1. Prevalence and Phylogenetic Analysis ofOrientia tsutsugamushiin Small Mammals in Hanoi, Vietnam
- Author
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Hang T. T. Pham, Hang L. K. Nguyen, Tu C. Trang, Akio Yamada, Jiro Arikawa, Thuy N. Vu, Kozue Hotta, Huong T. Hoang, Mai T. Q. Le, Kenta Shimizu, Trang T. H. Ung, Hoa T. Nguyen, and Daisuke Hayasaka
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Orientia tsutsugamushi ,030231 tropical medicine ,Rodentia ,Human pathogen ,Scrub typhus ,Disease Vectors ,Biology ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Hospitals, Urban ,0302 clinical medicine ,Phylogenetics ,Virology ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Animals ,Phylogeny ,Phylogenetic tree ,Shrews ,Zoonosis ,Nucleic acid sequence ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Scrub Typhus ,Vietnam ,Arthropod Vector - Abstract
Rodents are important reservoirs of many human pathogens transmitted via arthropod vectors. Arthropod-borne bacteria belonging to the family Rickettsiaceae cause acute febrile diseases in humans worldwide, but the real burdens of rickettsial diseases appear to be underestimated in Hanoi, Vietnam, because differential diagnosis on the basis of clinical signs and symptoms is confounded by the presence of other tropical infectious diseases with similar signs and symptoms. To know the prevalence of bacteria of the family Rickettsiaceae among small mammals in Hanoi, 519 animals thriving in the public places were captured and examined for the presence of bacterial sequences using duplex PCR. Nucleotide sequences specific for Orientia tsutsugamushi were detected in seven samples (1.3%). Out of seven animals, two were captured in a market, whereas five were in hospitals. None of the captured small mammals tested positive for the genus Rickettsia. The nucleotide sequence analysis of the genes encoding the 47-kDa high-temperature requirement A (47-kDa HtrA) and 56-kDa type-specific antigen (TSA) showed that these seven isolates were indistinguishable from each other. O. tsutsugamushi isolated in this study was closely related phylogenetically to the Gilliam strain, which was originally isolated at the border of Assam and Burma, rather than to those isolated in the central to southern part of Vietnam. It should be emphasized that Vietnamese hospitals were heavily infested by small rodents and some of them harbored O. tsutsugamushi. Strict hygienic control should be implemented to mitigate the potential risk posed by O. tsutsugamushi in hospital settings.
- Published
- 2016