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4 result(s)
Journal Article > ResearchFull Text

Impact of a mass vaccination campaign against a meningitis epidemic in a refugee camp

Trop Med Int Health. 1 June 1996; Volume 1 (Issue 3); 385-392.; DOI:10.1046/j.1365-3156.1996.d01-49.x
Haelterman E, Boelaert M, Suetens C, Blok L, Henkens M,  et al.
Trop Med Int Health. 1 June 1996; Volume 1 (Issue 3); 385-392.; DOI:10.1046/j.1365-3156.1996.d01-49.x
Serogroup A meningococcus epidemics occurred in refugee populations in Zaire in August 1994. The paper analyses the public health impact of a mass vaccination campaign implemented in a large refugee camp. We compared meningitis incidence rates from 2 similar camps. In Kibumba camp, vaccination was implemented early in the course of the epidemic whilst in the control camp (Katale), vaccination was delayed. At a threshold of 15 cases per 100 000 population per week an immunization campaign was implemented. Attack rates were 94 and 134 per 100,000 in Kibumba and Katale respectively over 2 months. In Kibumba, one week after crossing the threshold, 121,588 doses of vaccine were administered covering 76% of all refugees. Vaccination may have prevented 68 cases (30% of the expected cases). Despite its rapid institution and the high coverage achieved, the vaccination campaign had a limited impact on morbidity due to meningitis. In the early phase in refugee camps, the relative priorities of meningitis vaccination and case management need to be better defined.More
Journal Article > ResearchFull Text

Kashin-Beck osteoarthropathy in rural Tibet in relation to selenium and iodine status

N Engl J Med. 15 October 1998
Reyes R, Suetens C, Mathieu F, Begaux F, Zhu D,  et al.
N Engl J Med. 15 October 1998
BACKGROUND AND METHODS: Kashin-Beck disease is a degenerative osteoarticular disorder that is endemic to certain areas of Tibet, where selenium deficiency is also endemic. Because selenium is involved in thyroid hormone metabolism, we studied the relation among the serum selenium concentration, thyroid function, and Kashin-Beck disease in 575 subjects 5 to 15 years of age in 12 villages around Lhasa, Tibet, including 1 control village in which no subject had Kashin-Beck disease. Clinical, radiologic, and biochemical data were collected. RESULTS: Among the 575 subjects, 280 (49 percent) had Kashin-Beck disease, 267 (46 percent) had goiter, and 7 (1 percent) had cretinism. Of the 557 subjects in whom urinary iodine was measured, 66 percent had a urinary iodine concentration of less than 2 microg per deciliter (157 nmol per liter; normal, 5 to 25 microg per deciliter [394 to 1968 nmol per liter]). The mean urinary iodine concentration was lower in subjects with Kashin-Beck disease than in control subjects (1.2 vs. 1.8 microg per deciliter [94 vs. 142 nmol per liter], P<0.001) and hypothyroidism was more frequent (23 percent vs. 4 percent, P=0.01). Severe selenium deficiency was documented in all villages; 38 percent of subjects had serum concentrations of less than 5 ng per milliliter (64 nmol per liter; normal, 60 to 105 ng per milliliter [762 to 1334 nmol per liter]). When age and sex were controlled for in a multivariate analysis, low urinary iodine, high serum thyrotropin, and low serum thyroxine-binding globulin values were associated with an increased risk of Kashin-Beck disease, but a low serum selenium concentration was not. CONCLUSIONS: In areas where severe selenium deficiency is endemic, iodine deficiency is a risk factor for Kashin-Beck disease.More
Journal Article > ResearchFull Text

Selenium and iodine supplementation of rural tibetan children affected by Kashin-Beck osteoarthropathy

Am J Clin Nutr. 1 July 2003; Volume 78 (Issue 1); 137-144.; DOI:10.1093/ajcn/78.1.137
Reyes R, Mathieu F, Boelaert M, Begaux F, Suetens C,  et al.
Am J Clin Nutr. 1 July 2003; Volume 78 (Issue 1); 137-144.; DOI:10.1093/ajcn/78.1.137
BACKGROUND
Kashin-Beck disease is an osteoarthropathy endemic in selenium- and iodine-deficient areas around Lhasa, Tibet.

OBJECTIVE
We assessed the efficacy of selenium supplementation on disease progression.

DESIGN
A double-blind, randomized controlled trial of selenium supplementation was carried out in 324 children aged 5-15 y who had Kashin-Beck disease. Two hundred eighty children received iodized oil before being randomly assigned to receive selenium or placebo, and a control group of 44 subjects was not supplemented at all. Clinical and radiologic signs, selenium status, urinary iodine, and thyroid function were evaluated at baseline and at 12 mo.

RESULTS
The frequencies of joint pain, decreased joint mobility, and radiologic abnormalities were not significantly different between the 3 groups at 12 mo. Height-for-age z scores increased significantly in the subjects who received placebo and iodine or selenium and iodine. In contrast, unsupplemented control subjects did not recover from growth retardation. Serum selenium concentrations at 12 mo were within the reference range and were significantly greater in the selenium-iodine group than in the placebo-iodine group. Serum thyroid hormone concentrations were within the reference ranges after the administration of iodine, and these values were not significantly affected by selenium supplementation.

CONCLUSIONS
The results of this study do not rule out the possibility that selenium may help to prevent the occurrence of Kashin-Beck disease. However, selenium supplementation had no effect on established Kashin-Beck disease, growth, or thyroid function once iodine deficiency was corrected. These results suggest that iodine, but not selenium, deficiency should be corrected in Tibetan children with Kashin-Beck disease.
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Journal Article > LetterFull Text

Cholera treatment in Goma

Lancet. 17 June 1995; Volume 345 (Issue 8964); 1567-1568.
Boelaert M, Suetens C, van Soest M, Henkens M, Rigal J,  et al.
Lancet. 17 June 1995; Volume 345 (Issue 8964); 1567-1568.