Publications by authors named "Pani S"

This study examines the relationship between the dynamic of Wuchereria bancrofti infection and the development of chronic lymphatic disease. Data sets from Pondicherry, south India, and Calcutta are used to estimate the age-specific proportion of the endemic population which has converted from microfilaria positive to amicrofilaraemia, and is assumed to be at risk of disease. For men, but not women, the age-prevalence profile of the estimated population 'at risk' is shown to correspond closely to the observed age-prevalence of chronic lymphatic disease in the same community.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We studied the clinical manifestations of Bancroftian filariasis in relation to microfilaraemia and diethylcarbamazine (DEC) therapy in three groups of individuals in Pondicherry. In 3170 persons examined in a door-to-door survey (Group I), the prevalence of disease was found to be independent of microfilaria (mf) status (the disease rate was 13.4% in mf carriers and 13.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The fecundic life span of adult female W. bancrofti was estimated by longitudinal study of microfilaraemia in a cohort of population (7,525) in Pondicherry. The estimation was based on a deterministic model, using the rate of loss in infection.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Treatment following rapid case detection in population, particularly the target age classes, which record high prevalence, is necessary for effective control of lymphatic filariasis. Conventional door-to-door surveys resulted in delay in detection of parasite carriers and patients with clinical filariasis, particularly in rural areas. An integration with other approaches like school surveys, health camps, filariasis clinics and microfilaria detection camps (MDC) was found effective in covering a much larger population in brugian filariasis case detection in an endemic area in south India.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In a door-to-door survey in Shertallai area of Kerala state in southern India, 7,766 persons were examined for clinical manifestations of filariasis. The prevalence of disease was 9.85 per cent and chronic persistent oedema (grade-II) was the predominant clinical presentation in both sexes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A sample survey in 37 villages covering 10,733 people in 1986-87 in the Koraput district, Orissa showed that the malaria prevalence is of a much higher order than that reported by the National Malaria Eradication Programme (annual parasite incidence between 14.3 and 26.8 during 1981-86).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This article examines the evaluation of a bancroftian filariasis control programme undertaken in Pondicherry from 1981-5. Integrated vector management was applied in one half of the town, and routine operations under the national programme (larviciding and chemotherapy) continued in the comparison area. The programme was evaluated by monitoring relative change in the epidemiological statistics of both populations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A deterministic immigration-death model, which reflects the population dynamics of W. bancrofti in human host has been applied to study the relationship between vector and human infections. Application of the model showed that the rate of acquisition and loss of human infection were approximately equal (L = 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This article examines the long term effects of vector control on the prevalence of B. malayi infection and disease, by comparing the results of 3 earlier studies (1934, 1955, 1976) in one area of south India with a recent (1986) survey. The data indicate that disease and infection prevalence have declined continuously over the last 50 years.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study uses a reversible catalytic model to estimate the age-specific rates of gain and loss of Wuchereria bancrofti infection from data collected during a control programme in Pondicherry, South India. The data describe the infection status in 1981 and 1986 of two cohorts of individuals, one living in an area where vector reduction had been achieved, and the other in a comparable endemic area. The rate of loss of infection in the absence of reinfection is estimated for the cohort in the control area, and the rate of gain of infection by the cohort in the endemic area estimated by substitution in the model.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A malariometric survey carried out among the upper Bonda tribals of Koraput district showed that malaria is the major cause of morbidity followed by worm infestation and malnutrition. A total of individuals 1,409 (32.2% of the population) were sampled and 771 were found positive for malaria parasites.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Incidence and prevalence of malaria was studied in the predominantly tribal district of Koraput, Orissa state. In the mass blood surveys in 61 malarious villages, a total of 12,122 persons were examined and 1,604 (13%) were found positive for malaria. Infant parasite rate was 23% and young children 2-4 years old were the worst affected (parasite rate 27.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The prevalence of microfilaraemia, clinical spectrum of bancroftian filariasis and vector potential were studied in Vettavalam village in North Arcot district of Tamil Nadu. The effectiveness of selective therapy with diethyl carbamazine (DEC) in controlling filariasis in rural areas was also evaluated. The prevalence of microfilaraemia (mf rate) and disease (disease rate) was found to be 11.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Malaria is a persistent problem in the tribal dominated Koraput district of Orissa state. Plasmodium falciparum is the predominant parasite species accounting for about 90% of the infections in the locality. Chloroquine sensitivity of P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF