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Vitamin A deficiency and its consequences : a field guide to detection and control / Alfred Sommer.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Geneva : World Health Organization, 1995.Edition: 3rd edDescription: vii, 69 pISBN:
  • 9241544783
  • 5225032621 (Russian)
Title translated: La carence en vitamine A et ses conséquences : guide pratique de dépistageet de la lutte; La carencia de vitamina A y sus consecuencias : guía práctica para la detección y el tratamientoSubject(s): NLM classification:
  • WD 110 95SO
Online resources: Abstract: A practical guide, now in its third edition, to the detection, treatment, and prevention of vitamin A deficiency and its consequences, including associated mortality, infectious morbidity, and xerophthalmia. Addressed to clinicians, nurses, and public health officials, the text has been thoroughly revised to reflect recent advances in knowledge. These include growing recognition of the importance of adequate vitamin A intake for normal child health and survival, and evidence that milder degrees of deficiency mayhave severe consequences, including increased mortality, before xerophthalmia becomes apparent in a population. In line with these advances, the guide offers advice on the detection and treatment of subclinical or marginal degrees of deficiency as well as on the emergency management of xerophthalmia and measles. The guide has six chapters. Background information is provided in the first two, which describe the biochemistry of vitamin A metabolism and explain the complex relationship between specific serum levels and the physiological consequences of deficiency. The third chapter provides a detailed guide to the clinical classification and diagnosis of xerophthalmia. Recognition of the characteristic signs and symptoms of increasingly severe disease is facilitated through the inclusion of 32 colour plates. A chapter on epidemiology concentrates on the many factors that place children, particularly those from depressed rural communities and urban slums, at risk of vitamin A deficiency. Of particular practical value is a chapter on assessment, which explains how well-conceived surveys, appropriate to local conditions, can guide the design of efficient and cost-effective interventions. A chapter on treatment provides schedules for vitamin A dosing in the emergency management of xerophthalmia, severe infectious episodes, and severe protein-energy malnutrition, and offers advice on dietary improvement, essential eye care, and the prevention of recurrence. The final chapter, on prevention, describes the wide range of options that can be followed to meet both short-term and long-term programme goals.
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Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books WHO HQ ONLINE-IRIS WD 110 95SO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 3 Available O92415447783
Books Books WHO HQ READING-RM WD 110 95SO CHI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00054947
Books Books WHO HQ READING-RM WD 110 95SO RUS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00054930
Books Books WHO HQ READING-RM WD 110 95SO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00046307
Books Books WHO HQ BORROWABLE-COLL-STACKS WD 110 95SO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 2 Available 00064053

A practical guide, now in its third edition, to the detection, treatment, and prevention of vitamin A deficiency and its consequences, including associated mortality, infectious morbidity, and xerophthalmia. Addressed to clinicians, nurses, and public health officials, the text has been thoroughly revised to reflect recent advances in knowledge. These include growing recognition of the importance of adequate vitamin A intake for normal child health and survival, and evidence that milder degrees of deficiency mayhave severe consequences, including increased mortality, before xerophthalmia becomes apparent in a population. In line with these advances, the guide offers advice on the detection and treatment of subclinical or marginal degrees of deficiency as well as on the emergency management of xerophthalmia and measles. The guide has six chapters. Background information is provided in the first two, which describe the biochemistry of vitamin A metabolism and explain the complex relationship between specific serum levels and the physiological consequences of deficiency. The third chapter provides a detailed guide to the clinical classification and diagnosis of xerophthalmia. Recognition of the characteristic signs and symptoms of increasingly severe disease is facilitated through the inclusion of 32 colour plates. A chapter on epidemiology concentrates on the many factors that place children, particularly those from depressed rural communities and urban slums, at risk of vitamin A deficiency. Of particular practical value is a chapter on assessment, which explains how well-conceived surveys, appropriate to local conditions, can guide the design of efficient and cost-effective interventions. A chapter on treatment provides schedules for vitamin A dosing in the emergency management of xerophthalmia, severe infectious episodes, and severe protein-energy malnutrition, and offers advice on dietary improvement, essential eye care, and the prevention of recurrence. The final chapter, on prevention, describes the wide range of options that can be followed to meet both short-term and long-term programme goals.

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