COMPARING SYMPTOMS OF KALACHI SLEEPING SYNDROME WITH KNOWN DISEASES AND CONDITIONS TO DETERMINE CLASSIFICATION OF CAUSAL AGENT. INCIDENCE DENSITY SAMPLING CALCULATIONS
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Date
2020
Authors
Zhalmagambetov, B.
Crape, Byron
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
International conference "MODERN PERSPECTIVES FOR BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES: FROM BENCH TO BEDSIDE”; National Laboratory Astana
Abstract
Introduction. In 2011some of the residents of Kalachi were afflicted with a sudden acute syndrome,
where they would abruptly fall into an immediate abnormal sleep. These episodes of losing consciousness
could happen anywhere and anytime. By the end of 2015, news reports estimated than 1out of
every 4 residents had developed this syndrome. Both children and adults were afflicted. Males and females
were equally affected with no gender preference. The overall purpose of the study is to characterize
signs and symptoms of the sleeping syndrome to confirm or reject the likely classification of causal
agents, based on the various hypotheses. Those include viruses, fungi, bacteria, chemicals, radiation,
mass sociogenic illness, and gases such as carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide intoxications. Second
purpose will be to assess the risks of developing the syndrome 1st,2nd and 3rd times through incidence
density sampling calculations.
Methods: Analyses on comparisons and contrasts with signs and symptoms and frequencies of signs
and symptoms of the Kalachi sleeping syndrome with those produced by various potential causal agents,
as reported in the published scientific literature. The statistical package SPSS was utilized for data management
and statistical applications. Analyses on the risks (overall hazard) of developing disease the first
time versus the second or third time, to determine if the sleeping syndrome conveyed any “immunity”,
utilized a probabilistic theoretical method sometimes utilized in survival analysis related to time to episode,
called incidence density sampling.
Results: Among the leading reported symptoms were spinning head, headache followed by fatique and
memory loss, significantly less number of people reported fever. The probability of getting 1st episode
equals to 0.2014 and 2nd episode equals to 0.3314. There is a statistically significant high chances to get
2nd episode if one already had a previous case (p=0.005). Finally, for the 3rd episode equals to 0.2615.
Conclusion: Symptomatically and in line with the previous household investigation current hypothesis
of incapacitant water transmission seems reasonable. Infectious nature of the cause is less likely due to
absence of immunity after the first exposure as it is evidenced from density sampling calculations.
Description
Keywords
public health, survival analysis, biostatistics, outbreak investigation, Research Subject Categories::MEDICINE