Medicine

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This repository contains the published and unpublished research of the Faculty of Medicine by the staff members of the faculty

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    Dengue and leptospirosis infection during the coronavirus 2019 outbreak in Sri Lanka
    (Oxford University Press, 2021) Niriella, M.A.; Ediriweera, D.S.; de Silva, A.P.; Premaratna, B.A.H.R.; Jayasinghe, S.; de Silva, H.J.
    ABSTRACT: A significant decrease in dengue fever cases and a contrasting increase in leptospirosis cases were reported for the second quarter of 2020 compared with 2019 in Sri Lanka. In the absence of significant environmental and weather-related differences to account for these changes in incidence, we investigated the possibility that the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on public health, social behaviour and the restrictions imposed during the lockdown influenced the fluctuations in dengue and leptospirosis infections. KEYWORDS: COVID-19; dengue fever; leptospirosis; pandemic; tropical infections.
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    Developing a severity index on day 4 to predict severe dengue infection in adults
    (Sri Lanka Medical Association, 2012) Wijewantha, H.S.; Premaratna, R.; Nishad, A.A.N.; Mabharana, I.D.M.; de Silva, A.P.; Waraketiya, P.R.; Niriella, M.A.; de Silva, H.J.
    INTRODUCTION: Dengue causes high morbidity and mortality among adults in Sri Lanka. Early prediction of severe illness would help to reduce morbidity and mortality. Studies to identify predictors of severe dengue in adults are sparse. AIMS: To identify predictors of severe dengue infection by the fourth day of illness. Methods: Symptoms, signs and investigation results on the 4th day of illness were compared between two groups of patients with serologically confirmed dengue over 6 months from 1st of March 2011; Group A (severe illness: evidence of fluid leakage, compensated shock, profound shock). Group B (non-severe illness). RESULTS: Of 117 adults 9meanage 32 yrs (SD= 13.3) and 95 males) 27 fell into Group A and 90 into group B. On day 4 of illness serum aminotransferases (AST and ALT) were significantly higher in Group A than group B [AST: 260 iu/1 (SD=168.8] vs 145 iu/l(SD 135.11), p=0.005; ALT: 247 iu/1 (SD= 161.5) vs 105 iu/1 (SD= 91.5), p=0.002]. Overall AST (r=0.3, p=0.038) and ALT (r=0.3, p=0.045) had a positive correlation with haematocrit (PCV). An index was developed using stepwi-se multivariate discriminant function analysis to predict severe infection by the 4th day. A severity Index, [(0.082 x PCVD4) + (0.02 x PlateIetD4) + (-0.006 x ASTD4) -3.677] of <-0.258 predicted severe infection with 73.7 % specificity, 73.8% sensitivity, 56% positive predictive value and 86% negative predictive value. CONCLUSIONS: A severity index <-0.258 calculated on the 4th day of illness may predict severe infection among adult dengue patients. This must now be validated prospectively.
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