
Science Resources RSS Feeds
|
 |
 |
 |
Research ensures 50 million vaccinated against deadly brain infection
October 07, 2009
Research at the University of Liverpool has supported the vaccination of more than 50 million people against a zoonotic brain infection that affects thousands of children across Asia every year. The infection, called Japanese encephalitis (JE), is found in pigs and wading birds and transmitted by mosquitoes in areas of Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific. The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that JE affects approximately 50,000 people a year and kills around 15,000. Those that survive the infection can be left brain damaged.
Scientists at Liverpool, in collaboration with Asian governments, the WHO and the Program for Appropriate Technology in Health (PATH), are improving understanding of the disease and developing immunisation programmes to control it, with the support of funds from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Children in poor rural communities are particularly vulnerable to the infection, but as a result of improved diagnostics and clinical management, vaccinations against the disease have now reached more than 50 million children and the programme continues across Asia.
Professor Tom Solomon, Head of the University's Brain Infection Group, said: "Japanese encephalitis invades the central nervous system and can cause seizures, paralysis and in severe cases, death. Approximately 50 per cent of people who survive the infection are left with physical and mental illness, which could include personality changes. It affects children between the ages of one to 15, but adults, including tourists to the region, can contract the disease also.
"Although we knew this disease was important, five years ago it was virtually unrecognised due to the difficulty in diagnosing cases. It causes disability more often than it causes death, but with no standard method of quantifying the disability, it was difficult for governments to make decisions on introducing vaccines. We have been developing ways of diagnosing JE and measuring the outcome of the infection, and these methods are now being used in many countries across Asia."
Previously scientists used highly specialised laboratories to grow cultures of the virus, but these facilities were not widely available across Asia. The Liverpool team, and partner institutions, have developed simple blood tests that allow medics to detect antibodies of the disease, a procedure that can be performed in hospitals and regional labs to provide accurate diagnosis.
Scientists have been working to enhance disease detection by developing surveillance guidelines, which helps medics build a database of all patients that enter hospitals with symptoms of the infection. The system allows authorities to monitor the number of people infected so that appropriate measures can be taken to protect against the disease. The team have also developed a standard method of quantifying the disabilities caused by JE. This gives a profile of the disease and shows how to characterise the disabilities children may have after the infection has left the body.
As a result of these new measures many governments across Asia are beginning to effectively control JE through vaccination.
University of Liverpool
|
 |
Related Brain Infection Current Events and Brain Infection News Articles Brain Infection Current Events and Brain Infection News RSS Popular cancer drug linked to often fatal brain virus The 57-year-old lawyer in New York had handily completed the New York Times' Saturday crossword puzzle - the hardest of the week - for years. But one Saturday morning, suddenly he couldn't retrieve the words to fill in the squares.
New treatments prevent brain injury hours after stroke in rats Two novel treatments - a basic compound found in every cell in the body and an extract of green tea - may prevent brain damage caused from stroke, according to two studies in rats led by a researcher at the San Francisco VA Medical Center.
Deaths from rodent virus raise need for tracking system After the deaths of seven people from a virus transmitted through organ donation in the past two years, authorities are recommending that a tracking system be put in place to monitor patients following transplantation, and until then, physicians should be more vigilant in looking for signs of infection transmitted through transplantation.
Biologic therapies lead evolution of Crohn's treatments A variety of diseases are now treated with biologic therapies, which are derived from human tissues, because of their ability to target specific causes of inflammation compared with the general immunosuppressive effects of the chemical-based compounds that make up current therapies.
New treatment for food poisoning A team of researchers working at the University of Bristol has found a potential new treatment for listeriosis, a deadly form of food poisoning.
Anti-inflammatory drug's potentially deadly side effect found to be rare Scientists have completed an extensive study of more than 3,000 patients who received a promising anti-inflammatory drug, natalizumab, that was linked to three cases of a serious brain infection in large clinical trials halted in early 2005.
New Study Shows SARS Can Infect Brain Tissue Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), by its very name, indicates a disease of the respiratory tract. More Brain Infection Current Events and Brain Infection News Articles
|
 |
|
|
HIV-Infection in the Brain.
by Francesca Chiodi (Author)
|

|
Cinnamon Extract (500 Mg, European Cinnamon, 100 Tablets, GMP Quality)
by NutraBest, LLC
Cinnamon, it turns out, has long been used to
cure everything from athletes foot to
indigestion. Early civilizations recognized its
ability to stop bacterial growth. The Egyptians
used it in embalming. During the Middle Ages,
it was mixed with cloves and warm water, and
placed in the sick rooms of victims of the
Bubonic Plague. Cinnamon Extract supports a healthy blood
sugar level, blood lipids, and blood pressure.
According to some studies, cinnamon may
improve blood glucose, cholesterol, blood
lipids, and blood pressure. The studies also
showed that cinnamon may lower levels of
fasting glucose, triglycerides, LDL cholesterol
and total cholesterol. Recent research indicates that cinnamon can
have favorable effects on brain function. That antiseptic power of the spice could also
account...
|

|
Inflammatory Diseases of the Brain (Medical Radiology / Diagnostic Imaging)
by S. Hähnel (Editor), Michael Knauth (Editor)
This book provides a comprehensive overview of inflammatory brain diseases from a neuroradiological point of view, encompassing both infectious (e.g., viral encephalitis and pyogenic brain abscess) and non-infectious (e.g., multiple sclerosis) diseases. Neuroimaging contributes greatly to the differentiation of infectious and noninfectious brain diseases and to the distinction between brain inflammation and other diseases. In order to ensure a standardized approach throughout the book, each chapter is subdivided into three principal sections: epidemiology, clinical presentation and therapy; imaging; and differential diagnosis. A separate chapter addresses technical and methodological issues and imaging protocols. All of the authors are recognized experts in their fields, and numerous...
|

|
New Body Herbal Birth Formula: "GEM" (GEMINI)
by New Body Products
We live in a world that has four seasons, and each season is reproduced in the same manner from year to year. The as the earth rotates around the sun in conjunction with the atmosphere to produce plant growth. That is why the Iron producing plants are stronger at certain times of the year, and the same with Zinc, Potassium, Magnesium, Calcium, Copper, and other body-building foods which we get from the soil.
Since we are not twelve-month babies, our bodies have to adjust to this twelve-month system. Some minerals we obtain naturally, while others we get from food. What it really comes down to is the human body breaks down because of deficiencies we were born with. Organs like the Head, Skin, Kidney, Liver, Spleen, Back, Teeth, Colon, Eyes, Brain, etc., slowly break down, because of the...
|

|
In Defense of the Brain: Current Concepts in the Immunopathogenesis and Clinical Aspects of Cns Infections
by PK Peterson (Editor), Jack S Remington (Editor)
Univ. of Minnesota, MN. Review of major topics in neuroimmunology, and the clinical management of major infectious diseases of the central nervous system. For clinicians. 35 contributors, 30 U.S. DNLM: Central Nervous System Diseases--etiology.
|

|
IMMUNOLOGY OF NERVOUS SYSTEM INFECTIONS, Volume 59 (Progress in Brain Research)
by Author Unknown (Editor)
|

|
Rheumatoid Arthritis: The Infection Connection {Targeting and Treating the Cause of Chronic Illness}
by Katherine M. Poehlmann (Author)
Foreword by Dr. Harold W. Clark, author of "Why Arthritis?" Appendices by Dr. Joseph Mercola (mercola.com) and Dr. Garth Nicolson (Institute for Molecular Medicine) Definitions of terms ****************************** EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW BEFORE CONSULTING YOUR DOCTOR! ****************************** A research scientist and former arthritis sufferer outlines a proven treatment that could banish your arthritis pain forever. This well-documented study presents evidence that rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and other chronic illnesses are caused by microbial infection. When the infection triggers allergic reactions, it appears that the body's immune system has turned on itself. Once the cause of the infection and allergies are identified and removed,...
|
|
|
Brain in Pediatric AIDS: Proceedings of the Conference on Brain And Behavior in Pediatric HIV Infection, New York, Ny, July 24-25, 1989
by Piotr B. Kozlowski (Contributor)
|
|
|
Vaccinating Against Brain Syndromes: The Campaign Against Measles and Rubella (Monographs in Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Vol 9)
by Ernest M. Gruenberg (Editor), Carol Lewis (Editor), Stephen E. Goldston (Editor)
In this book, the public health experts who lead the campaign against measles and rubella discuss the epidemiology of these diseases, their deleterious effect on the brain, and the development of vaccines to control their spread. After evaluating the various immunization policies, programs, and strategies developed in the United States, the book considers how global eradication of these two viruses might be approached.
|
|
|
HIV triggers brain loss despite antiviral therapy: heavy drinking exacerbates condition.(Clinical Rounds): An article from: Family Practice News
by Mitchel L. Zoler (Author)
This digital document is an article from Family Practice News, published by International Medical News Group on September 1, 2003. The length of the article is 539 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details Title: HIV triggers brain loss despite antiviral therapy: heavy drinking exacerbates condition.(Clinical Rounds) Author: Mitchel L. Zoler Publication: Family Practice News (Magazine/Journal) Date: September 1, 2003 Publisher: International Medical News Group Volume: 33 Issue: 17 Page: 39(1)
Distributed by Thomson...
|
|