Background: Vascular injury management remains an extremely challenging task. The fundamental principles of management are bleeding arrest and flow restoration, to avoid death and amputation. With advances in medicine, there has been a shift from ligation to primary repair which has resulted in a fall in amputation rate from 50 % in World War II to less than 2 % in civilian injuries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn South Africa, about 72% of black South Africans are said to rely on traditional medicine. This contributes to a high prevalence of traditional medicine (TM) used by women during pregnancy, especially in rural areas. This paper explored literature knowledge on the use and reasons of using African traditional medicine in pregnant women who reside in South Africa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study investigated whether prior exposure to helminths (Ascaris IgE, Ascaris eggs and Trichuris eggs) either in childhood or in adulthood, and residence in rural and resource-limited urban areas influence allergy outcomes (asthma, rhinitis, IgE atopy and food allergy) in a South African population. Participants historical and present allergies data were collected through questionnaires and clinical record files. Coproscopy and immunoassays (ImmunoCAP Phadiatop, total IgE and allergen-specific fx3 IgE immunoassays and Ascaris IgE radioallergosorbent [RAST] tests) were used for active helminthiasis and allergy screens respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Carbapenem-resistant infections in neonates are increasing worldwide. These organisms are associated with poor outcomes because of the severity of the disease, lack of treatment options and impaired immune systems of premature neonates. These infections are associated with significantly higher morbidity, mortality and prolonged hospitalisations, especially in developing countries.
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