scholarly journals Imperial Aetiologies: Violence, Sleeping Sickness, and the Colonial Encounter

2021 ◽  
pp. 175-204
Author(s):  
Emilie Taylor-Pirie

AbstractIn this chapter Taylor-Pirie examines how one particular tropical disease—sleeping sickness—was conceptualised as a form of tropical violence across a range of medical and nonmedical genres. Using the repetition of an African curse ‘owa na ntolo’ as an access point, she reveals how sensational literary depictions of sleeping sickness circulated between newspaper reports and clinical case studies, augmenting debates about racial susceptibility. Depictions of African sleeping sickness, she argues, were filtered through an emotional register that produced new aetiologies of race and illness visible in Henry Seton Merriman’s hugely popular imperial romance novel With Edged Tools (1894), as well as in medical essays and tropical travel guides. The melodramatic mode and a flexible approach to representations of disease transmission produced Africa as a place productive of illness and immorality in equal measure. Ultimately, she demonstrates how Britain’s encounters with tropical disease—fictional and nonfictional—were used to map not only the epidemiological but also the sociocultural topographies of empire.

2013 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 75-75

The case studies below are referred to in the articles “Pulmonary Hypertension in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease: Noninvasive Strategies for Patient Phenotyping and Risk Assessment” by Amresh Raina, MD, and “Hemodynamic Evaluation of Pulmonary Hypertension in Chronic Kidney Disease” by Ryan Tedford, MD, and Paul Forfia, MD, on the following pages.


Author(s):  
Luc J. Jordaens ◽  
Dominic A.M.J. Theuns

2021 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 90-92
Author(s):  
Nashwa Eltaweel ◽  
Samuel Lockley ◽  
Irshad Ahmed ◽  
Bee K Tan

Immune system changes during pregnancy could make pregnant women more susceptible to SARS-Cov-2 infection. The use of corticosteroids within obstetrics has been shown to reduce the risks of respiratory distress syndrome, intraventricular haemorrhage, necrotizing enterocolitis and neonatal death in the baby associated with premature delivery. During the COVID-19 pandemic, corticosteroids have been trialled as a treatment to dampen the ‘cytokine storm’ and associated inflammatory processes. Corticosteroids have long been known to have immunosuppressive effects that could hinder the body's ability to mount a defence against COVID-19 and thereby delaying viral clearance. In this clinical case studies, antenatal steroids for fetal lung maturation appear to be of benefit and did not result in a deterioration of maternal disease. Our clinical case studies support the current recommendations from the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists ie corticosteroids for fetal lung maturation is appropriate in patients who are suspected or have confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection.


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