Rickettsioses as major etiologies of unrecognized acute febrile illness, Sabah, East Malaysia

Orientia tsutsugamushi, spotted fever group rickettsioses, and typhus group rickettsioses (TGR) are reemerging causes of acute febrile illness (AFI) in Southeast Asia. To further delineate extent, we enrolled patients >4 weeks of age with nonmalarial AFI in Sabah, Malaysia, during 2013-2015. We c...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Grigg, Matthew J., William, Timothy, Clemens, Emily G., Patel, Kaajal, Chandna, Arjun, Wilkes, Christopher S., Barber, Bridget E., Anstey, Nicholas M., Dumler, J. Stephen, Yeo, Tsin Wen, Reller, Megan E.
Other Authors: Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146334
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-146334
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1463342023-03-05T16:43:46Z Rickettsioses as major etiologies of unrecognized acute febrile illness, Sabah, East Malaysia Grigg, Matthew J. William, Timothy Clemens, Emily G. Patel, Kaajal Chandna, Arjun Wilkes, Christopher S. Barber, Bridget E. Anstey, Nicholas M. Dumler, J. Stephen Yeo, Tsin Wen Reller, Megan E. Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Science::Medicine Acute Febrile Illness Dizziness Orientia tsutsugamushi, spotted fever group rickettsioses, and typhus group rickettsioses (TGR) are reemerging causes of acute febrile illness (AFI) in Southeast Asia. To further delineate extent, we enrolled patients >4 weeks of age with nonmalarial AFI in Sabah, Malaysia, during 2013-2015. We confirmed rickettsioses (past or acute, IgG titer >160) in 126/354 (36%) patients. We confirmed acute rickettsioses (paired 4-fold IgG titer rise to >160) in 38/145 (26%) patients: 23 O. tsutsugamushi, 9 spotted fever group, 4 TGR, 1 O. tsutsugamushi/spotted fever group, and 1 O. tsutsugamushi/TGR. PCR results were positive in 11/319 (3%) patients. Confirmed rickettsioses were more common in male adults; agricultural/plantation work and recent forest exposure were risk factors. Dizziness and acute hearing loss but not eschars were reported more often with acute rickettsioses. Only 2 patients were treated with doxycycline. Acute rickettsioses are common (>26%), underrecognized, and untreated etiologies of AFI in East Malaysia; empirical doxycycline treatment should be considered. Published version 2021-02-09T08:32:20Z 2021-02-09T08:32:20Z 2020 Journal Article Grigg, M. J., William, T., Clemens, E. G., Patel, K., Chandna, A., Wilkes, C. S., . . . Reller, M. E. (2020). Rickettsioses as major etiologies of unrecognized acute febrile illness, Sabah, East Malaysia. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 26(7), 1409-1419. doi:10.3201/eid2607.191722 1080-6040 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146334 10.3201/eid2607.191722 32568664 2-s2.0-85086931246 7 26 1409 1419 en Emerging Infectious Diseases © 2020 The Author(s) (published by Public Domain). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Medicine
Acute Febrile Illness
Dizziness
spellingShingle Science::Medicine
Acute Febrile Illness
Dizziness
Grigg, Matthew J.
William, Timothy
Clemens, Emily G.
Patel, Kaajal
Chandna, Arjun
Wilkes, Christopher S.
Barber, Bridget E.
Anstey, Nicholas M.
Dumler, J. Stephen
Yeo, Tsin Wen
Reller, Megan E.
Rickettsioses as major etiologies of unrecognized acute febrile illness, Sabah, East Malaysia
description Orientia tsutsugamushi, spotted fever group rickettsioses, and typhus group rickettsioses (TGR) are reemerging causes of acute febrile illness (AFI) in Southeast Asia. To further delineate extent, we enrolled patients >4 weeks of age with nonmalarial AFI in Sabah, Malaysia, during 2013-2015. We confirmed rickettsioses (past or acute, IgG titer >160) in 126/354 (36%) patients. We confirmed acute rickettsioses (paired 4-fold IgG titer rise to >160) in 38/145 (26%) patients: 23 O. tsutsugamushi, 9 spotted fever group, 4 TGR, 1 O. tsutsugamushi/spotted fever group, and 1 O. tsutsugamushi/TGR. PCR results were positive in 11/319 (3%) patients. Confirmed rickettsioses were more common in male adults; agricultural/plantation work and recent forest exposure were risk factors. Dizziness and acute hearing loss but not eschars were reported more often with acute rickettsioses. Only 2 patients were treated with doxycycline. Acute rickettsioses are common (>26%), underrecognized, and untreated etiologies of AFI in East Malaysia; empirical doxycycline treatment should be considered.
author2 Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
author_facet Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Grigg, Matthew J.
William, Timothy
Clemens, Emily G.
Patel, Kaajal
Chandna, Arjun
Wilkes, Christopher S.
Barber, Bridget E.
Anstey, Nicholas M.
Dumler, J. Stephen
Yeo, Tsin Wen
Reller, Megan E.
format Article
author Grigg, Matthew J.
William, Timothy
Clemens, Emily G.
Patel, Kaajal
Chandna, Arjun
Wilkes, Christopher S.
Barber, Bridget E.
Anstey, Nicholas M.
Dumler, J. Stephen
Yeo, Tsin Wen
Reller, Megan E.
author_sort Grigg, Matthew J.
title Rickettsioses as major etiologies of unrecognized acute febrile illness, Sabah, East Malaysia
title_short Rickettsioses as major etiologies of unrecognized acute febrile illness, Sabah, East Malaysia
title_full Rickettsioses as major etiologies of unrecognized acute febrile illness, Sabah, East Malaysia
title_fullStr Rickettsioses as major etiologies of unrecognized acute febrile illness, Sabah, East Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Rickettsioses as major etiologies of unrecognized acute febrile illness, Sabah, East Malaysia
title_sort rickettsioses as major etiologies of unrecognized acute febrile illness, sabah, east malaysia
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146334
_version_ 1759856117263892480