1. Serological evidence of Burkholderia pseudomallei infection in U.S. Marines who trained in Australia from 2012-2014: a retrospective analysis of archived samples.
- Author
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Schully KL, Burtnick MN, Bell MG, Spall A, Mayo M, Rigas V, Chan AA, Yu K, Clark DV, Maves RC, Currie BJ, Brett PJ, and Lawler JV
- Subjects
- Australia, Burkholderia pseudomallei isolation & purification, Case-Control Studies, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay methods, Female, Humans, Male, Melioidosis epidemiology, Military Personnel statistics & numerical data, Retrospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, United States epidemiology, Melioidosis blood
- Abstract
Infection with the gram-negative bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei can result in a life-threatening disease known as melioidosis. Historically, melioidosis was a common infection in military forces serving in Southeast Asia, and it has the potential to have a serious impact on force health readiness. With the U.S. Department of Defense's increasing strategic and operational focus across the Pacific Theater, melioidosis is an increasingly important issue from a force health protection perspective. U.S. Marines deploy annually to Darwin, Australia, a "hyperendemic" region for B. pseudomallei , to engage in training exercises. In an effort to assess the risk of B. pseudomallei infection to service personnel in Australia, 341 paired samples, representing pre- and post-deployment samples of Marines who trained in Australia, were analyzed for antibodies against B. pseudomallei antigens. Serological evidence of possible deployment-related infection with B. pseudomallei was found in 13 Marines. Future prospective studies are required to further characterize the risk to service members deployed to melioidosis endemic areas.
- Published
- 2019