Buradasınız

A STUDY OF FEVER CASES IN URBAN SLUM AREAS IN AND AROUND VIJAYAWADA

Journal Name:

Publication Year:

Abstract (2. Language): 
The agents of human febrile illness can vary by region and country suggesting that diagnosis, treatment, and control programs need to be based on a methodical evaluation of area-specific etiologies. This study evaluates etiological agents of fever cases in urban slum areas of Vijayawada municipality by doing the tests for all commonly fever causing agents like plasmodium species(malaria), salmonella species(typhoid), Dengue virus(dengue fever), chikungunya virus, and HIV, collected blood samples are tested for above agents by doing peripheral smear examination, widal tests, dengue mac ELISA, immunochromatographic tests, rapid ELISA methods respectively, out these tests 65% for malaria,15% for typhoid,20% for dengue are came as positive . In conclusion all fevers are not dengue fevers and no need of vigorous management like higher antibiotics and platelet transfusions unnecessarily.
FULL TEXT (PDF): 
530-532

REFERENCES

References: 

1. Bhalla A, Suri V, Varma S, Sharma N, Mahi S 4. Karmarkar SA, Aneja S, Khare S, Saini A, and Singh P: Acute febrile encephalopathy in Seth A and Chauhan BK: A study of acute adults from Northwest India. J Emerg Trauma febrile encephalopathy with special
Shock 2010; 3: 220-4.
reference to viral etiology. Indian J Pediatr
2008; 75: 801-5.
2. Yeolekar ME and Trivedi TH: Febrile
Encephalopathy:
Challenges
in
5. Kumar R, Tripathi S, Tambe JJ, Arora V,
Management. J Assoc Physicians India 2006;
Srivastava A and Nag VL: Dengue
54: 845-7
encephalopathy in children in Northern
India: Clinical features and comparison with
3. Kothari VM, Karnad DR and Bichile LS.
non dengue. J Neurol Sci 2008; 269: 41-8.
Tropical infections in the ICU. J Assoc
Physicians India 2006; 54: 291-8.

Thank you for copying data from http://www.arastirmax.com