Publications by authors named "V J Spooner"

Background: Sporotrichosis caused by the dimorphic fungus Sporothrix schenckii can presents in a variety of clinical forms. Routine diagnosis is made by mycology and serology studies. Few investigations have been focused on the evaluation of the molecular diagnosis.

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The objective of this study was to determine which clinical features of typhoid and malaria are most helpful in distinguishing the two diseases among Papua New Guinean highlanders. In a study of 35 patients with culture-positive typhoid and 49 with blood-slide-positive malaria (Group 1), the odds of typhoid were increased most in patients with altered bowel habit, an illness of more than 2 week's duration, tremor or the presence of typhoid facies. The odds of typhoid were lowest in patients with pallor or jaundice.

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Article Synopsis
  • A study analyzed clinical and chest X-ray findings in 185 children aged 8 weeks to 6 years with cough in Papua New Guinea, excluding those with certain respiratory conditions.
  • 30% of the children were found to have pneumonia, with specific signs like a respiratory rate of 50/min or chest indrawing effectively indicating the disease.
  • Using a more complex definition for tachypnoea did not significantly improve pneumonia diagnosis compared to the simpler criteria.
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Following the administration of a standardized questionnaire, 62 adult patients with chronic bronchitis were enrolled into a double-blind controlled trial of an oral killed Haemophilus influenzae vaccine in the highlands of Papua New Guinea. A 3-day course of vaccine or placebo was given monthly for 3 consecutive months. Participants were monitored weekly over 12 months for acute exacerbations; early morning sputum specimens were collected monthly and during acute exacerbations.

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One hundred fifty-six children in the highlands of Papua New Guinea aged less than 5 y, studied for a total of 7019 child-weeks, had an incidence of 1.3 episodes per child-year of acute lower-respiratory-tract infections (ALRIs). There was a marked age trend with an incidence of almost three times this average for children aged less than 6 mo.

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