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Molecular and clinical evidence of Ehrlichia chaffeensis infection in Cameroonian patients with undifferentiated febrile illness

In the U.S.A., human monocytotropic ehrlichiosis (HME) caused by Ehrlichia chaffeensis is an emerging tick-transmitted zoonosis. In Cameroon, where E. canis, E. chaffeensis and E. ewingii have recently been detected in dogs and/or ticks (Rhipicephalus sanguineus), the potential exists for human infe...

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Published in:Annals of allergy, asthma, & immunology asthma, & immunology, 2009-12, Vol.103 (8), p.719-725
Main Authors: Ndip, L. M., Labruna, M., Ndip, R. N., Walker, D. H., McBride, J. W.
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description In the U.S.A., human monocytotropic ehrlichiosis (HME) caused by Ehrlichia chaffeensis is an emerging tick-transmitted zoonosis. In Cameroon, where E. canis, E. chaffeensis and E. ewingii have recently been detected in dogs and/or ticks (Rhipicephalus sanguineus), the potential exists for human infections. Patients from the coastal region of Cameroon who had acute fevers of unknown aetiology were therefore checked for ehrlichial infection, using a real-time PCR that amplifies part of a genus-specific gene (dsb) that codes for a disulphide-bond formation protein. Ehrlichial blood was detected in the peripheral blood from 12 (10%) of the 118 patients investigated by PCR. When the 12 amplicons from the positive cases were sequenced, they were found to be identical to each other and to the corresponding dsb sequence of an Arkansas strain of E. chaffeensis. The 12 patients who were PCR-positive for E. chaffeensis suffered from fever (100%), headache (67%), myalgia (42%), arthralgia (58%), pulmonary involvement (17%) and/or a diffuse rash (17%).
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subjects Acute Disease
Adolescent
Adult
Arthralgia
Bacterial diseases
Biological and medical sciences
Cameroon
Child
Child, Preschool
DNA, Bacterial - analysis
Ehrlichia - genetics
Ehrlichia - isolation & purification
Ehrlichia chaffeensis
Ehrlichiosis
Ehrlichiosis - diagnosis
Ehrlichiosis - genetics
Ehrlichiosis - immunology
Electrophoresis, Agar Gel
Exanthema
Female
Fever
Fever - etiology
Fluorescent Antibody Technique
General aspects
Headache
Human bacterial diseases
Humans
Immunoglobulins - analysis
Infant
Infection
Infectious diseases
Ixodidae
Lung
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Myalgia
Peripheral blood
Polymerase chain reaction
Polymerase Chain Reaction - methods
Rhipicephalus sanguineus
Rickettsial diseases
Tropical bacterial diseases
Young Adult
title Molecular and clinical evidence of Ehrlichia chaffeensis infection in Cameroonian patients with undifferentiated febrile illness
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