Pascale Y. Dettwiller
Flinders University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pascale Y. Dettwiller.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2016
Jackson Thomas; Christine F. Carson; Greg M. Peterson; Shelley F. Walton; Katherine A. Hammer; Mark Naunton; Rachel Davey; Tim Spelman; Pascale Y. Dettwiller; Greg Kyle; Gabrielle Cooper; Kavya E. Baby
Globally, scabies affects more than 130 million people at any time. In the developed world, outbreaks in health institutions and vulnerable communities result in a significant economic burden. A review of the literature demonstrates the emergence of resistance toward classical scabicidal treatments and the lack of effectiveness of currently available scabicides in reducing the inflammatory skin reactions and pyodermal progression that occurs in predisposed patient cohorts. Tea tree oil (TTO) has demonstrated promising acaricidal effects against scabies mites in vitro and has also been successfully used as an adjuvant topical medication for the treatment of crusted scabies, including cases that did not respond to standard treatments. Emerging acaricide resistance threatens the future usefulness of currently used gold standard treatments (oral ivermectin and topical permethrin) for scabies. The imminent development of new chemical entities is doubtful. The cumulative acaricidal, antibacterial, antipruritic, anti-inflammatory, and wound healing effects of TTO may have the potential to successfully reduce the burden of scabies infection and the associated bacterial complications. This review summarizes current knowledge on the use of TTO for the treatment of scabies. On the strength of existing data for TTO, larger scale, randomized controlled clinical trials are warranted.
Journal of pharmacy practice and research | 2012
Joseph De Zylva; Mark Naunton; Ferenc Szabo; Pascale Y. Dettwiller
To investigate adherence to venous thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis guidelines in patients who developed VTE within 90 days of hospital discharge.
BMJ Open | 2018
Jackson Thomas; Rachel Davey; Gm Peterson; Christine F. Carson; Shelley F. Walton; Tim Spelman; Tom Calma; Pascale Y. Dettwiller; Jacinta Tobin; Faye McMillan; Paul Collis; Mark Naunton; Sam Kosari; Julia Christenson; Andrew Bartholomaeus; John McEwen; Peter Fitzpatrick; Kavya E. Baby
Introduction In remote Aboriginal communities in Australia, scabies affects 7 out of 10 children before their first birthday. This is more than six times the rate seen in the rest of the developed world. Scabies infestation is frequently complicated by bacterial infection, leading to the development of skin sores and other more serious consequences, such as septicaemia and chronic heart and kidney diseases. Tea tree oil (TTO) has been used as an antimicrobial agent for several decades with proven clinical efficacy. Preclinical investigations have demonstrated superior scabicidal properties of TTO compared with widely used scabicidal agents, such as permethrin 5% cream and ivermectin. However, current data are insufficient to warrant a broad recommendation for its use for the management of scabies because previous studies were small or limited to in vitro observations. Methods and analysis A pragmatic first trial will examine the clinical efficacy of a simple and low-cost TTO treatment against paediatric scabies and the prevention of associated secondary bacterial infections, with 1:1 randomisation of 200 participants (Aboriginal children, aged 5–16 years and living in remote Australia) into active control (permethrin 5% cream) and treatment (5% TTO gel) groups. The primary outcome for the study is clinical cure (complete resolution). Secondary outcome measures will include relief of symptoms, recurrence rate, adverse effects, adherence to treatment regimen and patient acceptability. Ethics and dissemination The project has received approvals from the University of Canberra Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC 16-133), Wurli-Wurlinjang Health Service Indigenous subcommittee and the Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory reference group. The results of this study will be published in core scientific publications, with extensive knowledge exchange activities with non-academic audiences throughout the duration of the project. Trial registration ACTRN12617000902392; Pre-results.
Archive | 2016
Jackson Thomas; C.F. Carson; Greg M. Peterson; Shelley F. Walton; Kate A. Hammer; Mark Naunton; Rachel Davey; Tim Spelman; Pascale Y. Dettwiller; Greg Kyle; Gabrielle Cooper; Kavya E. Baby
School of Clinical Sciences; Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2016
Jackson Thomas; Christine F. Carson; Greg M. Peterson; Shelley F. Walton; Katherine A. Hammer; Mark Naunton; Rachel Davey; Tim Spelman; Pascale Y. Dettwiller; Greg Kyle; Gabrielle Cooper; Kavya E. Baby
AISHE-J: The All Ireland Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education | 2014
Pascale Y. Dettwiller
The Antimicrobials 2010 Annual Meeting | 2010
Pascale Y. Dettwiller; Jackson Thomas; Gm Peterson; Ga Jacobson; Ck Narkowicz; Helen Burnet; Ceridwen Sharpe
36th SHPA National Conference | 2010
Pascale Y. Dettwiller; Joseph De Zylva; Mark Naunton; Ferenc Szabo
The 35th SHPA National Conference: Across the Divide | 2009
Hemangi Surti; Roger H. Rumble; Pascale Y. Dettwiller
The 35th SHPA National Conference | 2009
Hemangi Surti; Roger H. Rumble; Mark Naunton; Pascale Y. Dettwiller