Melioidosis in Vietnam: Recently Improved Recognition but still an Uncertain Disease Burden after Almost a Century of Reporting
The first cases of human melioidosis were described in Vietnam in the 1920s, almost a century ago. It was in Vietnam in the thirties that the saprophytic nature of B. pseudomallei was first recognized. Although a significant number of French and U.S. soldiers acquired the disease during the Vietn...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
2019
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/66950 |
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Institution: | Vietnam National University, Hanoi |
Language: | English |
Summary: | The first cases of human melioidosis were described in Vietnam in the 1920s, almost
a century ago. It was in Vietnam in the thirties that the saprophytic nature of B. pseudomallei was first
recognized. Although a significant number of French and U.S. soldiers acquired the disease during
the Vietnam wars, indigenous cases in the Vietnamese population were only sporadically reported
over many decades. After reunification in 1975, only two retrospective studies reported relatively
small numbers of indigenous cases from single tertiary care hospitals located in the biggest cities in
the South and the North, respectively. Studies from provincial hospitals throughout the country were
missing until the Research Network on Melioidosis and Burkholderia pseudomallei (RENOMAB) project
started in 2014. From then on seminars, workshops, and national scientific conferences on melioidosis
have been conducted to raise awareness among physicians and clinical laboratory staff. This led
to the recognition of a significant number of cases in at least 36 hospitals in 26 provinces and cities
throughout Vietnam. Although a widespread distribution of melioidosis has now been documented,
there are still challenges to understand the true epidemiology of the disease. Establishment of
national guidelines for diagnosis, management, and reporting of the disease together with more
investigations on animal melioidosis, genomic diversity of B. pseudomallei and its environmental
distribution are required |
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