Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther
March 2009
We report the case of a 77-year-old man, who presented with seemingly clear cerebral ischemia. During transport a short-term inexplicable decline of oxygen saturation occurred. In-hospital diagnosis showed not only a thrombosis of A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUse of sewage or wastewater in agriculture is becoming increasingly common as a result of a global water scarcity. Intestinal nematode infections have been identified as the main health risk associated with this practice. To protect consumer and farmer health, the World Health Organization (WHO) has established an intestinal nematode water quality standard.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe combination of standard quantitative microbial risk analysis (QMRA) techniques and 10,000-trial Monte Carlo risk simulations was used to estimate the human health risks associated with the use of wastewater for unrestricted and restricted crop irrigation. A risk of rotavirus infection of 10(-2) per person per year (pppy) was used as the reference level of acceptable risk. Using the model scenario of involuntary soil ingestion for restricted irrigation, the risk of rotavirus infection is approximately 10(-2) pppy when the wastewater contains < or =10(6) Escherichia coli per 100ml and when local agricultural practices are highly mechanised.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Sci Technol
October 2004
The use of wastewater in agriculture is occurring more frequently because of water scarcity and population growth. Often the poorest households rely on this resource for their livelihood and food security needs. However, there are negative health implications of this practice that need to be addressed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of season and wastewater storage on the risk of Ascaris lumbricoides infection and diarrhoeal disease associated with wastewater reuse was studied in Mexico in 1991. Data were collected from 10,489 individuals during a dry-season survey. Exposure was to untreated wastewater, or effluent from 1 reservoir (< or = 1 nematode egg/L), or no wastewater irrigation (control group).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study assessed the risk factors for Giardia intestinalis infection in an agricultural population in Mexico. Exposure groups included 2,257 individuals from households exposed to untreated wastewater, 2,147 from a group using the effluent from a series of reservoirs, and 2,344 from rain-fed agricultural villages. Stool samples were collected from 6,748 individuals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree different approaches for establishing guidelines for the microbiological quality of treated wastewater that is reused for agriculture are reviewed. These approaches have different objectives as their outcomes: the absence of faecal indicator organisms in the wastewater, the absence of a measurable excess of cases of enteric disease in the exposed population and a model-generated estimated risk below a defined acceptable risk. If the second approach (using empirical epidemiological studies supplemented by microbiological studies of the transmission of pathogens) is used in conjunction with the third approach (using a model-based quantitative risk assessment for selected pathogens) a powerful tool is produced that aids the development of regulations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSchriftenr Ver Wasser Boden Lufthyg
August 2000
9,435 individuals participated in a cross-sectional survey in the irrigation districts of the Mezquital Valley (central Mexico). Exposure groups were: 848 households irrigating with untreated wastewater, 544 households irrigating with the effluent from a series of interconnected reservoirs, and 928 households farming with natural rainfall. The unit of analysis was the individual, and the health outcomes included diarrhoeal diseases and Ascaris lumbricoides infection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper discusses the distinction between the transmission of infectious diseases within the domestic domain (the area normally occupied by and under the control of a household) and that in the public domain, which includes public places of work, schooling, commerce and recreation as well as the streets and fields. Whereas transmission in the public domain can allow a single case to cause a large epidemic, transmission in the domestic domain is less dramatic and often ignored, although it may account for a substantial number of cases. Statistical methods are available to estimate the relative importance of the two.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article explores conceptual issues in the development and use of environmental health indicators for basic problems related to water and sanitation in developing countries. In this context, faecal contamination is the most important environmental health problem, responsible for the death of approximately 3 million children a year, and the infection of hundreds of millions. Good indicators would be invaluable in assessing the magnitude and source of such problems in different settings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWastewater from Mexico City is used to irrigate over 85,000 hectares mainly of fodder and cereal crops in the Mezquital Valley. A cross-sectional study method is being used to test the impact of exposure to raw wastewater and wastewater from storage reservoirs on diarrheal disease and parasitic infections in farmworkers and their families. The study population in the rainy season survey included 1,900 households: 680 households where the farmworker is exposed to untreated wastewater (exposed group), 520 households exposed to reservoir water (semiexposed group), and 700 households where the farmworker practices rain-fed agriculture (control group).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSalud Publica Mex
April 1994
Over 85,000 hectares in the Mezquital Valley of central Mexico are irrigated with wastewater. The main crops are fodder and cereal crops. A two cross-sectional survey was carried out to test the impact of exposure to raw wastewater and from storage of that wastewater in reservoirs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA well recognized feature of the immune response to parasitic helminth infections, including schistosomiasis, is the production of large amounts of specific and nonspecific IgE1,2. Immunological pathways involving IgE can lead to damage to the developing schistosomulum and it has been suggested that responses involving IgE could have evolved as protection against helminth infections. There has been no epidemiological evidence to support this idea and the only significant IgE responses known in man are those involved in the pathogenesis of allergic disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWastewater from Mexico city is used to irrigate over 85 000 hectares, mainly of fodder and cereal crops in the Mezquital Valley. A cross-sectional study method is being used to test the impact of exposure to raw wastewater and wastewater from storage reservoirs on diarrhoeal disease and parasitic infections in farmworkers and their families. The study population in the rainy season survey included 1 900 households: 680 households where the farmworker is exposed to untreated wastewater (exposed group), 520 households exposed to reservoir water (semi exposed group), and 700 households where the farmworker practices rain-fed agriculture (control group).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: New guidelines for wastewater reuse (WHO 1989) are controversial. Epidemiological studies are needed to test their validity. Cross-sectional studies of the impact of excreta use in aquaculture in Indonesia, and of wastewater use in irrigation in Mexico have been carried out.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrans R Soc Trop Med Hyg
November 1988
The relationship between reinfection with Schistosoma haematobium and immunological parameters was studied in a group of Gambian children aged from 8 to 13 years. Each individual's exposure to infection was assessed from observations of water contact, cercarial densities and infected snail densities at water contact sites. Eosinophil counts were made and responses to egg antigen (SEA) and adult worm antigen (WWH) measured by ELISA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrans R Soc Trop Med Hyg
April 1988
The process of reinfection after treatment was studied in a cohort of subjects in a focus of intense Schistosoma haematobium infection. Detailed observations were made at water contact sites of cercarial densities and of water contact by members of the cohort. Individual values of a cumulative index of exposure to infection were calculated using these observations and assumptions which were made about the effect of different water contact activities on the entry of cercariae into the skin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrans R Soc Trop Med Hyg
August 1987
We have measured the levels of infection with Schistosoma haematobium in children resident in an endemic area of The Gambia before and 3 months after successful chemotherapy and following reinfection. An exposure index was calculated from data collected on water contact, cercarial densities and infected snail densities at water contact sites. Peripheral blood eosinophil levels were recorded and the ability of serum (heat inactivated) from the children to allow killing of schistosomula of S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF