4 results match your criteria: "Federal Medical Center (FMC)[Affiliation]"
West Afr J Med
December 2023
Federal Medical Center (FMC), Abeokuta, Ogun State, Nigeria. E-mail:
Background: Control of intraocular pressure continues to be the mainstay of the management of primary open-angle glaucoma. It is also one of the key factors to consider in the diagnosis and risk of conversion of ocular hypertension to glaucoma (POAG). Medical management of IOP control is central to the treatment of POAG especially in resource-poor countries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Pregnancy Childbirth
October 2021
Department Of Chemical Patholoy, Ae-Futh, Abakaliki, Nigeria.
Aim: To compare universal screening with selective risk factor based screening for GDM, using the one-step 75 g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT).
Materials And Method: A cross-sectional, comparison between universal and selective risk factor based screening for GDM, among 400 antenatal care clients at Alex-Ekwueme Federal University Teaching Hospital Abakaliki (AE-FUTHA). All the participants had 75 g OGTT at 24-28 weeks of gestation and risk factor screening for GDM.
Infect Agent Cancer
February 2009
College of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences Florida A&M University, Tallahassee, Florida, USA.
African American Men are 65% more likely to develop prostate cancer and are twice as likely to die of prostate cancer, than are Caucasian American Males. The explanation for this glaring health disparity is still unknown; although a number of different plausible factors have been offered including genetic susceptibility and gene-environment interactions. We favor the hypothesis that altered gene expression plays a major role in the disparity observed in prostate cancer incidence and mortality between African American and Caucasian American Males.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfect Agent Cancer
February 2009
H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center, Tampa, Florida, USA.
Background: African American men have the highest prostate cancer morbidity and mortality rates than any other racial or ethnic group in the US. Although the overall incidence of and mortality from prostate cancer has been declining in White men since 1991, the decline in African American men lags behind White men. Of particular concern is the growing literature on the disproportionate burden of prostate cancer among other Black men of West African ancestry in the Caribbean Islands, United Kingdom and West Africa.
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