1.Morphology and Phylogeny of Neoscytalidium orchidacearum sp. nov. (Botryosphaeriaceae).
Shi Ke HUANG ; Narumon TANGTHIRASUNUN ; Alan J L PHILLIPS ; Dong Qin DAI ; Dhanushka N WANASINGHE ; Ting Chi WEN ; Ali H BAHKALI ; Kevin D HYDE ; Ji Chuan KANG
Mycobiology 2016;44(2):79-84
A coelomycete with characters resembling the asexual morphs in the family Botryosphaeriaceae was isolated from a fallen leaf of an orchid collected in Thailand. Morphological and phylogenetic analyses placed the strain in Neoscytalidium. Phylogenetic relationships among Neoscytalidium species were inferred by analyzing internal transcribed spacers and large subunit of rRNA sequence data and indicate that our strain is a new species, which is introduced and illustrated herein as Neoscytalidium orchidacearum sp. nov.
Humans
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Phylogeny*
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Thailand
2.Molecular Characterization of Hantavirus Isolated from Bandicota indica Captured in Indonesia and Thailand.
Yong Kyu CHU ; Longzhu CUI ; Dae Yong SONG ; Young Dae WOO ; Ho Wang LEE
Journal of the Korean Society of Virology 2000;30(3):203-210
No Abstract Available.
Animals
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Hantavirus*
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Indonesia*
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Murinae*
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Thailand*
3.Acupuncture in Thailand.
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2010;30(9):752-754
The article introduces the developing history of acupuncture-moxibustion in Thailand. Acupuncture-moxibustion has a long history in Thailand. Although its development with many twists and turns, it has always been popular among Thai. It is adopted by many private clinics, pharmacies and general hospitals nowadays. And there also exists 2 specialized hospitals of Chinese medicine. Undergraduate education has already been carried on by 2 colleges of Chinese medicine in Thailand through cooperation with Chinese universities of TCM. And departments of Chinese medicine have been set up in many comprehensive universities with the help of the Chinese side. Short-term training courses on acupuncture-moxibustion for biomedicine doctors have also been held by the Health Ministry of Thailand. Acupuncture now is undergoing a rapidly extension in Thailand. However, there are still a lot of problems crying out for solutions.
Acupuncture
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education
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Acupuncture Therapy
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Humans
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Thailand
4.Traditional medicinal plants for arthropod-borne diseases of five countries in Lancang-Mekong region:a review.
Er-Wei HAO ; An-Ran XIE ; Yan-Ting WEI ; Xiao-Lu CHEN ; Zheng-Cai DU ; Xiao-Tao HOU ; Jia-Gang DENG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2021;46(24):6303-6311
Arthropod-borne diseases, such as malaria and dengue fever, have frequently beset five countries(Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, and Thailand) in the tropical rainy Lancang-Mekong region, which pose a huge threat to social production and daily life. As a resort to such diseases, chemical drugs risk the resistance in plasmodium, non-availability for dengue virus, and pollution to the environment. Traditional medicinal plants have the multi-component, multi-target, and multi-pathway characteristics, which are of great potential in drug development. Exploring potential medicinals for arthropod-borne diseases from traditional medicinal plants has become a hot spot. This study summarized the epidemiological background of arthropod-borne diseases in the Lancang-Mekong region and screened effective herbs from the 350 medicinal plants recorded in CHINA-ASEAN Traditional Medicine. Based on CNKI, VIP, and PubMed, the plants for malaria and dengue fever and those for killing and repelling mosquitoes were respectively sorted out. Their pharmacological effects and mechanisms were reviewed and the material basis was analyzed. The result is expected to serve as a reference for efficient utilization of medicinal resources, development of effective and safe drugs for malaria and dengue fever, and the further cooperation between China and the other five countries in the Lancang-Mekong region.
Animals
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Culicidae
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Malaria
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Plants, Medicinal
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Plasmodium
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Thailand
5.A preliminary study on insects associated with pig (Sus scrofa) carcasses in Phitsanulok, northern Thailand.
Vitta Apichat ; Pumidonming Wilawan ; Tangchaisuriya Udomsak ; Poodendean Chanasorn ; Nateeworanart Saengchai
Tropical biomedicine 2007;24(2):1-5
preliminary study on insects associated with pig carcasses was conducted in Phitsanulok, northern Thailand. Five decomposition stages of pig carcasses were categorized: fresh (0-1 day after death), bloated (2 days after death), active (3 days after death), advanced (4- 6 days after death) and dry (7-30 days after death). The arthropod species collected from the corpses in the field sites were mainly classified belonging to two orders and nine families, namely order Diptera (family Calliphoridae: Chrysomya rufifacies and Chrysomya megacephala, family Muscidae: Musca domestica, family Faniidae: Fannia canicularis, family Sarcophagidae: Parasarcophaga ruficornis and family Piophilidae: Piophila casei,) and order Coleoptera (family Dermestidae: Dermestes maculatus, family Histeridae: Hister sp., family Cleridae: Necrobia rufipes and family Trogidae: Trox sp). The forensically dominant fly was C. rufifacies, while the beetle was D. maculatus. The beetles associated with pig carcasses found in this study are first reported in Phitsanulok, Thailand. In addition, ants, bees, spiders and millipedes were also associated with the carcasses. These findings may provide data for further use in legal investigations in Thailand.
Family
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Swine
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Thailand
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Cessation of life
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seconds
6.The status and development of acupuncture in northern Thailand.
Peidong HUANG ; Ailing CHEN ; Nan LUO ; Wenjie ZHENG ; Kai YUAN ; Wei YI ; Nenggui XU
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2018;38(9):989-992
To introduce the status and development of acupuncture in Thailand, and elaborate on the development of acupuncture education and acupuncture clinics in northern Thailand. It is pointed out that there are still a small number of Chinese medicine clinics in northern Thailand, a shortage of college acupuncturists, and there is no traditional Chinese medicine themes Confucius Institute and other issues. The author considered that through the cultivation of acupuncture skills and diagnosis and treatment ability, the development of Chinese medicine graduate education, the establishment of Confucius Institute of traditional Chinese medicine, to expand the influence of acupuncture in northern Thailand, hoping to provide references for the cooperation and exchanges between China and Thailand in acupuncture .
Acupuncture Therapy
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
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Thailand
7.Description of a male Gnathostoma spinigerum recovered from a Thai woman with meningoencephalitis.
Soon Hyung LEE ; Sung Tae HONG ; Jong Yil CHAI
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 1988;26(1):33-38
A coiled nematode, which was removed surgically from a Thai woman, was consulted to the authors in July 1987. She was known to suffer from meningoencephalitis since she was in Thailand. Numerous eosinophils were detected from her CSF. The worm was 12.3 mm long and 0.9 mm wide. It had a head bulb beset with eight rows of spines, a cervical constriction, esophagus, cervical sacs, dark intestine and testis. Cuticle of anterior half of the worm was covered with numerous spines. The spines at anterior part was stout and had 3-4 tips, but they became slender, shorter, single tipped and sparser and finally they disappeared posteriorly. Cuticular spines reappeared at tail which had 4 pairs of pedunculated papillae. By above morphological characteristics, the worm was identified as an adult male of Gnathostoma spinigerum. The present case is the first authentic case of imported intracranial gnathostomiasis in Korea, although clinical informations of the case were obtained limitedly.
parasitology-helminth-nematoda
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encephalitis
;
gnathostomiasis
;
Gnathostoma spinigerum
;
case report
;
Thailand
8.Morphological Characteristics and Phylogenetic Trends of Trematode Cercariae in Freshwater Snails from Nakhon Nayok Province, Thailand.
Thapana CHONTANANARTH ; Thanawan TEJANGKURA ; Napat WETCHASART ; Cherdchay CHIMBURUT
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2017;55(1):47-54
The prevalence of cercarial infection in freshwater snails and their evolutionary trends were studied in Nakhon Nayok province, Thailand. A total of 2,869 individual snails were examined for parasitic infections. The results showed that 12 snail species were found to host larval stages of trematodes with an overall prevalence of 4.7%. The infected specimens included 7 types at the cercarial stage; cercariae, megalurous cercariae, echinostome cercariae, furcocercous cercariae, parapleurolophocercous cercariae, virgulate cercariae, and xiphidiocercariae. Regarding molecular identification, ITS2 sequence data of each larval trematode were analyzed, and a dendrogram was constructed using the neighbor-joining method with 10,000 replicates. The dendrogram was separated into 6 clades (order/family), including Echinostomatida/Echinostomatidae, Echinostomatida/Philophthalmidae, Opisthorchiida/Heterophyidae, Plagiorchiida/Prosthogonimidae, Plagiorchiida/Lecithodendriidae, and Strigeatida/Cyathocotylidae. These findings were used to confirm morphological characteristics and evolutionary trends of each type of cercariae discovered in Nakhon Nayok province. Furthermore, this investigation confirmed that the ITS2 data of cercariae could be used to study on phylogenetic relationships or to determine classification of this species at order and/or family level when possible.
Cercaria*
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Classification
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Fresh Water*
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Humans
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Methods
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Prevalence
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Snails*
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Thailand*
9.Costs and Effectiveness of Ciprofloxacin and Ceftriaxone in Treatment of Typhoid Fever in Children in Thailand
Wannee Limpitikul ; Phechnoy Singchungchai
International Journal of Public Health Research 2013;3(1):192-197
The burden of typhoid fever remains high in impoverished settings, and increasing antibiotic resistance is making treatment costly. The purposes of this study were: to compare the costs and the effectiveness of typhoid programs between oral and injection treatments in pediatric patients at Songkhla Hospital. This study was an incidence-based cost-of-illness analysis from providers’ perspective. Micro-costing approach was employed for calculating patient-specific data. The study was conducted in Songkhla Hospital in the southern part of Thailand from 2009 to 2010. The total number of the cases was 78. Patients taking antibiotics for 48 hours, and those suspected of having complicated typhoid fever like peritonitis, ileus, toxic encephalopathy were excluded. We collected and reviewed medical records. In all provisionally selected children, blood was drawn for complete blood count, widal test and blood culture. The statistics used in data analysis were descriptive statistics and the cost-effectiveness of typhoid treatment with the two methods was compared using independent t-test. The results of the study revealed that the average cost of typhoid treatment with oral Ciprofloxacin calculated with DRG was 3,301.88 baht which was lower than that of injection Ceftriaxone treatment calculated with DRG (3,615.05 baht). When the operation costs were considered, the results of the study remained the same, i.e. the treatment cost of typhoid with oral Ciprofloxacin was two times lower than that with injection Ceftriaxone. The average cost of the oral treatment was 2,844.45 baht, and that of the injection treatment was 5,303.19 baht. Regarding the effectiveness of typhoid treatment with Ciprofloxacin measured from the time the fever was reduced, it was found that the body temperature of the two methods of treatment were used was not significantly different (p<.05). The patients on oral medications had a fever for an average of 3.36 days while those on injection treatment had a fever for an average of 3.76 days. However, the lengths of stay (LOS) of the two groups of patients were significantly different. The results of this study showed that the cost-effectiveness of oral treatment was better than injection. Bedside, the patient and caregiver spent less time when oral treatment was administered than when injection treatment was used. Therefore, the direct cost for treatment was reduced and the indirect cost as a result from LOS was also reduced. Above all, the patient did not get pain from injection while the effectiveness of fever reduction was not different.
Costs and Cost Analysis
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Ciprofloxacin
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Ceftriaxone
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Typhoid Fever
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Child
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Thailand
10.Materia medica resources benefits Lancang-Mekong River:a new approach for sub-regional cooperation on traditional medicine.
Zhi-Yong LI ; Hao-Yue LI ; Xiao-Bo ZHANG ; Zi-Jun ZHANG ; Jing MU ; Yuan-Chen ZHAO ; Ping SONG ; Lu-Qi HUANG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2021;46(24):6295-6302
Lancang-Mekong Cooperation is a new type of subregional cooperation mechanism initiated and built by China and other five countries of the Lancang-Mekong subregion, namely Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam. Countries in the Lancang-Mekong subregion are geographically and culturally connected, and they have nurtured their unique traditional medicine. By combing the history of traditional medicine exchanges between China and other Lancang-Mekong countries and their progress of modern research, this paper summarized the challenges and opportunities of traditional medicine cooperation in the Lancang-Mekong subregion. It has been found that many regional cooperation mechanisms coexist for a long time in the Lancang-Mekong subregion and the medicinal resources are abundant. However, the degree of their development and utilization varies, and modern scientific research is insufficient. Lancang-Mekong Cooperation has provided a strong support for integrating the advantageous resources in Lancang-Mekong subregion countries and making progress together. Focusing on the development and protection of medicinal resources, this paper puts forward a new path of cooperation in the intellectual property rights and characteristic seed resource protection, the compilation of universal herbal pharmacopoeia in various countries, the research and development of public health products, and the construction of traditional herbal industry bases, thus enabling the traditional medicine to better protect the public health and building a human health community.
China
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Humans
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Materia Medica
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Medicine, Traditional
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Rivers
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Thailand