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Orientia, rickettsia, and leptospira pathogens as causes of CNS infections in Laos:a prospective study

Authors :
Dittrich, Sabine
Rattanavong, Sayaphet
Lee, Sue J
Panyanivong, Phonepasith
Craig, Scott B
Tulsiani, Suhella
Blacksell, Stuart D
Dance, David A B
Dubot-Pérès, Audrey
Sengduangphachanh, Amphone
Phoumin, Phonelavanh
Paris, Daniel H
Newton, Paul N
Dittrich, Sabine
Rattanavong, Sayaphet
Lee, Sue J
Panyanivong, Phonepasith
Craig, Scott B
Tulsiani, Suhella
Blacksell, Stuart D
Dance, David A B
Dubot-Pérès, Audrey
Sengduangphachanh, Amphone
Phoumin, Phonelavanh
Paris, Daniel H
Newton, Paul N
Source :
Dittrich , S , Rattanavong , S , Lee , S J , Panyanivong , P , Craig , S B , Tulsiani , S , Blacksell , S D , Dance , D A B , Dubot-Pérès , A , Sengduangphachanh , A , Phoumin , P , Paris , D H & Newton , P N 2015 , ' Orientia, rickettsia, and leptospira pathogens as causes of CNS infections in Laos : a prospective study ' , The Lancet Global Health , vol. 3 , no. 2 , pp. e104-e112 .
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Scrub typhus (caused by Orientia tsutsugamushi), murine typhus (caused by Rickettsia typhi), and leptospirosis are common causes of febrile illness in Asia; meningitis and meningoencephalitis are severe complications. However, scarce data exist for the burden of these pathogens in patients with CNS disease in endemic countries. Laos is representative of vast economically poor rural areas in Asia with little medical information to guide public health policy. We assessed whether these pathogens are important causes of CNS infections in Laos.METHODS: Between Jan 10, 2003, and Nov 25, 2011, we enrolled 1112 consecutive patients of all ages admitted with CNS symptoms or signs requiring a lumbar puncture at Mahosot Hospital, Vientiane, Laos. Microbiological examinations (culture, PCR, and serology) targeted so-called conventional bacterial infections (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Neisseria meningitidis, Haemophilus influenzae, S suis) and O tsutsugamushi, Rickettsia typhi/Rickettsia spp, and Leptospira spp infections in blood or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). We analysed and compared causes and clinical and CSF characteristics between patient groups.FINDINGS: 1051 (95%) of 1112 patients who presented had CSF available for analysis, of whom 254 (24%) had a CNS infection attributable to a bacterial or fungal pathogen. 90 (35%) of these 254 infections were caused by O tsutsugamushi, R typhi/Rickettsia spp, or Leptospira spp. These pathogens were significantly more frequent than conventional bacterial infections (90/1051 [9%] vs 42/1051 [4%]; p<0·0001) by use of conservative diagnostic definitions. CNS infections had a high mortality (236/876 [27%]), with 18% (13/71) for R typhi/Rickettsia spp, O tsutsugamushi, and Leptospira spp combined, and 33% (13/39) for conventional bacterial infections (p=0·076).INTERPRETATION: Our data suggest that R typhi/Rickettsia spp, O tsutsugamushi, and Leptospira spp infections are important causes of CNS infecti

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Dittrich , S , Rattanavong , S , Lee , S J , Panyanivong , P , Craig , S B , Tulsiani , S , Blacksell , S D , Dance , D A B , Dubot-Pérès , A , Sengduangphachanh , A , Phoumin , P , Paris , D H & Newton , P N 2015 , ' Orientia, rickettsia, and leptospira pathogens as causes of CNS infections in Laos : a prospective study ' , The Lancet Global Health , vol. 3 , no. 2 , pp. e104-e112 .
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1322655770
Document Type :
Electronic Resource