Publications by authors named "F Malveiro"

Cerebral angiography using a radioactive radiological contrast medium, Thorotrast, was pioneered by Moniz in Portugal in the 1920s. Thorotrast is retained by the reticuloendothelial system, with a biological half-life of several hundred years, so that such patients suffer lifetime exposure to internal radiation. We studied mortality in Portuguese patients who were administered Thorotrast during the period 1928-1959 and in a comparison group of patients who received nonradioactive contrast agents.

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This paper reports a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial of the effect of routine vitamin A supplementation given on admission to children with severe malaria with regard to survival, recovery during hospitalisation and outcome 6 weeks after discharge. Children aged between 6 and 72 months admitted to the paediatric wards of the Central Hospital of Maputo (CHM), Mozambique with a diagnosis of severe malaria were randomly assigned either to a control group (placebo) or an experimental group (vitamin A) and were followed up 6 weeks after discharge. There were 280 children in the experimental and 290 in the placebo group.

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Objective: The objective of this study was to test the potential of routine vitamin A supplementation at admission to speed up recovery during hospitalization for acute lower respiratory tract infections (ALRI) and to decrease the levels of morbidity at 6 weeks after discharge. The study was conducted in the Central Hospital of Maputo (CHM), Mozambique, from 1995 to 1997.

Methods: Children aged 6-72 months with ALRI admitted to the paediatric wards of the CHM were assigned to a supplementation group (n = 71, receiving 200000 IU of vitamin A) or a control group (n = 93, receiving a placebo).

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The Portuguese Thorotrast study cohort consists of a group of patients who received Thorotrast for diagnostic reasons between 1929 and 1956, and a group of similar patients who were given nonradioactive contrast agents. The cohort members were identified from medical records that contained information on reasons for the radiological investigation, type of procedure employed, and name and dose of the contrast medium used. This cohort was assembled in 1961, but its follow-up was interrupted in 1976.

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