A descriptive study on rickettsiosis was conducted at the largest referral hospital in Hanoi, Vietnam, to identify epidemiological and clinical characteristics of specific rickettsiosis. Between March 2001 and February 2003, we enrolled 579 patients with acute undifferentiated fever (AUF), excluding patients with malaria, dengue fever, and typhoid fever, and serologically tested for Orientia tsutsugamushi and Rickettsia typhi. Of the patients, 237 (40.9%) and 193 (33.3%) had scrub and murine typhus, respectively, and 149 (25.7%) had neither of them (non–scrub and murine typhus [non-ST/MT]). The proportion of murine typhus was highest among patients living in Hanoi whereas that of scrub typhus was highest in national or regional border areas. The presence of an eschar, dyspnea, hypotension, and lymphadenopathy was significantly associated with a diagnosis of scrub typhus (OR = 46.56, 10.90, 9.01, and 7.92, respectively). Patients with murine typhus were less likely to have these findings but more likely to have myalgia, rash, and relative bradycardia (OR = 1.60, 1.56, and 1.45, respectively). Scrub typhus and murine typhus were shown to be common causes of AUF in northern Vietnam although the occurrence of spotted fever group rickettsiae was not determined. Clinical and epidemiological information may help local clinicians make clinical diagnosis of specific rickettsioses in a resource-limited setting.
Zoonotic potential of a rat-derived hepatitis E virus (HEV), designated as HEV-C1,
remains unknown. To evaluate the risk for HEV-C1 infection in humans, paired sera of 208
hospitalized febrile patients collected from 2001 to 2003 in Hanoi, Vietnam, were examined
for IgG antibodies to HEV-C1 and genotype 1 HEV (HEV-1), which is common in humans. IgG
antibodies to virus-like particles (VLPs) of HEV-C1 and/or HEV-1 were detected from 99 of
the 208 convalescent sera in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). IgG antibody
titers to HEV-C1 antigen in 3 of the 99 sera were more than 8-fold higher than those to
HEV-1 antigen. IgM antibodies to HEV-C1 antigen were detected in acute sera from 2 of the
3 patients in ELISA and Western blotting. However, no HEV genome was detected. Clinical
information was available for 1 of the 2 patients. Hepatic enzymes, aspartate
aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase, were mildly elevated (156
IU/l and 68 IU/l, respectively), and hepatomegaly was
detected by ultrasonography. The patient recovered from the illness after 17 days. These
results indicated that HEV-C1 or its variants infect humans in Vietnam and may cause acute
febrile illness with mild liver dysfunction.
The MRU test had high sensitivity and specificity for moderate to severe H. pylori infection, but it may result in false-negative results in tests for mild infection. As the MRU test has the advantages of shorter incubation times and low cost, a combination of the MRU test and the Giemsa stain for touch cytology may be the most time- and cost-efficient tests in a clinical setting for the diagnosis of H. pylori infection.
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