1.The use of an in-house biotin-avidin linked immunosorbent assay to detect Aspergillus antigens in sera of immunocompromised patients.
S Abdul Samad ; H Yusoff ; S A Fadilah
The Medical journal of Malaysia 2001;56(1):32-8
A biotin-avidin-linked immunosorbent assay was developed to detect Aspergillus antigens in sera of immunocompromised patients. The assay was based on a double antibody sandwich ELISA using polyclonal antibodies raised against water-soluble antigens of Aspergillus fumigatus. Aspergillus antigens were positive in sera of 9 of 16 (56%) patients who were studied prospectively and in 13 of 73 (19%) patients studied retrospectively. The 9 prospectively studied patients who were antigen positive were febrile neutropenic hematological malignancy patients who exhibited a high risk of acquiring invasive aspergillosis.
Antigens
;
assay
;
Aspergillus
;
Immunocompromised Host
;
Biotin
2.Invasive aspergillosis--a rabbit model.
S Abdul Samad ; M S Yasin ; G Arumugham ; K L Yap
The Malaysian journal of pathology 1993;15(2):119-23
An invasive aspergillosis model in rabbits was attempted using 3 concentrations of A. fumigatus conidia. Conidia concentrations of 1 x 10(6), 1 x 10(7) and 1 x 10(8) were inoculated intravenously into rabbits. The severity of infection was directly proportional to the inoculum size of the conidia. Aspergillus fumigatus was isolated from livers, kidneys, spleens, hearts and lungs of infected rabbits at a rate of 82%, 75%, 57%, 54% and 32% respectively. Cultures of urine specimens taken by bladder tap were positive for A. fumigatus in 30% of the rabbits tested. Blood cultures using the Bactec Fungal System (Becton Dickinson Corp., USA) failed to isolate A. fumigatus in 20 rabbits with biopsy-proven invasive apergillosis. Active infection with high fungal tissue burden occurred between 2-4 days after infection in rabbits inoculated with 1 x 10(7) conidia.
Lower case ecks
;
Infection as complication of medical care
;
Models
;
Aspergillosis
;
Invasive
3.College of Radiology, Academy of Medicine of Malaysia position on whole body screening CT scans in healthy asymptomatic individuals (2008)
ELM Ho ; BJJ Abdullah ; AAL Tang ; AJ Nordin ; AR Nair ; GCC Lim ; H Samad-Cheung ; KH Ng ; S Ponnusamy ; SF Abbas ; Bux SI ; S Arasaratnam ; YF Abdul Aziz ; S Venugopal ; Z Musa ; Z Abdul Manaf
Biomedical Imaging and Intervention Journal 2008;4(4):1-5
To date, the College of Radiology (CoR) does not see any clear benefit in performing whole body screening
computed tomography (CT) examinations in healthy asymptomatic individuals. There are radiation risk issues in CT and principles of screening should be adhered to. There may be a role for targeted cardiac screening CT that derives calcium score, especially for asymptomatic medium-risk individuals and CT colonography when used as part of a strategic programme for colorectal cancer screening in those 50 years and older. However, population based screening CT examinations may become appropriate when evidence emerges regarding a clear benefit for the patient outweighing the associated radiation risks.