian children. Chloroquine resistance had not been documented in the study area; pyrimethamine resistance was probably present but uncommon. Children who received weekly chemoprophylaxis with pyrimethamine had a lower prevalence of malaria parasitaemia and malaria antibodies than children who received weekly chemoprophylaxis with chloroquine.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Haematological indices, malarial parasitaemia, serum and red cell folate (SFA, RCF), serum vitamin B12 and haemoglobin (Hb) electrophoretic patterns were studied in 228 non-elite young Hausa primigravidae at less than 24 weeks of gestation. The study was conducted in the guinea savanna of Nigeria, where malaria is hyperendemic. Ninety-nine (43%) were anaemic (Hb less than 11.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The prevalence of different haemoglobins and their interaction with malaria have been studied in Garki, Kano State, Nigeria. Sickle cell trait was present in 24% of newborn and 29% of those aged over five years. Hb.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF