1.Research on the characteristics of young male heroin users at the age of 16-29 in Ha Noi
Hao Thi Minh Bui ; Vinh Quang Hoang ; Phong Quy Nguyen ; Son Minh Nguyen ; Giang Minh Le ; Tuan Minh Vu
Journal of Medical Research 2008;54(2):97-102
Background: According to statistical data of the Vietnam Ministry of Health, there were 124,223 people with positive HIV, 23,661 AIDS patients and 13,649 AIDS- related deaths up to April 30th 2007. The major transmission route is injection. Objectives: (1) To compare the characteristics of drug use in users with different time. (2) To describe the health issues and health service access of young male drug users. Subjects and method: A cross-sectional survey was carried out using a combination of medical anthropology and epidemiology methods. 1.115 young male drug users in Ha Noi between September 2004 and September 2005 were divided into 4 groups of the equivalence number, but with different drug using history. Results and conclusion: The newer drug users (within 2 years) started using drug later than the older ones, more of them started using by injecting; they transfer from smoking/sniffing to injecting as well as trying and using more different types of drugs together in shorter time than others. The proportion of HIV (+) infection in these people was higher, which states the necessity of intervention to help them enhance their knowledge to prevent HIV infection amongst themselves. Mental health care is also needed for drug users, the demand for mental health care increases with the time of drug usage.
young male heroin users
2.SCN1A Gene Mutation and Adaptive Functioning in 18 Vietnamese Children with Dravet Syndrome.
Thi Thu Hang DO ; Diem My VU ; Thi Thuy Kieu HUYNH ; Thi Khanh Van LE ; Eun Hwa SOHN ; Thieu Mai Thao LE ; Huu Hao HA ; Chi Bao BUI
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2017;13(1):62-70
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Dravet syndrome is a rare and severe type of epilepsy in infants. The heterogeneity in the overall intellectual disability that these patients suffer from has been attributed to differences in genetic background and epilepsy severity. METHODS: Eighteen Vietnamese children diagnosed with Dravet syndrome were included in this study. SCN1A variants were screened by direct sequencing and multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification. Adaptive functioning was assessed in all patients using the Vietnamese version of the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales, and the results were analyzed relative to the SCN1A variants and epilepsy severity. RESULTS: We identified 13 pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants, including 6 that have not been reported previously. We found no correlations between the presence or type of SCN1A variants and the level of adaptive functioning impairment or severity of epilepsy. Only two of nine patients aged at least 5 years had an adaptive functioning score higher than 50. Both of these patients had a low frequency of convulsive seizures and no history of status epilepticus or prolonged seizures. The remaining seven had very low adaptive functioning scores (39 or less) despite the variability in the severity of their epilepsy confirming the involvement of factors other than the severity of epilepsy in determining the developmental outcome. CONCLUSIONS: Our study expands the spectrum of known SCN1A variants and confirms the current understanding of the role of the genetic background and epilepsy severity in determining the developmental outcome of Dravet syndrome patients.
Adaptation, Psychological
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Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
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Child*
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Epilepsies, Myoclonic*
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Epilepsy
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Genetic Background
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Humans
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Infant
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Intellectual Disability
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Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction
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Population Characteristics
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Seizures
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Status Epilepticus
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Weights and Measures