1.Pediatric multiple sclerosis is similar to adult-onset form in Asia.
Heng Thay Chong ; Patrick C.K. Li * ; Benjamin Ong ** ; Kwang Ho Lee *** ; Ching Piao Tsai **** ; Bhim S. Singhal ***** ; Naraporn Prayoonwiwat ****** ; Chong Tin Tan
Neurology Asia 2007;12(1):37-40
Pediatric-onset multiple sclerosis is underreported because of difficulty in diagnosis and assessment. In Western series, pediatric-onset disease showed significant differences from adult-onset disease with higher female preponderance, polysymptomatic in onset, frequent systemic manifestation in relapses, higher relapse rate, but less disability, and fewer lesions in brain magnetic resonance imaging. Multiple sclerosis manifests differently in Asians, yet there was no large series of pediatric-onset multiple sclerosis reported. We found that pediatric-onset disease in Asians showed greater similarity with adult-onset disease without the reported differences in female preponderance, relapse rate, and magnetic resonance imaging findings. There were also similar proportion and clinical features in optico-spinal form, and long spinal cord lesions were common in both groups. The significant difference was less disability among the pediatric-onset group. Thus, although multiple sclerosis in Asia is different from Western countries, there is greater similarity between the pediatric-onset and adult-onset group in Asia.
Multiple Sclerosis
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Adult
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Asia
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Pediatric
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Cancer Relapse
2.Identification of skin bacterial profiles of early deceased bodies and the relation to post-mortem interval
Chong, C.K. ; Emamjomeh, M. ; Joseph, N. ; Siew, S.F. ; Maeda, T. ; Mustapha, N.A. ; Hoshiko, Y. ; Muthanna, A. ; Amin-Nordin, S.
Tropical Biomedicine 2024;41(No.1):109-117
Post-mortem microbiology (PMM) is an important tool in identifying possible causes of sudden
unexpected death, as an infectious cause is highly suspected. However, contamination is a major problem
in microbiology, and this has increased the difficulty determining the true pathogen that contributes to
death in post-mortem cases. Skin commensals are common contaminants in blood cultures. This study
was conducted to investigate the skin flora on early deceased bodies and observe the bacteria detected
at different post-mortem intervals (PMIs). As blood is usually drawn from the neck and femoral sites for
PMM examination, the two body sites were chosen as the sampling sites. Skin swab samples from the
neck and femoral (n=80) of each early deceased body were collected by sterile cotton swabs. DNA was
extracted from the swabs and then subjected to high-throughput 16S rRNA sequencing by using the
Illumina MiSeq platform. Staphylococcus was found to be the most dominant genus in both neck and
femoral sites. LEfSe results showed that Cutibacterium is significantly different at the neck site while
Corynebacterium is more abundant at femoral site. There are significant differences at genus level
between PMI<5H and PMI>5H at both neck and femoral sites. The findings of the present study may
act as a reference for microbiologists and forensic pathologists when mixed growth or contamination
occurs in post-mortem blood cultures.