Terrie E. Taylor
Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Programme
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Publication
Featured researches published by Terrie E. Taylor.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1988
Terrie E. Taylor; Malcolm E. Molyneux; Wirima Jj; Fletcher Ka; Morris K
Hypoglycemia may develop in patients with severe untreated malaria and can complicate the course of treatment with parenteral quinine as a result of quinine-induced hyperinsulinemia. Intravenous quinine is used increasingly as the therapy of choice in patients with severe malaria, most of whom are children. To assess the importance of both pretreatment and quinine-related hypoglycemia in children in an area in which the disease is endemic, we prospectively studied 95 Malawian children with falciparum malaria and altered consciousness who were treated with intravenous quinine. Nineteen patients had hypoglycemia before treatment. Seven (37 percent) died, and five of the survivors (26 percent) had neurologic sequelae. The corresponding values for patients who were initially normoglycemic were 4 percent and 4 percent, respectively (P less than 0.0001). Hypoglycemia was associated with low plasma insulin concentrations and with elevated plasma concentrations of lactate, alanine, and 5-nucleotidase--a finding that suggests that impaired hepatic gluconeogenesis but not hyperinsulinemia contributes to the pathogenesis of pretreatment hypoglycemia. All patients were given quinine dihydrochloride in a 5 percent dextrose infusion, and those with hypoglycemia received 50 percent dextrose. Hypoglycemia recurred in seven of the patients with pretreatment hypoglycemia, but these episodes were also not associated with hyperinsulinemia. Of the 76 children who were initially normoglycemic, none became hypoglycemic during the course of treatment with intravenous quinine. We conclude that hypoglycemia is a frequent complication of falciparum malaria in children and that it reflects severe disease and is associated with a poor prognosis. We did not find it to be a complication of quinine treatment.
The Lancet | 1991
Malcolm E. Molyneux; Terrie E. Taylor; JackJ. Wirima; C.G. Thomas; Sm Mansor
Chloroquine has been reported to antagonise the anti-parasitic action of quinine against Plasmodium falciparum in vitro. We looked for evidence of any such antagonism in vivo. In 123 Malawian children with cerebral malaria treated with parenteral quinine, the likelihood of survival and the rate of recovery were much the same in patients who had taken chloroquine and those who had not. In these circumstances we found no evidence of chloroquine/quinine antagonism.
JAMA | 2004
Valery Combes; Terrie E. Taylor; Irène Juhan-Vague; Jean Louis Mege; James Mwenechanya; Madalitso Tembo; Georges E. Grau; Malcolm E. Molyneux
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1992
Adrian V. S. Hill; C E Allsopp; Dominic P. Kwiatkowski; Terrie E. Taylor; S N Yates; N.M. Anstey; JackJ. Wirima; D.R. Brewster; Andrew J. McMichael; Malcolm E. Molyneux
Archive | 2012
Danny A. Milner; Jimmy Vareta; Clarissa Valim; Jacqui Montgomery; Rachel Daniels; Sarah K. Volkman; Daniel E. Neafsey; Daniel J. Park; Stephen F. Schaffner; Nira Mahesh; Kayla G. Barnes; David M. Rosen; Amanda K Lukens; Daria Van-Tyne; Roger Wiegand; Pardis C. Sabeti; Karl B. Seydel; Simon J. Glover; Steve Kamiza; Malcolm E. Molyneux; Terrie E. Taylor; Dyann Wirth
Archive | 2013
Christopher A. Moxon; Samuel C. Wassmer; Danny A. Milner; Ngawina V. Chisala; Terrie E. Taylor; Karl Seydel; Malcolm E. Molyneux; Brian Faragher; Charles T. Esmon; Colin Downey; Cheng Hock Toh; Alister Craig; Robert S. Heyderman
Archive | 2013
Douglas G. Postels; Gretchen L. Birbeck; Clarissa Valim; Kara M. Mannor; Terrie E. Taylor
Archive | 2008
Jacqui Montgomery; Steve Kamiza; Celine Carret; Al Ivens; Nicholas H. Hunt; Terrie E. Taylor; Malcolm E. Molyneux; Alister Craig
Archive | 2006
Rachel N. Bronzan; Susan Lewallen; Nicholas V Beare; Malcolm E Molyneux; M. Chagomerana; Terrie E. Taylor
The Lancet | 2001
Felix I D Konotey-Ahulu; A. Pain; K. Oscar; Kevin Marsh; David J. Roberts; Stephen J. Rogerson; Malcolm E. Molyneux; Terrie E. Taylor
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Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Programme
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