Last data update: Apr 18, 2025. (Total: 49119 publications since 2009)
Records 1-2 (of 2 Records) |
Query Trace: Fisk TL[original query] |
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Sennetsu neorickettsiosis, spotted fever group, and typhus group rickettsioses in three provinces in Thailand
Bhengsri S , Baggett HC , Edouard S , Dowell SF , Dasch GA , Fisk TL , Raoult D , Parola P . Am J Trop Med Hyg 2016 95 (1) 43-49 We estimated the seroprevalence and determined the frequency of acute infections with Neorickettsia sennetsu, spotted fever group rickettsiae, Rickettsia typhi, and Orientia tsutsugamushi among 2,225 febrile patients presenting to community hospitals in three rural Thailand provinces during 2002-2005. The seroprevalence was 0.2% for sennetsu neorickettsiosis (SN), 0.8% for spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsiae, 4.2% for murine typhus (MT), and 4.2% for scrub typhus (ST). The frequency of acute infections was 0.1% for SN, 0.6% for SFG, 2.2% for MT, and 1.5% for ST. Additional studies to confirm the distribution of these pathogens and to identify animal reservoirs and transmission cycles are needed to understand the risk of infection. |
Bartonella seroprevalence in rural Thailand
Bhengsri S , Baggett HC , Peruski LF , Morway C , Bai Y , Fisk TL , Sitdhirasdr A , Maloney SA , Dowell SF , Kosoy M . Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health 2011 42 (3) 687-92 We estimated the prevalence of anti-Bartonella antibodies among febrile and non-febrile patients presenting to community hospitals in rural Thailand from February 2002 through March 2003. Single serum specimens were tested for IgG titers to four Bartonella species, B. henselae, B. quintana, B. elizabethae and B. vinsonii subsp vinsonii using an indirect immunofluorescent assay. A titer 21:256 was considered positive. Forty-two febrile patients (9.9%) and 19 non-febrile patients (19%) had positive serology titers to at least one Bartonella species. Age-standardized Bartonella seroprevalence differed significantly between febrile (10%) and non-febrile patients (18%, p=0.047), but did not differ by gender. Among all 521 patients, IgG titers 21:256 to B. henselae were found in 20 participants (3.8%), while 17 (3.3%) had seropositivity to B. quintana, 51 (9.8%) to B. elizabethae, and 19 (3.6%) to B. vinsonii subsp vinsonii. These results suggest exposure to Bartonella species is more common in rural Thailand than previously suspected. |
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