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Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 2001

Diethylene glycol poisoning in Gurgaon, India, 1998

Jagvir Singh; A. K. Dutta; Shashi Khare; N.K. Dubey; A. K. Harit; N.K. Jain; T.C. Wadhwa; Sunil Gupta; A.C. Dhariwal; D. C. Jain; Bhatia R; Jotna Sokhey

OBJECTIVE To discover the cause of acute renal failure in 36 children aged 2 months to 6 years who were admitted to two hospitals in Delhi between 1 April and 9 June 1998. METHODS Data were collected from hospital records, parents and doctors of the patients, and district health officials. Further information was obtained from house visits and community surveys; blood and stool samples were collected from other ill children, healthy family members and community contacts. Samples of drinking-water and water from a tube-well were tested for coliform organisms. FINDINGS Most of the children (26/36) were from the Gurgaon district in Haryana or had visited Gurgaon town for treatment of a minor illness. Acute renal failure developed after an episode of acute febrile illness with or without watery diarrhoea or mild respiratory symptoms for which the children had been treated with unknown medicines by private medical practitioners. On admission to hospital the children were not dehydrated. Median blood urea concentration was 150 mg/dl (range 79-311 mg/dl) and median serum creatinine concentration was 5.6 mg/dl (range 2.6-10.8 mg/dl). Kidney biopsy showed acute tubular necrosis. Thirty-three children were known to have died despite being treated with peritoneal dialysis and supportive therapy. CONCLUSION Cough expectorant manufactured by a company in Gurgaon was found to be contaminated with diethylene glycol (17.5% v/v), but a sample of acetaminophen manufactured by the same company tested negative for contamination when gas-liquid chromatography was used. Thus, poisoning with diethylene glycol seems to be the cause of acute renal failure in these children.


Tubercle and Lung Disease | 1997

Serological diagnosis of childhood tuberculosis by estimation of mycobacterial antigen 60-specific immunoglobulins in the serum

Sunil Gupta; Bhatia R; K.K. Datta

SETTING An ELISA assay based on mycobacterial antigen 60 (A60) for the estimation of specific immunoglobulins in the serum has been used successfully for the rapid diagnosis of tuberculosis in studies done predominantly in Western countries. In a recent Indian study, encouraging results were reported in adult tuberculosis. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the utility of this ELISA test for rapid diagnosis of different clinical forms of tuberculosis in Indian children. DESIGN ELISA test based on mycobacterial A60 was used to estimate specific IgM, IgA and IgG antibodies in the sera obtained from 452 cases of tuberculosis and 161 controls in the paediatric population of Delhi, India. RESULTS Of the 161 controls, only 7.4% were positive for IgM, 4.3% for IgG, 3.7% for IgA and 8% when a combination of IgM and IgA was considered. Of 58 cases of definite pulmonary tuberculosis, 55.2% were positive for IgM, 32.7% for IgG, 36.2% for IgA and a high positivity of 72.4% was seen when IgA and IgM estimations were combined. The corresponding figures in 150 cases of definite extrapulmonary tuberculosis were 57.3%, 36.6%, 38% and 76.6%. A relatively weak serology was observed in 244 cases of probable tuberculosis. A very high positivity (95%) was seen in acid-fast bacilli-positive cases of tuberculosis. CONCLUSIONS Our findings point to a very good specificity (92%) and a reasonably good sensitivity (75.5%) of the test when combined IgM and IgA antibody titres are considered in the diagnosis of childhood tuberculosis.


Epidemiology and Infection | 1999

Diphtheria is declining but continues to kill many children: analysis of data from a sentinel centre in Delhi, 1997

Jagvir Singh; A. K. Harit; D. C. Jain; R. C. Panda; K. N. Tewari; Bhatia R; Jotna Sokhey

Although diphtheria is declining in Delhi, case fatality rates (CFRs) are rising. In 1997, of 143 clinically suspected cases admitted to the Infectious Diseases Hospital 45 (32%) died. We examined their records to understand the epidemiology and reasons for high CFRs. About 53% of cases were from Delhi; they were not limited to any particular area. All the deaths and 92% (131/143) of cases occurred in children below 10 years of age. Only 12% of cases had received one or more doses of DPT. Muslims contributed significantly more cases than Hindus. CFRs were significantly higher in young (P = 0.03) and unvaccinated (P = 0.01) children and in those who received antitoxin on the third day of illness or later (P = 0.03). The study highlights the importance of improved vaccine coverage and early diagnosis and prompt administration of antitoxin in reducing CFRs for diphtheria in Delhi.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2000

Silent spread of dengue and dengue haemorrhagic fever to Coimbatore and Erode districts in Tamil Nadu, India, 1998 : need for effective surveillance to monitor and control the disease

Jagvir Singh; N. Balakrishnan; M. Bhardwaj; P. Amuthadevi; E. G. George; K. Subramani; K. Soundararajan; N. C. Appavoo; D. C. Jain; R. L. Ichhpujani; Bhatia R; Jotna Sokhey

Dengue fever (DF) or dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF) has not previously been reported in Coimbatore and Erode districts in Tamil Nadu in India. In 1998, 20 hospitalized cases of fever tested positive for dengue virus IgM and/or IgG antibodies. All of them had dengue-compatible illness, and at least four had DHF. Two of them died. Sixteen cases were below 10 years of age. The cases were scattered in 15 distantly located villages and 5 urban localities that had a high Aedes aegypti population. Although the incidence of dengue-like illness has not increased recently, almost 89% (95/107) of samples from healthy persons in the community tested positive for dengue IgG antibodies. The study showed that dengue has been endemic in the area, but was not suspected earlier. A strong laboratory-based surveillance system is essential to monitor and control DF/DHF.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2000

A severe and explosive outbreak of hepatitis B in a rural population in Sirsa district, Haryana, India: unnecessary therapeutic injections were a major risk factor

Jagvir Singh; Sunil Gupta; Shashi Khare; Bhatia R; D. C. Jain; Jotna Sokhey

Most outbreaks of viral hepatitis in India are caused by hepatitis E. This report describes an outbreak of hepatitis B in a rural population in Haryana state in 1997. At least 54 cases of jaundice occurred in Dhottar village (population 3096) during a period of 8 months; 18 (33.3%) of them died. Virtually all fatal cases were adults and tested positive for HBsAg (other markers not done). About 88% (21/24) of surviving cases had acute or persistent HBV/HCV infections; 54% (13/24) had acute hepatitis B. Many other villages reported sporadic cases and deaths. Data were pooled from these villages for analysis of risk factors. Acute hepatitis B cases had received injections before illness more frequently (11/19) than those found negative for acute or persistent HBV/HCV infections (3/17) (P = 0.01). Although a few cases had other risk factors, these were equally prevalent in two groups. The results linked the outbreak to the use of unnecessary therapeutic injections.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2000

Community studies on hepatitis B in Rajahmundry town of Andhra Pradesh, India, 1997-8: unnecessary therapeutic injections are a major risk factor.

Jagvir Singh; Bhatia R; S. K. Patnaik; Shashi Khare; Bora D; D. C. Jain; Jotna Sokhey

In Rajahmundry town in India, 234 community cases of jaundice were interviewed for risk factors of viral hepatitis B and tested for markers of hepatitis A-E. About 41% and 1.7% of them were positive for anti-HBc and anti-HCV respectively. Of 83 cases who were tested within 3 months of onset of jaundice, 5 (6%), 11 (13.3%), 1 (1.2%), 5 (6%) and 16 (19.3%) were found to have acute viral hepatitis A-E, respectively. The aetiology of the remaining 60% (50/83) of cases of jaundice could not be established. Thirty-one percent (26/83) were already positive for anti-HBc before they developed jaundice. History of therapeutic injections before the onset of jaundice was significantly higher in cases of hepatitis B (P = 0.01) or B-D (P = 0.04) than in cases of hepatitis A and E together. Other potential risk factors of hepatitis B transmission were equally prevalent in two groups. Subsequent studies showed that the majority of injections given were unnecessary (74%, 95% CI 66-82%) and were administered by both qualified and unqualified doctors.


Journal of Tropical Pediatrics | 1998

Epidemiologic Consequences of Moderate Coverage Levels of Measles Vaccine in a District Headquarter Town (Alwar) in India, 1996

Jagvir Singh; R. S. Gupta; Bora D; V. R. Meena; D. C. Jain; Shashi Khare; Bhatia R; Jotna Sokhey

This paper describes the epidemiology of measles in a medium size town (population 240,000) in India where vaccine coverage levels have remained constant at around 70 per cent in the past 7 years. A retrospective community survey covering 4023 children under 10 years old detected 252 cases of measles in the previous year. This gave an annual incidence of 6.3 per cent (95 per cent CI 5.5-7). About half of the cases occurred in vaccinated children. Only 5 per cent of the cases occurred in children below 9 months of age. This age is appropriate for routine measles immunization. Despite modest coverage levels with only 54 per cent effective vaccine (estimated by a screening method), there was a modest upward shift in the age distribution of measles cases; the median age was more than 48 months.


Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 1998

Outbreak of viral hepatitis B in a rural community in India linked to inadequately sterilized needles and syringes.

Jagvir Singh; Bhatia R; Gandhi Jc; Kaswekar Ap; Shashi Khare; Patel Sb; Oza Vb; D. C. Jain; Jotna Sokhey


Indian Pediatrics | 2001

Epidemiological characteristics of rabies in Delhi and surrounding areas, 1998

Jagvir Singh; D. C. Jain; Bhatia R; R L Ichhpujani; A. K. Harit; R. C. Panda; K. N. Tewari; Jotna Sokhey


Indian Pediatrics | 2000

Community studies on prevalence of HBsAg in two urban populations of southern India.

Jagvir Singh; Bhatia R; Shashi Khare; S. K. Patnaik; Shyamal Biswas; Sohan Lal; D. C. Jain; Jotna Sokhey

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Jagvir Singh

National Institute of Communicable Diseases

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Jotna Sokhey

National Institute of Communicable Diseases

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D. C. Jain

National Institute of Communicable Diseases

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Shashi Khare

National Centre for Disease Control

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K. K. Datta

National Institute of Communicable Diseases

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Sunil Gupta

National Institute of Communicable Diseases

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A. K. Harit

National Institute of Communicable Diseases

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Bora D

National Institute of Communicable Diseases

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Veena Mittal

National Institute of Communicable Diseases

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A.C. Dhariwal

National Institute of Communicable Diseases

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