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Nepalese researchers identify cost-effective treatment for drug-resistant typhoid
June 27, 2007
New research carried out by researchers in Nepal has shown that a new and affordable drug, Gatifloxacin, may be more effective at treating typhoid fever than the drug currently recommended by the World Health Organisation. The study, funded by the Wellcome Trust, has implications for the treatment of typhoid particularly in areas where drug resistance is a major problem. The results are published today in the open access journal PLoS ONE. Enteric fever, of which typhoid fever is the most common form, is a major disease affecting the developing world, where sanitary conditions remain poor. The best global estimates are of at least 22 million cases of typhoid fever each year with 200,000 deaths. Drug resistance is becoming a major problem and treatment is becoming increasingly difficult, leading to patients taking longer to recover, suffering more complications and continuing to spread the disease to their family and to their community.
Clinical investigators based at Patan Hospital Lalitpur in Kathmandu, Nepal, and the Oxford University Clinical Research Unit in Vietnam have completed a study to see if they can improve the treatment for patients with typhoid fever. Kathmandu has been termed the typhoid fever capital of the world as a result of this disease remaining so common.
"Typhoid fever is a major problem in Nepal and in the developing world and drug-resistant strains are making it even more difficult to tackle," says Dr Buddha Basnyat, senior investigator on the study. "The currently recommended treatment, Cefixime, is relatively expensive and must be administered for a longer duration than is ideal. Clearly there is an urgent need for a treatment that is cost-effective and easy to administer."
The results of the study show that a cost-effective new fluoroquinolone drug, Gatifloxacin, may be a better treatment for enteric fever than Cefixime, which is currently recommended by the World Health Organisation. In addition, Salmonella enterica Typhi and Salmonella enterica serovar Paratyhpi A, the two most common bacteria to cause enteric fever, do not show resistance to Gatifloxacin, unlike for other fluoroquinolones.
"We have shown that Gatifloxacin may be better than an established drug used by many doctors around the world," says Dr Basnyat. "There is currently no resistance to the drug, and at just over US$1 dollar for a seven day treatment course is relatively inexpensive."
"This is an important study with major implications for treating disease widespread in the developing world," says Professor Jeremy Farrar from the Oxford University Clinical Research Unit in Vietnam. "It also shows the major contribution that clinical investigators in Nepal, with the experience and knowledge gained from access to thousands of patients, can help make to improving treatment for our patients and to global health."
Wellcome Trust
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Related Typhoid Current Events and Typhoid News Articles Typhoid Current Events and Typhoid News RSS TraDIS technique tackles typhoid For the first time, researchers are able to look at the need for every gene in a bacterial cell in a single experiment. The new method will transform the study of gene activity and the search for weaknesses in bacterial armouries.
New biosensor can detect bacteria instantaneously A research group from the Rovira i Virgili University (URV) in Tarragona has developed a biosensor that can immediately detect very low levels of Salmonella typhi, the bacteria that causes typhoid fever.
Typhoid fever cases in US linked to foreign travel Infection with an antimicrobial-resistant strain of typhoid fever among patients in the United States is associated with international travel, especially to the Indian subcontinent (India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh).
Vi typhoid vaccine proves highly effective in young children A new study has found that a currently available yet underused vaccine against typhoid fever is highly effective in young children and protects unvaccinated neighbors of vaccinees.
Details of bacterial 'injection' system revealed New details of the composition and structure of a needlelike protein complex on the surface of certain bacteria may help scientists develop new strategies to thwart infection.
Superbug risk to war wounded Soldiers who survive severe injuries on battlefields such as those in Iraq and Afghanistan can be at risk from developing infections of their wounds with multidrug resistant bacteria.
How much is the world spending on neglected disease research and development? The first comprehensive survey of global spending on neglected disease R&D, published in this week's PLoS Medicine, finds that just over $US 2.5 billion was invested into R&D of new products in 2007, with three diseases-HIV/AIDS, TB, and malaria-receiving nearly 80% of the total.
Defining DNA differences to track and tackle typhoid For the first time, next-generation DNA sequencing technologies have been turned on typhoid fever - a disease that kills 600,000 people each year. The results will help to improve diagnosis, tracking of disease spread and could help to design new strategies for vaccination.
Nepalese researchers identify cost-effective treatment for drug-resistant typhoid New research carried out by researchers in Nepal has shown that a new and affordable drug, Gatifloxacin, may be more effective at treating typhoid fever than the drug currently recommended by the World Health Organisation.
New bacterium discovered -- related to cause of trench fever A close cousin of the bacterium that debilitated thousands of World War I soldiers has been isolated at UCSF from a patient who had been on an international vacation. The woman, who has since recovered, suffered from symptoms similar to malaria or typhoid fever, two infections that can occur in returning travelers. More Typhoid Current Events and Typhoid News Articles
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Typhoid Mary
by Judith Walzer Leavitt (Author)
She was an Irish immigrant cook. Between 1900 and 1907, she infected twenty-two New Yorkers with typhoid fever through her puddings and cakes; one of them died. Tracked down through epidemiological detective work, she was finally apprehended as she hid behind a barricade of trashcans. To protect the public's health, authorities isolated her on Manhattan's North Brother Island, where she died some thirty years later.
This book tells the remarkable story of Mary Mallon--the real Typhoid Mary. Combining social history with biography, historian Judith Leavitt re-creates early-twentieth-century New York City, a world of strict class divisions and prejudice against immigrants and women. Leavitt engages the reader with the excitement of the early days of microbiology and brings to life...
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NOVA - Typhoid Mary: The Most Dangerous Woman in America
Starring: Artist Not Provided
Interweaving biography and social history, The Most Dangerous Woman in America tells the extraordinary story of Mary Mallon, better known as Typhoid Mary. She gained this notoriety by being the first person in North America to be identified as a healthy carrier of typhoid fever. Despite her indignant protests of innocence, she was incarcerated for years on an island in New York's East River. Mary Mallon's saga throws into vivid relief the emerging science of public health and the social, ethical, and legal dilemmas it posed to its pioneers at the turn of the twentieth century. Special DVD features include: materials and activities for educators; a link to the NOVA Web site; scene selections; closed captions; and described video for the visually impaired. On one DVD5 disc. Region...
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![Typhoid Fever Calamities Plush [Toy] [Toy]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/21tX6bZlcHL._SL160_.jpg)
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Typhoid Fever Calamities Plush [Toy] [Toy]
by Giant Microbes
What do Pericles, Alexander the Great, and William the Conqueror all have in common? Typhoid Mary knows.... Now you can collect a dozen of the most adorable viruses, bacteria, mites, worms and calamities nature ever unleashed. Disturbingly cuddly, Giant Microbes are great learning tools for parents and educators, amusing gifts for anyone with a sense of humor, or just friendly plush companions for those trying to get past their Bacillophobia. Each 5-to-7 inch doll is accompanied by an image of the not-so-cute real microbe it represents, as well as quick facts about the microbe. Antibiotics not required.
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Typhoid Mary
Typhoid Mary - S/T CD -
1. Slowly Nowhere
2. Bad Seed
3. Alone
4. Wilted Love
5. Pieces of Me
6. Yesterday's News
7. Dirty Hands
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365000 Eyes
Typhoid (Primary Contributor)
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TYPHUS, EGGS, and SOLDIERS! In this World War, our soldiers confront an ancient foe even more deadly than the enemy's panzer divisions. That foe killed between two and three million people in World War I. It is Typhus fever - a disease transmitted by the bite of the body louse, and often confused with typhoid fever because of the similarity of names. Today our troops are immunized against typhus. They are among the first troops so safeguarded in the history of the world. Such mass protection is a striking and dramatic medical triumph, yet it hinges upon a most prosaic thing - a hen's egg. For in the preparation of the new vacine against typhus fever, hen's eggs play a stellar role. In closely guarded and isolated rooms, there are great trays of these eggs. Each is fertile. Each is allowed to incubate for a time. Then, a tiny hole is carefully drilled in one end of each egg. Live typhus fever viris is injected through this opening. The live virus multiplies many times over. When the virus has grown sufficiently in the egg embryo, it is "harvested" and killed. Yes, killed with chemicals, for it is the dead typhus fever virus that forms the basis of the vacine which is used to protect our armed forces against typhus fever. ..... 1943 Parke, Davis & Company Ad, A5095.
This Item is an original Magazine ad, taken from a vintage magazine of the year indicated. The ad is suitable for framing and displaying in your home or office. The scan of this item was taken through plastic film, however it is an accurate representation of the item. The nominal size is 10.5 inches by 14 inches.
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Het Loo Wilhelmina Typhoid Apeldoorn 1902
by old-print
Old Antique Historical Victorian Prints Maps and Historic Fine Art ----------. Het Loo Wilhelmina Typhoid Apeldoorn 1902 Page From An Issue 1878 . The Illustrated London News . These Wood Engravings From Sketches, Or Early Photographs Would Make An Ideal Gift For Christmas Or Birthday . The Actual Date Is Printed On Each Page . This Engraving Is Over 120 Years Old. And Is Not A Modern Copy. These Images Are Scanned At Low Resolution For Quick Uploading And Are Much Better Than The Scanned Image.. Size Of Print Is Approx 14" X 9.1/2" If It Is Shown As Whole Page, Or Prorata.. Approx. Page Size = 16" High X 11" Wide. Ready To Matt And Frame. These Old Prints Really Look Great With Matt And Framed. . Note This Print Is From A Periodical And Has Printing On Reverse.
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![Nova: Typhoid Mary [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41FGKVJTTZL._SL160_.jpg)
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Nova: Typhoid Mary [VHS]
Starring: Nova
The notorious life of "Typhoid Mary." When six members of a wealthy family contracted typhoid fever in posh Oyster Bay, Long Island, in August 1906, one question puzzled everyone: how could such an upscale summer enclave become infected with this highly contagious "slum disease"? Hired to perform the bacterial detective work, George Soper soon discovered the source of the outbreak was Mary Mallon, a 37-year-old Irish immigrant cook he feared was a "walking typhoid fever factory." But how could this seemingly healthy woman, with no outward symptoms, infect so many people? At a time when the concept of communicable diseases was not widely understood, the story of "Typhoid Mary" pitted the new science of bacteriology against ancient terrors. Mary’s banishment to a quarantine...
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Typhoid Mary
by Anthony Bourdain (Author)
In 1906, at a prosperous Long Island summer home, a family falls ill and typhoid is diagnosed. When Dr George Soper is called in to find the source of the contagion, he notices that the household cook has gone missing. She is Mary Mallon, the woman who would become known as Typhoid Mary. Soper, sanitary engineer turned sleuth, sees Mary as his Moriarty. He finds there has been an outbreak of typhoid fever in every household she has worked in over the past decade. Mary is a 'carrier', a seemingly healthy individual who passes on her dangerous germs, sometimes with fatal consequences. Now Soper must hunt the cook down before she can infect more unsuspecting victims. A poor Irish immigrant, Mary refuses to believe that she can harbour typhoid in her strong and healthy body, and she doesn't...
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Giant Microbes: 3 Mini Typhoid
What do Pericles, Alexander the Great, and William the Conqueror all have in common? Typhoid Mary knows.... Giant Microbes are stuffed 'animals' that look like tiny microbesonly a million times actual size! Each 5-to-7 inch doll is accompanied by an image of the real microbe it represents, as well as information about the microbe.They make great learning tools for parents and educators, as well as amusing gifts for anyone with a sense of humor!
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