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Orang Asli (Indigenous Malaysian) Biomedical Bibliography AS Baer

Orang Asli (Indigenous Malaysian) Biomedical Bibliography AS Baer

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24. Bulbeck, F. Continuities in Southeast Asian evolution since the late Pleistocene. M. S.<br />

thesis, Australian National Univ., Canberra, 1981. (Anthropometric measurements of skeletal<br />

remains and prehistory analysis.)<br />

25. Burns-Cox, C., and J. MacLean. Splenomegaly and blood pressure in an <strong>Orang</strong> <strong>Asli</strong><br />

community in West Malaysia. American Heart J. 80:718-719, 1970. (On 85 River Nenggiri<br />

Temiar, male and female; found little risk of coronary heart disease; today, with pressure to turn<br />

to store-bought food, this finding is no longer secure.)<br />

26. Burns-Cox, C., Y. H. Chong, and R. Gilman. Risk factors and the absence of coronary heart<br />

disease in aborigines in West Malaysia. British Heart J. 34:953-958, 1972. (Studied 73 <strong>Orang</strong><br />

<strong>Asli</strong> men visiting Gombak hospital; found 1 case of elephantiasis; 34% had enlarged spleens; all<br />

had adequate blood pressure and nutritional status.)<br />

27. Candish, J., N. Saha, and J. W. Mak. Plasma lipids and apolipoproteins in a population of<br />

<strong>Orang</strong> <strong>Asli</strong> (‘aborigines’) from West Malaysia. Atherosclerosis 129 (1):49-51, 1997.<br />

28. Carey, I. <strong>Orang</strong> <strong>Asli</strong>. Oxford Univ. Press, London, 1976. (Contains information and<br />

misinformation on health and health care.)<br />

29. Chan, O. L., et al. The cardiorespiratory fitness and energy expenditure of the Temiars. MJM<br />

28 (4):267-272, 1974. (On 35 boys and men in the Nenggiri area of the Kelantan River; no<br />

malnutrition or yaws found.)<br />

30. Chen, P. C. Medical systems in Malaysia: cultural bases and differential use. SSM 9:171-<br />

180, 1975. (Reviews work on Semai and other E. and W. <strong>Malaysian</strong> groups; contrasts ethno- and<br />

scientific medicine.)<br />

31. Chong, Y. H., and C. W. Pang. Blood lipids in the Malayan aborigines. In: Food and<br />

Nutritional Biochemistry. P. Kanagasuntheram, ed. Proceedings 2 nd Symposium Federal Asian<br />

and Oceanian Biochemists, Kuala Lumpur, 1980. Pp. 165-168. (Found that peri-urban Semai<br />

adults had a higher risk of coronary heart disease than did forest <strong>Orang</strong> <strong>Asli</strong>.)<br />

32. Dewey, R., and A. Rudnick. An <strong>Orang</strong> <strong>Asli</strong> blowpipe with a syringe-type dart for the live<br />

capture of wild primates in Malaysia. SEAJTMPH 4 (2):285, 1973. (Studied arboreal primates to<br />

determine if they were reservoirs of a dengue virus transmissible to humans.)<br />

33. Dissanaike, A. S. Further studies on trypanosome infections in <strong>Orang</strong> <strong>Asli</strong> in West Malaysia.<br />

TRSTMH 70 (2):170-171, 1976.<br />

34. Dissanaike, A. S., H. T. Ong, and S. P. Kan. Trypanosome infections in <strong>Orang</strong> <strong>Asli</strong><br />

(Aborigines) in West Malaysia. TRSTMH 68 (4):494-495, 1974. (2 Semelai cases were found, 1<br />

at Post Iskandar, Pahang, and 1 at Kg. Guntor, Negri Sembilan.)<br />

35. Dissanaike, A. S., M. K. Kutty, and A. M. Das. Sarcocystic infection in an <strong>Orang</strong> <strong>Asli</strong>.<br />

SEAJTMPH 6 (3):400-401, 1975. (Infection found incidental to a lethal brain tumor.)<br />

36. Dissanaike, A. S., et al. Studies of parasitic infections in <strong>Orang</strong> <strong>Asli</strong> (Aborigines) in<br />

Peninsular Malaysia. MJM 32:48-55, 1977. (Studied unidentified hospital patients: 25% had<br />

amebic antibodies, 21% had E. coli infections, and over 90% had intestinal helminths; 11% had

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