107 results on '"James G. Olson"'
Search Results
2. Human Spotted Fever Rickettsial Infections
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George B. Schoeler, Cecilia Morón, Allen L. Richards, Patrick J. Blair, and James G. Olson
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Rickettsial disease ,South America ,disease surveillance ,spotted fever group Rickettsia ,dispatch ,Peru ,Medicine ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Serum specimens from patients at 4 sites in Peru were tested for evidence of spotted fever group rickettsial infection. Results showed that 30 (18%) of 170 patients had spotted fever group rickettsial infections, which likely caused their illnesses. These findings document laboratory-confirmed spotted fever from diverse areas of Peru.
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- 2005
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3. Antibodies to Nipah-Like Virus in Bats (Pteropus lylei), Cambodia
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James G. Olson, Charles E. Rupprecht, Pierre E. Rollin, Ung Sam An, Michael Niezgoda, Travis Clemins, Joe Walston, and Thomas G. Ksiazek
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antibodies ,bats ,Cambodia ,Nipah virus ,Pteropus ,Medicine ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Serum specimens from fruit bats were obtained at restaurants in Cambodia. We detected antibodies cross-reactive to Nipah virus by enzyme immunoassay in 11 (11.5%) of 96 Lyle’s flying foxes (Pteropus lylei). Our study suggests that viruses closely related to Nipah or Hendra viruses are more widespread in Southeast Asia than previously documented.
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- 2002
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4. Etiology of Acute, Non-Malaria, Febrile Illnesses in Jayapura, Northeastern Papua, Indonesia
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John Sisson, Decy Subekti, Helena Picarima, Samuel Baso, Ferry Wangsasaputra, Thomas L. Richie, Buhari A. Oyofo, Cyrus H. Simanjuntak, James G. Olson, Andrew L. Corwin, Narain H. Punjabi, Murad Lesmana, Walter R. J. Taylor, Gerald S. Murphy, and Sri Purwaningsih
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Fever ,Bacteremia ,Scrub typhus ,Murine typhus ,Typhoid fever ,Dengue fever ,Papua New Guinea ,Young Adult ,Central Nervous System Infections ,Virology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Blood culture ,Child ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Infant ,Bacterial Infections ,Articles ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Leptospirosis ,Spotted fever ,Infectious Diseases ,Virus Diseases ,Child, Preschool ,Acute Disease ,Female ,Parasitology ,business ,Encephalitis - Abstract
We conducted a prospective, inpatient fever study in malaria-endemic Papua, Indonesia to determine non- malaria fever etiologies. Investigations included malaria blood films, blood culture, paired serologic samples analysis for dengue, Japanese encephalitis, leptospirosis, scrub typhus, murine typhus, and spotted fever group rickettsia. During 1997- 2000, 226 patients (127 males and 99 females) 1-80 years of age (median age = 25 years) were enrolled. Positive blood cultures (n = 34, 15%) were obtained for Salmonella Typhi (n = 13), Escherichia coli (n = 8), Streptococcus pneumoniae (n = 6), Staphylococcus aureus (n = 5), Streptococcus pyogenes (n = 1), and Klebsiella pneumoniae (n = 1). Twenty (8.8%) patients were positive for leptospirosis by polymerase chain reaction. Eighty (35.4%) of 226 patients had ≥ 1 positive serol- ogy, diagnostic for 15 rickettsial and 9 dengue cases. Acid-fast bacilli-positive sputum was obtained from three patients. Most common confirmed (81 of 226, 35.8%)/suspected diagnoses were typhoid fever (n = 41), pneumonia (n = 29), lep- tospirosis (n = 28), urinary tract infections (n = 20), rickettsioses (n = 19), dengue (n = 17), and meningitis/encephalitis (n = 15). There were 17 deaths, 7 (46.7%) were caused by meningitis/encephalitis. Multiple positive serologic results and few confirmed diagnoses indicate the need for improved diagnostics.
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- 2012
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5. Comparison of Two Active Surveillance Programs for the Detection of Clinical Dengue Cases in Iquitos, Peru
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Thomas W. Scott, Claudio Rocha, Jeffrey D. Stancil, Brett M. Forshey, Amy C. Morrison, Moises Sihuincha, James G. Olson, Patrick J. Blair, and Tadeusz J. Kochel
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Public health ,Prevalence ,medicine.disease ,Dengue fever ,Infectious Diseases ,Environmental protection ,Virology ,Environmental health ,Epidemiology ,Tropical medicine ,medicine ,Dengue transmission ,Parasitology ,Viral disease ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
Endemic dengue transmission has been documented in the Amazonian city of Iquitos, Peru, since the early 1990s. To better understand the epidemiology of dengue transmission in Iquitos, we established multiple active surveillance systems to detect symptomatic infections. Here we compare the efficacy of distinct community-based (door to door) and school absenteeism-based febrile surveillance strategies in detecting active cases of dengue. Febrile episodes were detected by both systems with equal rapidity after disease onset. However, during the period that both programs were running simultaneously in 2004, a higher number of febrile cases in general (4.52/100 versus 1.64/100 person-years) and dengue cases specifically (2.35/100 versus 1.29/100 person-years) were detected in school-aged children through the community-based surveillance program. Similar results were obtained by direct comparison of 435 participants concurrently enrolled in both programs (P < 0.005). We conclude that, in Iquitos, community-based door-to-door surveillance is a more efficient and sensitive design for detecting active dengue cases than programs based on school absenteeism.
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- 2009
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6. Dengue Virus Infections in a Cohort of Schoolchildren from Maracay, Venezuela: A 2-Year Prospective Study
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Gloria Sierra, Diamelis Guzman, Maritza Cabello de Quintana, Daría Elena Camacho, Patrick J. Blair, James G. Olson, Mergiory Bracho-Labadie, Maritza Soler, Tadevsz J. Kochel, Guillermo Comach, and Kevin L. Russell
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Male ,Serotype ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Endemic Diseases ,viruses ,Prevalence ,Dengue virus ,Antibodies, Viral ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Dengue fever ,Cohort Studies ,Dengue ,Neutralization Tests ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Virology ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Seroprevalence ,Serologic Tests ,Cumulative incidence ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Serotyping ,Child ,Prospective cohort study ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,virus diseases ,Dengue Virus ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Venezuela ,medicine.disease ,Infectious Diseases ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,business - Abstract
In 2001, we began a prospective longitudinal study in a cohort of schoolchildren 5-13 years of age residing in Maracay, Venezuela, to determine the cumulative incidence of dengue virus (DENV) infections by virus serotype. This report presents serological data from 710 schoolchildren who were tested during the first 2 years of the study. Serological evaluations were conducted by plaque reduction neutralization test (PRNT). At study initiation, 51% of children had PRNT antibody titers against one (30.1% = 13.4% DENV-1, 14.2% DENV-2, 0.6% DENV-3, and 2% DENV-4) or multiple DENV serotypes (20.9%). By the end of the first year, 89 of 348 (25.6%) PRNT-negative children seroconverted, and 94 of 362 (26%) who were PRNT-positive in their baseline sera tested positive for additional serotypes, for an overall cumulative incidence of DENV infections of 25.8%. By serotype, the percentages found were 1.4% DENV-1, 1.4% DENV-2, 19% DENV-3, and 1.2% DENV-4. In the second year, 37 of 259 (14.3%) PRNT-negative children seroconverted, and 83 of 451 (18.4%) who had monotypic and multitypic PRNT patterns in their baseline sera exhibited additional serotype seroconversions, for an overall cumulative incidence of DENV infections of 16.9%. By serotype, the percentages found were 0.8% DENV-1, 1.5% DENV-2, 8.5% DENV-3, and 2.3% DENV-4. Overall, these results suggest a high cumulative incidence of DENV infections among 5-13-year-old school children in Maracay, Venezuela.
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- 2009
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7. GENETIC RELATIONSHIPS AMONG MAYARO AND UNA VIRUSES SUGGEST DISTINCT PATTERNS OF TRANSMISSION
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Tiffany A. Meakins, Patricia V. Aguilar, Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos, Aaron C. Brault, James G. Olson, Douglas M. Watts, Kevin L. Russell, Robert B. Tesh, Scott C. Weaver, Ann M. Powers, Laura J. Chandler, and Amelia P.A. Travassos Da Rosa
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Genetics ,biology ,Molecular epidemiology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Alphavirus ,biology.organism_classification ,Infectious Diseases ,Phylogenetics ,Virology ,Genotype ,Togaviridae ,Parasitology ,Clade ,Gene - Abstract
Mayaro and Una viruses (MAYV, UNAV) are mosquito-borne alphaviruses that may cause an acute febrile illness characterized by headache, retro-orbital pain, and rash that may progress to a severe and prolonged arthralgia. MAYV was first isolated in Trinidad in 1954, and UNAV was first identified in northern Brazil in 1959. Since then, numerous isolates of these agents have been made from humans, wild vertebrates, and mosquitoes in several countries in northern South America. Serological evidence suggests that these viruses are also present in portions of Central America. Because little is known about the natural transmission cycle of MAYV and virtually nothing is known about UNAV transmission, 63 isolates covering the known geographic and temporal ranges were used in phylogenetic analyses to aid in understanding the molecular epidemiology. Approximately 2 kb from the E1 and E2 glycoprotein genes and the complete 3' non-coding region were sequenced. Phylogenetic analyses of these sequences indicated that two distinct genotypes of MAYV exist with a distinct clade consisting exclusively of UNAV (previously designated as a subtype of MAYV). One MAYV genotype (genotype D) contains isolates from Trinidad and the northcentral portion of South America including Peru, French Guiana, Surinam, Brazil, and Bolivia. All of these isolates are highly conserved with a nucleotide divergence of < 6%. The second MAYV genotype (genotype L) contains isolates only from Brazil that are highly conserved (< 4% nucleotide divergence) but are quite distinct (15-19%) from the first genotype isolates. These analyses provide possible explanations for the natural ecology and transmission of MAYV and UNAV.
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- 2006
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8. Seroprevalence of and risk factors for HIV-1 infection among female commercial sex workers in South America
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Margarita Serra, Jorge Sanchez, E Ramirez, Juan Perez, Nicolas Aguayo, Christian T. Bautista, N Velazques, Pablo E. Campos, Margarita Villafane, Jean K. Carr, Alberto Gianella, C Aponte, Silvia M. Montano, J. L. Sanchez, James G. Olson, Alfredo Mejia, Alberto Laguna-Torres, María M. Avila, Luis Suarez, C. Mosquera, Mercedes Weissenbacher, R Child, and C Gallardo
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Adult ,Sexually transmitted disease ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cross-sectional study ,Blotting, Western ,Population ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,HIV Infections ,Dermatology ,Soth America ,Ciencias Biológicas ,Biología Celular, Microbiología ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,HIV Seroprevalence ,Risk Factors ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Seroprevalence ,Risk factor ,education ,Sex work ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,HIV ,South America ,medicine.disease ,Sex Work ,Virology ,Infectious Diseases ,Risk factors ,HIV-1 ,Female ,Public Health ,Epidemiologic Methods ,business ,CIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAS ,Demography - Abstract
Objective: Assessment of HIV prevalence and associated risk behaviours among female commercial sex workers (FCSW) across major cities in South America. Methods: Seroepidemiological, cross sectional studies of 13 600 FCSW were conducted in nine countries of South America during the years 1999-2002. Participants were recruited in brothels, massage parlours, hotels, and streets where anonymous questionnaires and blood samples were collected. HIV infection was determined by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) screening and western blot confirmatory tests. Results: The overall HIV seroprevalence was 1.2% (range 0.0%-4.5%). The highest HIV seroprevalences were reported in Argentina (4.5%) and Paraguay (2.6%); no HIV infected FCSW were detected in Venezuela and Chile. Consistent predictors of HIV seropositivity were: (1) a previous history of sexually transmitted infections (STI, AORs = 3.8-8.3), and (2) 10 years or more in commercial sex work (AORs = 2.2-24.8). In addition, multiple (≥3) sexual contacts (AOR = 5.0), sex with foreigners (AOR = 6.9), use of illegal drugs (AOR = 3.2), and marijuana use (AOR = 8.2) were associated with HIV seropositivity in Southern Cone countries. Conclusions: Consistently low HIV seroprevalences were detected among FCSW in South America, particularly in the Andean region. Predictors of HIV infection across the continent were STI and length of commercial sex work; however, use of illegal drugs, especially marijuana, and sexual contacts with foreigners were also found to be associated risk factors in the Southern Cone region. Interventions for the control of HIV and other STI need to be region and country specific; drug use appears to have an ever increasing role in the spread of HIV among heterosexually active populations. Fil: Bautista, Christian T.. Walter Reed Army Institute Of Research; Estados Unidos Fil: Sanchez, J. L.. Walter Reed Army Institute Of Research; Estados Unidos Fil: Montano, S. M.. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 6; Perú Fil: Laguna Torres, A.. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 6; Perú Fil: Suarez, L.. Dirección General de Epidemiología; Perú Fil: Sanchez, J.. Asociación Civil Impacta Salud y Educación; Perú Fil: Campos, P.. Ministerio de Salud, Lima; Perú Fil: Gallardo, C.. Fundacion Esperanza; Ecuador Fil: Mosquera, C.. Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública E Investigación Leopoldo Izquieta Pérez; Ecuador Fil: Villafane, M.. Ministerio de Salud Pública; Paraguay Fil: Aguayo, N.. Ministerio de Salud Pública; Paraguay Fil: Ávila, María Mercedes. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Medicina. Departamento de Microbiología. Centro Nacional de Referencia para el Sida; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Houssay; Argentina Fil: Weissenbacher, Mercedes Crecencia. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Houssay; Argentina. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Medicina. Departamento de Microbiología. Centro Nacional de Referencia para el Sida; Argentina Fil: Ramirez, E.. Instituto de Salud Publica de Chile; Chile Fil: Child, R.. Comisión Nacional de Acreditación; Chile Fil: Serra, M.. Ministerio de Salud; Uruguay Fil: Aponte, C.. Instituto Nacional de Higiene Rafael Rangel; Venezuela Fil: Mejia, A.. Instituto Nacional de Salud; Colombia Fil: Velazques, N.. Centro Nacional de Enfermedades Tropicales; Bolivia Fil: Gianella, A.. Centro Nacional de Enfermedades Tropicales; Bolivia Fil: Perez, J.. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 6; Perú Fil: Olson, J. G.. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 6; Perú Fil: Carr, J. K.. Walter Reed Army Institute Of Research; Estados Unidos
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- 2006
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9. Aedes aegypti(Diptera: Culicidae) production from non-residential sites in the Amazonian city of Iquitos, Peru
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C. Vidal-Ore, T. W. Scott, Helvio Astete, M. Sihuincha, E. Zamora, James G. Olson, Amy C. Morrison, and Jeffrey D. Stancil
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animal structures ,Amazonian ,Aedes aegypti ,Dengue ,Aedes ,Water Supply ,Environmental protection ,Peru ,Dengue transmission ,Animals ,Humans ,Demographic surveys ,Cities ,Household Articles ,Socioeconomics ,Recreation ,biology ,Extramural ,fungi ,Pupa ,Urban Health ,biology.organism_classification ,Insect Vectors ,Infectious Diseases ,Geography ,Population Surveillance ,Parasitology ,Urban environment - Abstract
Programmes for the surveillance of Aedes aegypti (L.) often focus on residential areas, ignoring non-residential sites. Between November 2003 and October 2004, pupal/demographic surveys were therefore conducted in non-residential sites in the Peruvian city of Iquitos. The sampled sites included schools, factories, ports, public markets, petrol stations, commercial zones, airports, government buildings, animal-production areas, and recreational areas. Compared with the residential sites that had been surveyed a few years earlier, the non-residential sites generally had fewer pupae/ha, even though pupae were found in a high percentage of the sites investigated. Nonetheless, although56 pupae/ha were observed in the industrial, commercial, recreational and school sites, the river boats in the ports and the areas in and around public markets sometimes had pupal abundances (of 122-213 pupae/ha) that were comparable with those previously recorded in the residential sites. When the relative production of Ae. aegypti was calculated by container type and characteristic (lidded/lidless, indoors/outdoors, and water-use patterns), no single container category was found to be a major producer of Ae. aegypti, with the exception of flower vases in cemeteries. In general, almost all (97%) of the pupae collected in the non-residential sites came from unlidded containers, although 91% of those collected in river boats came from lidded storage areas. With the exception of lumber mills, plant nurseries and markets (where only 39%-60% of the pupae were collected outdoors),70% of pupal production was outdoors. In commercial areas, 41% of the pupae came from manually-filled containers, compared with12% in residential sites. These results indicate that non-residential sites can be highly productive for Ae. aegypti and that the role of such sites in dengue transmission requires further investigation.
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- 2006
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10. Evaluation of immunity and protective efficacy of a dengue-3 premembrane and envelope DNA vaccine in Aotus nancymae monkeys
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James G. Olson, Tadeusz J. Kochel, Milagros Salazar, Shuenn-Jue Wu, Carolina Guevara, Patrick J. Blair, Kanakatte Raviprakash, and Kevin R. Porter
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viruses ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Viremia ,Biology ,Antibodies, Viral ,Virus ,Dengue fever ,DNA vaccination ,Dengue ,Viral Envelope Proteins ,Neutralization Tests ,Immunity ,Vaccines, DNA ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Neutralizing antibody ,Antigens, Viral ,General Veterinary ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Immunogenicity ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Viral Vaccines ,Dengue Virus ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Disease Models, Animal ,Infectious Diseases ,biology.protein ,Aotidae ,RNA, Viral ,Molecular Medicine ,Antibody - Abstract
A dengue (DEN) virus type 3 DNA vaccine expressing pre-membrane and envelope genes was tested for immunogenicity and protective efficacy in Aotus monkeys. Five of six vaccinated animals demonstrated moderate DEN-specific antibody responses as measured by ELISA and virus neutralization in vitro. By contrast, none of the six control animals developed detectable anti-DEN antibodies. When five vaccinated animals were challenged with live DEN-3 virus and viremia determined by PCR amplification of viral RNA in serum samples, one animal was completely protected and two were partially protected as indicated by a decrease in mean days of viremia. The results demonstrate the ability of the DEN-3 DNA vaccine to elicit a neutralizing antibody response and to partially protect against live virus challenge. These findings support the inclusion of this construct in a tetravalent DNA vaccine.
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- 2006
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11. Phylogenetic Analysis of a Novel Molecular Isolate of Spotted Fever Group Rickettsiae from Northern Peru: Candidatus Rickettsia andeanae
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Elizabeth Anaya, James G. Olson, Vidal Felices, Patrick J. Blair, Cecilia Morón, George B. Schoeler, Ju Jiang, Manuel Cespedes, Allen L. Richards, and John W. Sumner
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Phylogenetic tree ,biology ,General Neuroscience ,Amplicon ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Microbiology ,Spotted fever ,Molecular Weight ,Ticks ,Rickettsia ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Genes, Bacterial ,Phylogenetics ,GenBank ,Peru ,Animals ,Amblyomma maculatum ,Horses ,Nested polymerase chain reaction ,Phylogeny ,Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins - Abstract
Phylogenetic analysis of five rickettsial genes (17-kDa gene, gltA, ompB, ompA, and sca4) from two molecular isolates of Candidatus Rickettsia andeanae from two ticks (Amblyomma maculatum and Ixodes boliviensis) collected from two domestic horses living in two separate locations in northern Peru (Coletas and Naranjo) was conducted to more clearly characterize this recently reported novel spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsia. Following nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of the 17-kDa gene, gltA, ompB, ompA, and sca4, amplicons were purified, sequenced, and compared to those downloaded from GenBank. Phylogenetic analyses of the Candidatus Rickettsia andeanae sequences generated from 17-kDa gene (483 bp), gltA (1185 bp), ompA (1598 bp), ompB (4839 bp), and sca4 (2634 bp) demonstrated that they aligned strongly with those of SFG rickettsiae. Moreover, the sequences of these five genes most closely aligned with the following rickettsiae: ompA: Rickettsia sp RpA4 (98.03%), R. sp DnS28 (97.90%), and R. rhipicephali and R. massiliae (97.11%); ompB: R. aeschlimannii (97.22%), R. rhipicephali (97.20%), and R. sp Bar 29 (97.10%); and sca4: R. massiliae (97.8%), R. rhipicephali, and R. slovaca (97.7%). These results from the additional phylogenetic analyses of Candidatus Rickettsia andeanae confirm its inclusion within, and distance and uniqueness from, other known SFG rickettsiae.
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- 2005
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12. A NOVEL, RAPID ASSAY FOR DETECTION AND DIFFERENTIATION OF SEROTYPE-SPECIFIC ANTIBODIES TO VENEZUELAN EQUINE ENCEPHALITIS COMPLEX ALPHAVIRUSES
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Eryu Wang, Darci R. Smith, Patrick J. Blair, Slobodan Paessler, M. Pfeffer, Carolina Guevara, Jose G. Estrada-Franco, Scott C. Weaver, Patricia V. Aguilar, James G. Olson, Lark L. Coffey, and Wenli Kang
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Serotype ,animal structures ,medicine.drug_class ,viruses ,virus diseases ,Biology ,Monoclonal antibody ,medicine.disease ,complex mixtures ,Virology ,Virus ,Epitope ,nervous system diseases ,Serology ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Enzootic ,Parasitology ,Antibody ,Epizootic - Abstract
An epitope-blocking enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was developed for the rapid differentiation of serologic responses to enzootic variety IE and ID versus epizootic variety IAB and IC strains of Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) virus. Two monoclonal antibodies that differentially recognize epizootic versus enzootic VEE virus epitopes were used to measure the serotype-specific blocking abilities of antibodies in sera of naturally infected humans, equines, and bovines, as well as in experimentally infected equines. The assay is simple, species-independent, rapid, and sensitive, and will improve surveillance for VEE emergence. It could also be used to determine the epidemic potential of a VEE virus following an intentional introduction for bioterrorism.
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- 2005
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13. SEROINCIDENCE AND PHYLOGENY OF HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS INFECTIONS IN A COHORT OF COMMERCIAL SEX WORKERS IN MONTEVIDEO, URUGUAY
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Christian T. Bautista, Dora Ruchansky, Gladys Carrion, Jean K. Carr, James G. Olson, Sergio Sosa-Estani, Margarita Serra, Jose Vinoles, Mercedes Weissenbacher, Jose L. Sanchez, Silvia M. Montano, Jose C. Russi, and Lindsay M. Eyzaguirre
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education.field_of_study ,biology ,business.industry ,Population ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Infectious Diseases ,Blood serum ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Cohort ,medicine ,Parasitology ,Viral disease ,Sida ,business ,education ,Prospective cohort study ,Cohort study - Abstract
A cohort study involving 60 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-negative male transvestite commercial sex workers (CSWs) was conducted in Montevideo, Uruguay in 1999-2001. Serum samples were tested for HIV by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay screening with immunoblot confirmation. Six participants seroconverted for an incidence-density rate of 6.03 (95% confidence interval = 2.21-13.12) per 100 person-years. Inconsistent condom use during client sex (adjusted hazard ratio [AHR] = 6.7), during oral sex (AHR = 5.6), and at the last sexual encounter (AHR = 7.8), and use of marihuana (AHR = 5.4) were marginally associated with HIV seroconversion. Five samples were genotyped in the protease and reverse transcriptase regions; three were subtypes B and two were BF recombinants. Full genome analysis of four samples confirmed all three subtype B samples and one of the two BF recombinants. Male transvestite CSWs sustained a high rate of HIV infection. Larger prospective studies are required to better define subtypes and associated sexual and drug-related risk factors.
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- 2005
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14. RANDOMIZED, DOUBLE-BLIND, PHASE III, PIVOTAL FIELD TRIAL OF THE COMPARATIVE IMMUNOGENICITY, SAFETY, AND TOLERABILITY OF TWO YELLOW FEVER 17D VACCINES (ARILVAX™ AND YF-VAX®) IN HEALTHY INFANTS AND CHILDREN IN PERU
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Scott Kitchener, Philip Bedford, Giovanna Pastor-Cauna, Karen McCarthy, Christian T. Bautista, Richard A. Nichols, Vivian E. Belmusto-Worn, James P. Burans, Alan J. Magill, Billey K. Samame, Jose L. Sanchez, Victor Alberto Laguna-Torres, Maria E. Baldeon, James G. Olson, Thomas P. Monath, and Carlos Echevarria
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medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Population ,Vaccine trial ,Gastroenterology ,Confidence interval ,law.invention ,Vaccination ,Titer ,Infectious Diseases ,Randomized controlled trial ,Tolerability ,law ,Virology ,Internal medicine ,Immunology ,medicine ,Parasitology ,Seroconversion ,business ,education - Abstract
We conducted a randomized, double-blind, phase III yellow fever (YF) vaccine trial among 1,107 healthy children in Sullana in northern Peru. The safety and efficacy (by measurement of geometric mean neutralizing antibody titer responses) were determined for two YF vaccines, ARILVAX (n = 738) and YF-VAX(R) (n = 369). Serocon-version rates were higher (94.9%) in ARILVAX than in YF-VAX (90.6%) recipients. The two-sided 95% confidence interval (YF-VAX-ARILVAX) was (-12.8% to -2.5%), indicating that the higher seroconversion rate for Arilvax was significant. Post-vaccination (30-day) mean log(10) neutralization indices were found to be similar for both products: 1.32 for ARILVAX and 1.26 for YF-VAX (P = 0.1404, by analysis of variance). A similar number of subjects in each group reported at least one adverse event (AE); 441 (59.8%) for ARILVAX versus 211 (59.9%) for YF-VAX. Most (591; 96.7%) of these were of a mild nature and resolved without treatment. There were no treatment-related serious AEs. This is the first randomized, double-blind comparison of two YF vaccines in a pediatric population; both vaccines were shown to be highly immunogenic and well-tolerated.
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- 2005
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15. HANTAVIRUS PULMONARY SYNDROME IN CENTRAL BOLIVIA: RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN RESERVOIR HOSTS, HABITATS, AND VIRAL GENOTYPES
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Milagros Salazar, Vidal Felices, James G. Olson, Patrick J. Blair, Duke S. Rogers, Alberto Gianella, James N. Mills, James P. Burans, Naomi Iihoshi, Stuart T. Nichol, Joel M. Montgomery, Thomas G. Ksiazek, Daniel G. Bausch, and Darin S. Carroll
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Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome ,viruses ,Biology ,Calomys callosus ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Virus ,Microtis ,Infectious Diseases ,Rio Mamore virus ,Oligoryzomys microtis ,Parasitology ,Hantaan virus ,Hantavirus - Abstract
In August 2002, two cases of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) were confirmed in Mineros and Concepcion, within the Santa Cruz Department of Bolivia. Extensive alteration of the native ecosystem, from dense forest to pasture or sugarcane, had occurred in both regions. An ecologic assessment of reservoir species associated with the human disease identified a single hantavirus antibody-positive Oligoryzomys microtis from Mineros and three hantavirus antibody-positive Calomys callosus from Concepcion. In Mineros, the virus from the O. microtis was 90% similar to sequences published for Rio Mamore virus. Viral nucleotide sequences from two C. callosus were 87�88% similar to the sequence of Laguna Negra virus. The viral sequence from the C. callosus was 99% identical to viral sequences obtained from the HPS patient in this area, implicating C. callosus as the host and Laguna Negra virus as the agent responsible for the HPS case near Concepcion.
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- 2005
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16. Temporal and Geographic Patterns of Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) Production in Iquitos, Peru
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Patrick J. Blair, Dana A. Focks, Helvio Astete, Moises Sihuincha, Thomas W. Scott, Jeffrey D. Stancil, Douglas M. Watts, Kenneth Gray, Amy C. Morrison, James G. Olson, and Arthur Getis
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education.field_of_study ,Veterinary medicine ,Larva ,General Veterinary ,Ecology ,Population ,Aedes aegypti ,Biology ,Container (type theory) ,biology.organism_classification ,Population density ,Pupa ,Infectious Diseases ,Insect Science ,Demographic surveys ,Parasitology ,Sampling circuits ,education - Abstract
Large-scale longitudinal cohort studies are necessary to characterize temporal and geographic variation in Aedes aegypti (L.) (Diptera: Culicidae) production patterns and to develop targeted dengue control strategies that will reduce disease. We carried out pupal/demographic surveys in a circuit of ≈6,000 houses, 10 separate times, between January 1999 and August 2002 in the Amazonian city of Iquitos, Peru. We quantified the number of containers positive for Ae. aegypti larvae and/or pupae, containers holding pupae, and the absolute number of pupae by 4-mo sampling circuits and spatially by geographic area by using a geographic information system developed for the city. A total of 289,941 water-holding containers were characterized, of which 7.3% were positive for Ae. aegypti. Temporal and geographic variations were detected for all variables examined, and the relative importance of different container types for production of Ae. aegypti was calculated. Ae. aegypti larvae and pupae were detected in 64 types of containers. Consistent production patterns were observed for the lid status (lids: 32% wet containers, 2% pupal production), container location (outdoor: 43% wet containers, 85% pupal production), and method by which the container was filled with water (rain filled: 15% wet containers, 88.3% pupal production); these patterns were consistent temporally and geographically. We describe a new container category (nontraditional) that includes transient puddles, which were rare but capable of producing large numbers of pupae. Because of high variable pupal counts, four container categories (large tank, medium storage, miscellaneous, and nontraditional) should be targeted in addition to outdoor rain-filled containers that are not covered by a lid. The utility of targeted Ae. aegypti control is discussed, as well as the ability to achieve control objectives based on published but untested threshold values.
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- 2004
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17. HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS TYPE 1 AND OTHER VIRAL CO-INFECTIONS AMONG YOUNG HETEROSEXUAL MEN AND WOMEN IN ARGENTINA
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Silvia M. Montano, Mirna M. Biglione, José Luis Sánchez, Monica Negrete, Horacio Salomón, María M. Avila, Sergio Sosa-Estani, Jorge Rey, James G. Olson, Liliana Martinez-Peralta, María A. Pando, Jean K. Carr, Silvia Gianni, Mauro Fernández Toscano, and Kevin L. Russell
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Hepatitis B virus ,Needle sharing ,Sexual transmission ,business.industry ,Opportunistic infection ,Hepatitis C virus ,virus diseases ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Virus ,Infectious Diseases ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Immunology ,Medicine ,Parasitology ,Viral disease ,business - Abstract
Infections with hepatitis C virus, (HCV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), and human T lymphotropic type I/II (HTLV-I/II) virus are commonly found in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). We conducted a seroepidemiologic study among 174 HIV-positive heterosexuals in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1999. Evidence of exposure to HCV, HBV, and HTLV-I/II was found in 32%, 17%, and 5%, respectively. A higher prevalence of HBV infection was observed among males (33%) compared with females (12%; P < 0.05). Among women, a prior history of a sexually transmitted infection, injecting drug use (IDU), having had more than five lifetime sex partners, and having exchanged sex-for-goods were significantly associated with HCV infection, whereas an IDU history, syringe sharing, and having exchanged sex-for-goods were found to be associated with HBV infection. Among men, an IDU history and syringe/needle sharing were significantly associated with HCV infection. The IDU-related and sexual transmission of hepatitis viruses constitute a significant problem among young, HIV-infected, heterosexuals in Argentina.
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- 2004
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18. Endemic Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis in Northern Peru
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Abelardo C. Moncayo, Robert B. Tesh, John S. Lee, Douglas M. Watts, Gladys Medina, Amelia P.A. Travassos Da Rosa, Tadeusz J. Kochel, César Cabezas, Lark L. Coffey, Monica L. O'Guinn, Kevin L. Russell, Ivorlyne P. Greene, Carolina Guevara, Stephen P. Yanoviak, Michael J. Turell, Michael Anishchenko, Hilda Guzman, Scott C. Weaver, Christine L. Hice, David J. Dohm, Terry A. Klein, Patricia V. Aguilar, James G. Olson, George V. Ludwig, and Amy C. Morrison
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Epidemiology ,Arbovirus infections ,lcsh:Medicine ,medicine.disease_cause ,Encephalitis Virus, Venezuelan Equine ,Rodent Diseases ,0302 clinical medicine ,Venezuelan Equine Alphavirus ,Genotype ,Peru ,Phylogeny ,Polymorphism, Single-Stranded Conformational ,0303 health sciences ,Panama ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Phylogenetic tree ,Amazon rainforest ,Encephalomyelitis, Venezuelan Equine ,3. Good health ,Infectious Diseases ,classification ,RNA, Viral ,geographic locations ,Microbiology (medical) ,Endemic diseases ,030231 tropical medicine ,Rodentia ,Biology ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Viral Proteins ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phylogenetics ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Protein Precursors ,Equine Encephalitis ,Epizootic ,030304 developmental biology ,Research ,lcsh:R ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Encephalitis Virus ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Culicidae ,Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus - Abstract
Since Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV) was isolated in Peru in 1942, >70 isolates have been obtained from mosquitoes, humans, and sylvatic mammals primarily in the Amazon region. To investigate genetic relationships among the Peru VEEV isolates and between the Peru isolates and other VEEV strains, a fragment of the PE2 gene was amplified and analyzed by single-stranded conformation polymorphism. Representatives of seven genotypes underwent sequencing and phylogenetic analysis. The results identified four VEE complex lineages that cocirculate in the Amazon region: subtypes ID (Panama and Colombia/Venezuela genotypes), IIIC, and a new, proposed subtype IIID, which was isolated from a febrile human, mosquitoes, and spiny rats. Both ID lineages and the IIID subtype are associated with febrile human illness. Most of the subtype ID isolates belonged to the Panama genotype, but the Colombia/Venezuela genotype, which is phylogenetically related to epizootic strains, also continues to circulate in the Amazon basin.
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- 2004
19. Experimental Evaluation of Rodent Exclusion Methods to Reduce Hantavirus Transmission to Residents in a Native American Community in New Mexico
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Andrew S. Hopkins, Joe Whitetail-Eagle, Ralph T. Bryan, Kathleen F. Cavallaro, Bobbie Person, Jon Norstog, James N. Mills, Paul J. Ettestad, Gerard A. Hoddenbach, Thomas G. Ksiazek, Mark DiMenna, Jacob Creswell, James E. Cheek, Bruce Begay, Ali S. Khan, Amy Corneli, and James G. Olson
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Risk ,Peromyscus truei ,Orthohantavirus ,Veterinary medicine ,Time Factors ,Peromyscus ,Rodent ,Hantavirus Infections ,New Mexico ,Disease Vectors ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,House mouse ,Mice ,Virology ,biology.animal ,Infestation ,Animals ,Medicine ,Hantavirus ,Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome ,biology ,Sin Nombre virus ,business.industry ,biology.organism_classification ,Infectious Diseases ,Costs and Cost Analysis ,Housing ,Indians, North American ,Rodent Control ,business ,Demography - Abstract
We conducted a pilot study to evaluate the efficacy of rodent proofing continuously occupied homes as a method for lowering the risk for hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) among residents of a Native American community in northwestern New Mexico. Rodent proofing of dwellings was paired with culturally appropriate health education. Seventy homes were randomly assigned to treatment or control categories. Treatment homes were rodent-proofed by sealing openings around foundations, doors, roofs, and pipes and repairing screens and windows. Repairs to each dwelling were limited to $500 US. After repairs were completed, 15-20 snap traps were placed in each treatment and control home and checked approximately every 2 days for an average of 3-4 weeks. During 23,373 trap nights, one house mouse (Mus musculus) was captured in one treatment home, and 20 mice (16 deer mice, Peromyscus maniculatus, two Pinyon mice, Peromyscus truei, and two unidentified mice) were captured in five control homes (one house had 14 captures, two had two captures, and two had one capture). Trap success was 0.01% in treatment homes and 0.15% in controls. Intensity of infestation (mean number of mice captured per infested home) was 1 in treatment homes and 4 in controls. Observations of evidence of infestation (feces, nesting material, gnaw marks, or reports of infestation by occupant) per 100 days of observation were 1.2 in treatment homes and 3.1 in controls. Statistical power of the experiment was limited because it coincided with a period of low rodent abundance (August-November 2000). Nevertheless, these results suggest that inexpensive rodent proofing of occupied rural homes can decrease the frequency and intensity of rodent intrusion, thereby reducing the risk of HPS among rural residents in the southwestern United States.
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- 2002
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20. Emerging Rickettsioses
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Didier Raoult and James G. Olson
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- 2014
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21. Epidemic Typhus: a Forgotten but Lingering Threat
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James G. Olson
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Epidemic typhus ,animal structures ,biology ,business.industry ,Transmission (medicine) ,Disease ,Louse ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,High fever ,Rickettsia prowazekii ,biology.animal ,Maculopapular rash ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Typhus ,Demography - Abstract
The impact of louse-borne, or epidemic, typhus, which is caused by Rickettsia prowazekii, on populations is of historical significance but has passed from current concern. Whenever large numbers of people were crowded together under less than sanitary conditions, typhus appeared. Louse-borne typhus remains endemic in the mountainous regions of the Americas, the Himalayas, Afghanistan, and Africa. The disease is maintained in an endemic cycle of transmission that remains barely detectable. Occasionally, conditions that favor epidemic transmission occur. Epidemic typhus spreads into populations at higher elevations, where colder conditions prevailed and infestations with lice were prevalent. Epidemic typhus is characterized clinically by sudden onset, sustained high fever of about 2 weeks duration, a maculopapular rash, and altered mental state. There is effective antimicrobial therapy for the typhus fevers. The response to tetracyclines or chloramphenicol is rapid and efficacious. Most patients become afebrile within 48 h of treatment, and single-dose doxycycline therapy is effective in epidemic situations. Strategies for control of epidemics of louse-borne typhus in refugee camps must include two elements of intervention: (i) antimicrobial treatment of patients with suspected cases and (ii) delousing of the entire population at risk. Long-term louse control or eradication depends on correction of the complex environmental, economic, cultural, educational, and political factors that contribute to louse infestations.
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- 2014
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22. A Serological Survey of Rural Dogs and Cats on the Southwestern Canadian Prairie for Zoonotic Pathogens
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Harvey Artsob, James G. Olson, May C. Chu, and Frederick A. Leighton
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Canada ,Veterinary medicine ,Rocky Mountain spotted fever ,Cat Diseases ,Bubonic plague ,Article ,Tularemia ,Dogs ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Zoonoses ,Blood-Borne Pathogens ,medicine ,Animals ,Dog Diseases ,Hantavirus ,Bartonella henselae ,biology ,Zoonosis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease ,Rickettsia rickettsii ,biology.organism_classification ,Geography ,Rickettsiosis ,Cats - Abstract
A survey for antibodies against agents of plague, tularemia, and Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF), and against Sin Nombre hantavirus (SNV), Bartonella henselae and B. clarridgeiae was conducted in the summer of 1995 using serum from rural dogs and cats living in the vicinity of four public parks in southeastern Alberta and southwestern Saskatchewan. Antibodies to all pathogens were detected in all survey areas. Overall prevalence rates were 0.075 for Yersinia pestis, 0.089 for Francisella tularensis, 0.025 for Rickettsia rickettsii (dogs only), and 0.029, 0.178 and 0.186 for SNV, B. henselae and B. clarridgeiae, respectively (cats only). This serological survey of rural dogs and cats was more sensitive and efficient than previous surveys based on collection and culture of rodents and ectoparasites. All six pathogens appear endemic to the region. Surveillance for plague, tularemia, RMSF and SNV, and management of associated public risks should be done in endemic regions.
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- 2001
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23. Abstract
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J. W. Bass, J. A. Rooney, K. Hadley, T. T. Brown, M. Holmberg, J. R. Claybaugh, B. C. Freitas, E. Farnetti, Y. Golan, J. Ridder, U. Fabio, L. Serra, G. Delacour, C. Garrido, R. R. Wittler, I. Shalit, P. Terenziani, H. J. Boulouis, R. Heller, R. Regnery, G. Friman, R. Berner, Russell L. Regnery, M. Sanchez, S. McGill, D. Watts, L. Cooper, L. N. Slater, C. Lyons, Y. Kletter, S. Tye, B. Richter, L. Bonazzi, A. Sander, F. Dutly, M. Maurin, M. Giladi, D. A. Person, R. Zbinden, E. Hjelm, R. Orni-Wasserlauf, M. E. Weisse, F. Chen, Arthur Reingold, A. D. Freitas, B. Casali, J. G. Olson, Jane E. Koehler, C. E. Atkins, L. Wesslen, L. Laughlin, L. Benoit, Didier Raoult, M. Ephros, G. J. Ridder, Edward B. Breitschwerdt, Jordan W. Tappero, H. Gonzales, A. Hill, C. Ponce, N. Cimolai, D. Bermond, S. Gordon, B. Avidor, M. Punder, J. M. Vincent, A. Gonzalo, Y. Piemont, J. Chamberlin, D. S. Chan, C. Carillo, A. Tuzzi, A. Fabio, S. Abulafia, Bruno B Chomel, James G. Olson, S. Romero, M. Ruess, M. Altwegg, K. A. Dubois, T. Ness, M. Brandis, and B. B. Chomel
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Microbiology (medical) ,Bartonella ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular Biology ,Microbiology ,Virology - Published
- 1999
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24. An investigation into the possibility of transmission of tick-borne pathogens via blood transfusion
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Paul M. Arguin, Tracee A. Treadwell, M. E. Chamberland, L. D. Rotz, Joseph Singleton, L. Tengelsen, A. Schwartz, James G. Olson, James E. Childs, Eric L. Marston, and Kimetha S. Slater
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Blood transfusion ,Transmission (medicine) ,business.industry ,Rocky Mountain spotted fever ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Military personnel ,Rickettsiosis ,Tick borne ,Ehrlichiosis (canine) ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Complication ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tick-borne illnesses were diagnosed in a group of National Guard members, including some who had donated blood a few days before the onset of symptoms. A voluntary recall of those blood components was issued and a multistate investigation was conducted to determine if transfusion-transmitted illness had occurred. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Donors and recipients were asked to complete questionnaires regarding symptoms and risk factors for infection and to provide blood samples for laboratory analysis. RESULTS: Among National Guard personnel who donated blood, 12 individuals were found to have a confirmed or probable case of Rocky Mountain spotted fever or ehrlichiosis. A total of 320 units (platelets or packed red cells) from 377 donors were transfused into 129 recipients. Although 10 recipients received units from National Guard personnel with confirmed or probable infection, none became ill. CONCLUSION: Transfusion-transmitted illness did not occur. Despite the awareness of the risk for tick-borne diseases and the use of tick-preventive measures, many National Guard personnel reported exposure to ticks. In addition to augmenting current tick-preventive measures, scheduling blood drives before rather than after field exercises could further reduce the potential for transmission of tick-borne pathogens.
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- 1999
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25. Evidence of rickettsial spotted fever and ehrlichial infections in a subtropical territory of Jujuy, Argentina
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Charles A. Santos-Buch, Sherif R. Zaki, James G. Olson, Hector Fusaro, Roberto Arazamendi, Carlos Remondegui, Michael J. Hyman, Glenda Ordonez, Christopher D. Paddock, and Carlos M. Ripoll
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Argentina ,Rickettsia rickettsii ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Serology ,Amblyomma cajennense ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,Fatal Outcome ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Virology ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Ehrlichia chaffeensis ,Child ,Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever ,biology ,Ehrlichiosis ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Spotted fever ,Infectious Diseases ,Rickettsiosis ,Child, Preschool ,Ehrlichiosis (canine) ,bacteria ,Female ,Parasitology ,Rickettsiales - Abstract
Between November 1993 and March 1994, a cluster 6 pediatric patients with acute febrile illnesses associated with rashes was identified in Jujuy Province, Argentina. Immunohistochemical staining of tissues confirmed spotted fever group rickettsial infection in a patient with fatal disease, and testing of serum of a patient convalescing from the illness by using an indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA) demonstrated antibodies reactive with spotted fever group rickettsiae. A serosurvey was conducted among 16 households in proximity to the index case. Of 105 healthy subjects evaluated by IFA, 19 (18%) demonstrated antibodies reactive with rickettsiae or ehrlichiae: 4 had antibodies reactive with Rickettsia rickettsii, 15 with Ehrlichia chaffeensis, and 1 with R. typhi. Amblyomma cajennense, a known vector of R. rickettsii in South America, was collected from pets and horses in the area. These results are the first to document rickettsial spotted fever and ehrlichial infections in Argentina.
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- 1999
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26. Unexplained Deaths Due to Possibly Infectious Causes in the United States: Defining the Problem and Designing Surveillance and Laboratory Approaches
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David W. Fleming, Pierre E. Rollin, Norman Crouch, James L. Hadler, Rima F. Khabbaz, Paul R. Cieslak, Jean Rainbow, Mark L. Eberhard, Michael T. Osterholm, Grechen Rothrock, Michael Virata, Don J. Brenner, Robin Ryder, Robert C. Holman, Laura A. Klug, Matt Cartter, Kathy LeDell, Jennifer M. Flood, Arthur Reingold, Duc J. Vugia, Sherif R. Zaki, R. Gibson Parrish, Robert W. Pinner, James Meek, Mark L. Wilson, Richard Danila, Kristine L. MacDonald, Katrina Hedberg, James G. Olson, and Bradley A. Perkins
- Subjects
business.industry ,lcsh:R ,medicine ,lcsh:Medicine ,Research article ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Medical emergency ,medicine.disease ,business ,United States ,Cause of death ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases - Published
- 1996
27. Cluster of five children with acute encephalopathy associated with cat-scratch disease in South Florida
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Russell L. Regnery, Jorge Del Toro, Jane A. Rooney, James G. Olson, Jackson Wong, James L. Cresanta, Joseph S. Bresee, James E. Childs, Margaret J. Gorensek, and Donald L. Noah
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Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Encephalopathy ,Dogs ,medicine ,Animals ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Child ,Direct fluorescent antibody ,Bartonella henselae ,biology ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Zoonosis ,Cat-Scratch Disease ,Cat-scratch disease ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Infectious Diseases ,El Niño ,Animals, Domestic ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cats ,Florida ,Encephalitis ,Female ,business - Abstract
Between August 12 and September 27, 1994, five children in South Florida were hospitalized at a single hospital because of encephalopathy, presenting as status epilepticus, associated with cat-scratch disease (CSD). Diagnoses were confirmed by using an indirect fluorescent antibody test to detect antibody to Bartonella henselae, the causative agent of CSD. These cases represent the first cluster of CSD encephalopathy cases to be recognized in the United States. The patients lived within 7 miles of each other and all reported contact with pet or stray cats before developing regional lymphadenopathy and encephalopathy. All recovered fully. A high proportion of 124 cats from the local area were seropositive (62%) or bacteremic (22%). This study suggests that B. henselae can be associated with geographically focal clusters of CSD encephalitis and should be considered in the evaluation of children with acute encephalopathy.
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- 1995
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28. Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome in Santa Cruz, Bolivia: Outbreak Investigation and Antibody Prevalence Study
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Raisa A. Glabman, Vidal Felices, Ana M. Briggiler, Patrick J. Blair, Alberto Gianella, Daniel G. Bausch, Darin S. Carroll, Joel M. Montgomery, Naomi Iihoshi, James N. Mills, Milagros Salazar, and James G. Olson
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Adult ,Male ,Bolivia ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,Adolescent ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,Epidemiology ,viruses ,Population ,Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome ,Antibodies, Viral ,Microbiology ,Disease Outbreaks ,Young Adult ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Rio Mamore virus ,Medicine ,Humans ,education ,Child ,Biology ,Weather ,Hantaan virus ,Hantavirus ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome ,biology ,business.industry ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Outbreak ,virus diseases ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Infectious Diseases ,Immunoglobulin M ,Child, Preschool ,Immunoglobulin G ,Oligoryzomys microtis ,Female ,Public Health ,Hantavirus Infection ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
We report the results of an investigation of a small outbreak of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in 2002 in the Department of Santa Cruz, Bolivia, where the disease had not previously been reported. Two cases were initially reported. The first case was a physician infected with Laguna Negra virus during a weekend visit to his ranch. Four other persons living on the ranch were IgM antibody-positive, two of whom were symptomatic for mild hantavirus pulmonary syndrome. The second case was a migrant sugarcane worker. Although no sample remained to determine the specific infecting hantavirus, a virus 90% homologous with Río Mamoré virus was previously found in small-eared pygmy rice rats (Oligoryzomys microtis) trapped in the area. An antibody prevalence study conducted in the region as part of the outbreak investigation showed 45 (9.1%) of 494 persons to be IgG positive, illustrating that hantavirus infection is common in Santa Cruz Department. Precipitation in the months preceding the outbreak was particularly heavy in comparison to other years, suggesting a possible climatic or ecological influence on rodent populations and risk of hantavirus transmission to humans. Hantavirus infection appears to be common in the Santa Cruz Department, but more comprehensive surveillance and field studies are needed to fully understand the epidemiology and risk to humans., Author Summary Hantaviruses can evoke a severe, acute disease in humans known as hantavirus pulmonary syndrome with case fatalities up to 70%. Pathogenic hantaviruses are carried by rodents, with each virus species usually carried by a specific species of rodent. Hantavirus-host reservoir pairs continue to be discovered and details of the epidemiology and risk of hantaviruses to humans continue to emerge. We report the results of an investigation of a small outbreak of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in 2002 in the Department of Santa Cruz, Bolivia, where the disease had not previously been reported. Two cases were initially noted, with four additional persons shown to be recently infected with hantaviruses through thorough field investigation and antibody evidence. An antibody prevalence study conducted as part of the outbreak investigation showed over 9% of the population studied to have previous exposure to hantaviruses. Precipitation in the months preceding the outbreak was particularly heavy in comparison to other years, suggesting a possible climatic influence on rodent populations and risk of hantavirus transmission to humans. Hantavirus infection appears to be common in the Santa Cruz Department, but more comprehensive surveillance and field studies are needed to fully understand the epidemiology and risk to humans.
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- 2012
29. Evaluation of specificity of indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for diagnosis of human Q fever
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Daniel B. Fishbein, I J Uhaa, J C Williams, D M Waag, C C Rives, and James G. Olson
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Microbiology (medical) ,Rocky Mountain spotted fever ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Q fever ,Biology ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Antigen ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,medicine ,Humans ,Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever ,Ehrlichiosis ,Antibody titer ,Reproducibility of Results ,Convalescence ,Typhus, Endemic Flea-Borne ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Coxiella burnetii ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Virology ,Rickettsiosis ,Evaluation Studies as Topic ,Acute Disease ,Immunology ,Ehrlichiosis (canine) ,biology.protein ,Antibody ,Q Fever ,Research Article - Abstract
Ninety-five acute- and convalescent-phase serum specimens from 48 patients suspected of having rickettsial or Legionella infections were assayed for antibodies to Coxiella burnetii, the causative agent of Q fever. To evaluate the specificity of the indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for human Q fever, we compared the ELISA results with those of the indirect immunofluorescence antibody (IFA) test. The ELISA data were analyzed by two different criteria for a positive test. The first criterion for positive results by ELISA was based upon diagnostic titers established in a study of 150 subjects who had no demonstrable cellular or humoral immune responses to C. burnetii phase I or phase II whole cells or phase I lipopolysaccharide. The second criterion was based upon diagnostic antibody titers in a study of 51 subjects who had been diagnosed as having clinical Q fever and had fourfold or greater rises in humoral immune responses to C. burnetii phase I and phase II whole-cell antigens. A comparison of the ELISA and IFA test results of the 95 serum specimens indicated excellent agreement between the tests (Kappa = 92.9%; P < 0.05). None of the 38 patients whose etiologies were confirmed serologically as Legionnaires' disease or rickettsial diseases other than Q fever were classified as positive for C. burnetii by the ELISA. Only one patient identified by the IFA test as having Q fever was not scored positive by the ELISA. These results suggest that the ELISA is useful for epidemiologic screening and as a diagnostic test for human Q fever.
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- 1994
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30. WHITE-TAILED DEER AS A POTENTIAL RESERVOIR OF EHRLICHIA SPP
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Erik K. Hofmeister, John K. Bouseman, James E. Childs, Jacqueline E. Dawson, James G. Olson, Charla Moore, David E. Stallknecht, Kristine L. Biggie, and John H. Shaddock
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Human monocytotropic ehrlichiosis ,Disease reservoir ,Veterinary medicine ,animal diseases ,Ehrlichia ,Odocoileus ,Amblyomma americanum ,parasitic diseases ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Animals ,Direct fluorescent antibody ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Disease Reservoirs ,Ecology ,biology ,Deer ,Ehrlichiosis ,Discriminant Analysis ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Southeastern United States ,Geographic distribution ,White (mutation) ,geographic locations - Abstract
We determined the antibody prevalence to Ehrlichia spp., in white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) and the geographic distribution of seropositive animals in 84 counties in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia (USA). Using an indirect fluorescent antibody test we detected antibodies (or = 1:128) to this bacterium in 544 (43%) of 1269 deer. Presence of antibodies to Ehrlichia spp. was related to a southerly latitude, low elevation, and resulting milder climatic conditions. It appears that white-tailed deer were naturally infected with Ehrlichia spp.; the infection was widely distributed throughout the southeastern United States. Based on these data, we propose that white-tailed deer play a role in the natural history of Ehrlichia spp. infection in the United States.
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- 1994
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31. Prevalence and risk factors for encephalomyocarditis virus infection in Peru
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Patrick J. Blair, Alfredo Huaman, Amy C. Morrison, Tadeusz J. Kochel, Claudio Rocha, Jose Luis Huaman, James G. Olson, Josephine A. Czechowicz, Dominique Eza, Roger M. Castillo, Brett M. Forshey, and Roxana Caceda
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,viruses ,Serological evidence ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Disease ,Antibodies, Viral ,Microbiology ,Virus ,Serology ,Young Adult ,Risk Factors ,Virology ,parasitic diseases ,Epidemiology ,Peru ,Cardiovirus Infections ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Sigmodontinae ,Encephalomyocarditis virus ,Child ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,biology ,business.industry ,Transmission (medicine) ,Murinae ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,Infectious Diseases ,Logistic Models ,Immunoglobulin M ,Child, Preschool ,Immunoglobulin G ,Female ,business ,geographic locations - Abstract
Although encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV) infection has been commonly documented among domestic animals, less is known about EMCV transmission among humans. Recently, we described the isolation of EMCV from two febrile patients in Peru. To further investigate EMCV transmission in Peru, we screened febrile patients reporting to health clinics in Peru for serological evidence of recent EMCV infection. We also conducted a serological survey for EMCV-neutralizing antibodies in the city of Iquitos, located in the Amazon basin department of Loreto, Peru. Additionally, we screened serum from rodents collected from 10 departments in Peru for evidence of EMCV exposure. EMCV infection was found to be only rarely associated with acute febrile disease in Peru, accounting for1% of febrile episodes analyzed. Despite the low acute disease burden associated with the virus, human exposure was quite common, as prevalence of EMCV-neutralizing antibodies ranged between 6.0% in the coastal city of Tumbes and17% in cities in the tropical rainforest of northeastern Peru (Iquitos and Yurimaguas). On the basis of the serological survey conducted in Iquitos, risk factors for past infection include increased age, socioeconomic indicators such as residence construction materials and neighborhood, and swine ownership. Evidence from the rodent survey indicates that EMCV exposure is common among Murinae subfamily rodents in Peru (9.4% EMCV IgG positive), but less common among Sigmodontinae rodents (1.0% positive). Further studies are necessary to more precisely delineate the mode of EMCV transmission to humans, other potential disease manifestations, and the economic impact of EMCV transmission among swine in Peru.
- Published
- 2011
32. Amblyomma americanum: a Potential Vector of Human Ehrlichiosis
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James G. Olson, Christine M. Happ, James E. Childs, Kimetha G. Sims, Joseph Piesman, Barbara J. B. Johnson, Burt E. Anderson, and Gary O. Maupin
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Nymph ,Human monocytotropic ehrlichiosis ,Ehrlichia ewingii ,Ehrlichia ,Tick ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Amblyomma americanum ,Ticks ,Virology ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Ehrlichia chaffeensis ,Dermacentor variabilis ,Electrophoresis, Agar Gel ,Base Composition ,biology ,Ehrlichiosis ,Nucleic Acid Hybridization ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,United States ,Infectious Diseases ,Ixodes scapularis ,DNA, Viral ,Arachnid Vectors ,Parasitology ,Ixodidae - Abstract
Polymerase chain reaction primers specific for Ehrlichia chaffeensis were used to amplify DNA from extracts of pooled ticks. Amplification was performed on extracts from 140 pools (1,579 total ticks) consisting of three tick genera collected from five states. The characteristic 389-basepair product was observed after amplification of extracts from seven different pools of adult Amblyomma americanum (117 pools, 1,462 ticks), but not from pools of nymphs. No specific product was observed after amplification of 20 pools (105 ticks) of Dermacentor variabilis and three pools of Ixodes scapularis (12 ticks). Ehrlichia chaffeensis was present in A. americanum at a minimum frequency of > or = 0.48%, suggesting that A. americanum may be a vector of human ehrlichiosis.
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- 1993
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33. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for detection of human immunoglobulin G to lipopolysaccharide of spotted fever group rickettsiae
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D C Jones, Burt E. Anderson, Craig E. Greene, and James G. Olson
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Lipopolysaccharides ,Microbiology (medical) ,Lipopolysaccharide ,Immunoblotting ,Serine Endopeptidases ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Rickettsia Infections ,Biology ,Immunoglobulin E ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Immunoglobulin G ,Spotted fever ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Rickettsia ,Antigen ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Humans ,Endopeptidase K ,Antibody ,Rickettsiales ,Research Article - Abstract
An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for detecting human immunoglobulin G to spotted fever group rickettsiae was developed and tested. The assay uses proteinase K-resistant material, characteristic of the rickettsial lipopolysaccharides shown to be group specific by immunoblots, as the antigen. The results indicate that the assay provides a sensitive, yet specific, alternative method for diagnosing rickettsial diseases.
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- 1993
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34. Epidemiology of dengue virus in Iquitos, Peru 1999 to 2005: interepidemic and epidemic patterns of transmission
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Douglas M. Watts, Dana A. Focks, Thomas W. Scott, Brett M. Forshey, James G. Olson, Steven T. Stoddard, Arthur Getis, Amy C. Morrison, Kevin L. Russell, Claudio Rocha, Patrick J. Blair, Tadeusz J. Kochel, Moises Sihuincha, Sharon L. Minnick, and Tesh, Robert B
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Male ,Public Health and Epidemiology/Infectious Diseases ,Dengue virus ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antibodies, Viral ,Medical and Health Sciences ,law.invention ,Dengue fever ,Dengue ,Cohort Studies ,law ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Absenteeism ,Peru ,80 and over ,Viral ,Longitudinal Studies ,Aetiology ,Child ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Geography ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Age Factors ,Public Health and Epidemiology/Global Health ,Middle Aged ,Biological Sciences ,Transmission (mechanics) ,Infectious Diseases ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Population study ,Female ,Infection ,Research Article ,Infectious Diseases/Tropical and Travel-Associated Diseases ,Adult ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,Adolescent ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,Population ,Public Health and Epidemiology ,and over ,Fever of Unknown Origin ,Antibodies ,Vaccine Related ,Young Adult ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Biodefense ,Tropical Medicine ,Infectious Diseases/Viral Infections ,medicine ,Seroprevalence ,Humans ,education ,Preschool ,Aged ,business.industry ,Prevention ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Dengue Virus ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Good Health and Well Being ,Infectious Diseases/Neglected Tropical Diseases ,Public Health and Epidemiology/Epidemiology ,business ,Demography ,2.4 Surveillance and distribution - Abstract
Background Comprehensive, longitudinal field studies that monitor both disease and vector populations for dengue viruses are urgently needed as a pre-requisite for developing locally adaptable prevention programs or to appropriately test and license new vaccines. Methodology and Principal Findings We report the results from such a study spanning 5 years in the Amazonian city of Iquitos, Peru where DENV infection was monitored serologically among ∼2,400 members of a neighborhood-based cohort and through school-based absenteeism surveillance for active febrile illness among a subset of this cohort. At baseline, 80% of the study population had DENV antibodies, seroprevalence increased with age, and significant geographic variation was observed, with neighborhood-specific age-adjusted rates ranging from 67.1 to 89.9%. During the first 15 months, when DENV-1 and DENV-2 were co-circulating, population-based incidence rates ranged from 2–3 infections/100 person-years (p-years). The introduction of DENV-3 during the last half of 2001 was characterized by 3 distinct periods: amplification over at least 5–6 months, replacement of previously circulating serotypes, and epidemic transmission when incidence peaked at 89 infections/100 p-years. Conclusions/Significance Neighborhood-specific baseline seroprevalence rates were not predictive of geographic incidence patterns prior to the DENV-3 introduction, but were closely mirrored during the invasion of this serotype. Transmission varied geographically, with peak incidence occurring at different times among the 8 geographic zones in ∼16 km2 of the city. The lag from novel serotype introduction to epidemic transmission and knowledge of spatially explicit areas of elevated risk should be considered for more effective application of limited resources for dengue prevention., Author Summary To develop prevention (including vaccines) and control programs for dengue fever, a significant mosquito-borne disease in the tropics, there is an urgent need for comprehensive long term field epidemiological studies. We report results from a study that monitored ∼2,400 school children and some adult family members for dengue infection at 6 month intervals from 1999 to 2005, in the Amazonian city of Iquitos, Peru. At enrollment, ∼80% of the participants had a previous infection with DENV serotypes 1 and 2 or both. During the first 15 months, about 3 new infections for every 100 participants were observed among the study participants. In 2001, DENV-3, a serotype not previously observed in the region, invaded Iquitos in a process characterized by 3 distinct periods: amplification over at least a 5–6 month period, replacement of previously circulating serotypes, and epidemic transmission when incidence peaked. Incidence patterns of new infections were geographically distinct from baseline prevalence rates prior to arrival of DENV-3, but closely mirrored them during the invasion. DENV transmission varied geographically corresponding to elevated mosquito densities. The invasion of a novel serotype is often characterized by 5–6 months of silent transmission before traditional surveillance programs detect the virus. This article sets the stage for subsequent publications on dengue epidemiology.
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- 2010
35. Etiology of acute undifferentiated febrile illness in the Amazon basin of Ecuador
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Stephen R, Manock, Kathryn H, Jacobsen, Narcisa Brito, de Bravo, Kevin L, Russell, Monica, Negrete, James G, Olson, José L, Sanchez, Patrick J, Blair, Roger D, Smalligan, Brad K, Quist, Juan Freire, Espín, Willan R, Espinoza, Fiona, MacCormick, Lila C, Fleming, and Tadeusz, Kochel
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Adult ,Adolescent ,Fever ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Middle Aged ,Malaria ,Dengue ,Child, Preschool ,Acute Disease ,Humans ,Leptospirosis ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,Q Fever ,Aged - Abstract
We conducted a longitudinal observational study of 533 patients presenting to two hospitals in the Ecuadorean Amazon basin with acute undifferentiated febrile illness (AUFI) from 2001 through 2004. Viral isolation, reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), IgM seroconversion, and malaria smears identified pathogens responsible for fever in 122 (40.1%) of 304 patients who provided both acute and convalescent blood samples. Leptospirosis was found in 40 (13.2%), malaria in 38 (12.5%), rickettsioses in 18 (5.9%), dengue fever in 16 (5.3%), Q fever in 15 (4.9%), brucellosis in 4 (1.3%), Ilhéus infection in 3 (1.0%), and Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE), Oropouche, and St. Louis encephalitis virus infections in less than 1% of these patients. Viral isolation and RT-PCR on another 229 participants who provided only acute samples identified 3 cases of dengue fever, 2 of VEE, and 1 of Ilhéus. None of these pathogens, except for malaria, had previously been detected in the study area.
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- 2009
36. Comparison of two active surveillance programs for the detection of clinical dengue cases in Iquitos, Peru
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Claudio, Rocha, Amy C, Morrison, Brett M, Forshey, Patrick J, Blair, James G, Olson, Jeffrey D, Stancil, Moises, Sihuincha, Thomas W, Scott, and Tadeusz J, Kochel
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Cohort Studies ,Dengue ,Male ,Schools ,Adolescent ,Child, Preschool ,Population Surveillance ,Peru ,Humans ,Female ,Child - Abstract
Endemic dengue transmission has been documented in the Amazonian city of Iquitos, Peru, since the early 1990s. To better understand the epidemiology of dengue transmission in Iquitos, we established multiple active surveillance systems to detect symptomatic infections. Here we compare the efficacy of distinct community-based (door to door) and school absenteeism-based febrile surveillance strategies in detecting active cases of dengue. Febrile episodes were detected by both systems with equal rapidity after disease onset. However, during the period that both programs were running simultaneously in 2004, a higher number of febrile cases in general (4.52/100 versus 1.64/100 person-years) and dengue cases specifically (2.35/100 versus 1.29/100 person-years) were detected in school-aged children through the community-based surveillance program. Similar results were obtained by direct comparison of 435 participants concurrently enrolled in both programs (P0.005). We conclude that, in Iquitos, community-based door-to-door surveillance is a more efficient and sensitive design for detecting active dengue cases than programs based on school absenteeism.
- Published
- 2009
37. Human febrile illness caused by encephalomyocarditis virus infection, Peru
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W. Allan Nix, Thomas G. Ksiazek, Cynthia S. Goldsmith, Tadeusz J. Kochel, Pierre E. Rollin, M. Steven Oberste, James G. Olson, Eduardo Gotuzzo, James A. Comer, and Patrick J. Blair
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Microbiology (medical) ,Adult ,Male ,Cardiovirus Infections ,Fever ,Epidemiology ,febrile illness ,viruses ,lcsh:Medicine ,Antibodies, Viral ,Communicable Diseases, Emerging ,Virus ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Serology ,Blood serum ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,parasitic diseases ,Chlorocebus aethiops ,Peru ,Animals ,Humans ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Encephalomyocarditis virus ,Vero Cells ,Phylogeny ,DNA Primers ,biology ,Base Sequence ,Research ,lcsh:R ,Picornavirus ,Middle Aged ,human infections ,biology.organism_classification ,cardiovirus ,Virology ,Cardiovirus ,Infectious Diseases ,Immunoglobulin M ,Population Surveillance ,Acute Disease ,biology.protein ,Vero cell ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,Antibody ,geographic locations - Abstract
Encephalomyocarditis virus was identified in the serum of 2 febrile patients in Peru., Etiologic studies of acute febrile disease were conducted in sites across South America, including Cusco and Iquitos, Peru. Patients’ clinical signs and symptoms were recorded, and acute- and convalescent-phase serum samples were obtained for serologic examination and virus isolation in Vero E6 and C6/36 cells. Virus isolated in Vero E6 cells was identified as encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV) by electron microscopy and by subsequent molecular diagnostic testing of samples from 2 febrile patients with nausea, headache, and dyspnea. The virus was recovered from acute-phase serum samples from both case-patients and identified with cardiovirus-specific reverse transcription–PCR and sequencing. Serum samples from case-patient 1 showed cardiovirus antibody by immunoglobulin M ELISA (acute phase 1,024) and by neutralization assay (acute phase 1,280). Serum samples from case-patient 2 did not contain antibodies detectable by either assay. Detection of virus in serum strongly supports a role for EMCV in human infection and febrile illness.
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- 2009
38. Molecular epidemiology of dengue virus type 3 in Northern South America: 2000--2005
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Patricia V. Aguilar, Patrick J. Blair, Aracely Alava, Tadeusz J. Kochel, Cristopher Cruz, Vidal Felices, Guillermo Comach, Jorge Vargas, and James G. Olson
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Microbiology (medical) ,Genotype ,viruses ,Dengue virus ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Dengue ,Evolution, Molecular ,Viral Proteins ,Type (biology) ,Viral Envelope Proteins ,parasitic diseases ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Clade ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Phylogeny ,Molecular Epidemiology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Molecular epidemiology ,Genetic variants ,Dengue Virus ,South America ,Virology ,Infectious Diseases ,Capsid ,Capsid Proteins ,geographic locations - Abstract
A phylogenetic approach was used to identify genetic variants of DENV-3 subtype III that may have emerged during or after its expansion throughout South America. We sequenced the capsid, premembrane/membrane and envelope genes from 22 DENV-3 strains isolated from Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru between 2000 and 2005. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the isolates sequenced in this study formed three clades within subtype III: one with the isolates from Venezuela, one with the Bolivian isolates and one with the isolates from Ecuador and Peru.
- Published
- 2007
39. Coxiella burnetii
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James G. Olson, Franca R. Jones, and Patrick J. Blair
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- 2006
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40. Rickettsia spp
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James G. Olson, Franca R. Jones, and Patrick J. Blair
- Published
- 2006
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41. Epidemiology of transfusion-transmitted infections among multi-transfused patients in seven hospitals in Peru
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C. Mendoza, J. Málaga, M. Lavalle, Merly Sovero, D. Blichtein, A. Chunga, D. Bolívar, W. Flores, E. Soto, Victor Alberto Laguna-Torres, N. Loayza, S. Xueref, J. Gutiérrez, Silvia M. Montano, M. Suárez, Gloria Chauca, J. Pérez-Bao, James G. Olson, Jose L. Sanchez, J. González, S. Mendoza, Z. Monge, Maria Cruz, A. Retamal, Warren B. Sateren, R. Reyna, M. Oré, and Christian T. Bautista
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blood transfusion ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,HIV Infections ,HIV Antibodies ,Antibodies, Viral ,Renal Dialysis ,Risk Factors ,Virology ,Epidemiology ,Peru ,medicine ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,Humans ,Risk factor ,Hepatitis B Antibodies ,Human T-lymphotropic virus 1 ,business.industry ,Public health ,Medical record ,Transfusion Reaction ,Transfusion History ,Odds ratio ,Hepatitis C Antibodies ,Middle Aged ,Hepatitis B ,HTLV-I Infections ,Hepatitis C ,Hospitals ,Infectious Diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Emergency medicine ,Immunology ,Female ,Hemodialysis ,business - Abstract
Background: Transfusion-transmitted infections (TTIs) constitute a major health problem worldwide where routine screening of blood or blood products is improperly done, and where non-medical injecting medications and/or drug use are prevalent. Prevalence and risk factors vary by geographic location and by the specific TTI (including HIV-1, HBV, HCV and HTLV-I). Objective: To determine theprevalence and risk factors associated with TTIs among a sample of multi-transfused adult patients in Peru. Study design: A cross-sectionalmulti-center study was conducted across seven major hospitals in Peru from February 2003 to September 2004. Self-reported behavior information (medical procedures, number of sexual partners, and drug use history) was analyzed, along with a review of exposure history from hospital medical records. Prevalences were calculated by TTI for different exposures, along with unadjusted and adjusted odds ratios for infection risk. Results: Overall, 192 (54.7%) of 351 multi-transfused patients were found infected with one or more TTIs.Number of transfusion units, years of transfusion history (6 or more), and number of treatment facilities (2 or more) were associated with HCV infection. Hemodialysis history was a common risk factor associated with HBV, HCV and HTLV-I infection. HIV infection was associated only with total number of transfusion units received. Conclusions: High prevalences of HBV and HCV infection were foundamong Peruvian multi-transfused patients and were associated with a past history and number of blood transfusions, as well as with past hemodialysis procedures. TTIs continue to represent a significant public health problem in Peru. Continued vigilant attention to blood safety procedures, including universal screening and health care provider education, is recommended.
- Published
- 2006
42. Prevalences, genotypes, and risk factors for HIV transmission in South America
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Hugo Manrique, Douglas M. Watts, Adolfo Galeano, Gloria Chauca, Maria E. Acosta, Deborah L. Birx, Gladys Carrion, Eugenio Ramirez, Margarita Serra, Paloma Cuchi, Jose Vinoles, Mercedes Weissenbacher, Jean K. Carr, James G. Olson, Orlando Montoya, Kevin L. Russell, Angel Guevara, Anabella Arredondo, Christian T. Bautista, María M. Avila, Gloria I. Sanchez, Jose C. Russi, Javier R. Lama, Aracely Alava, Silvia M. Montano, Juan Perez, Fernando de la Hoz, Alberto Laguna-Torres, Claudia Ayala, Nicolas Aguayo, Monica Negrete, Maria E. Pacheco, Jose L. Sanchez, Alberto Gianella, Ronald Andrade, and J. L. Sanchez
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cross-sectional study ,Sexual Behavior ,HIV Infections ,Heteroduplex Analysis ,Men who have sex with men ,law.invention ,Interviews as Topic ,law ,Risk Factors ,Epidemiology ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Risk factor ,Homosexuality, Male ,Substance Abuse, Intravenous ,Genotyping ,Molecular Epidemiology ,Molecular epidemiology ,biology ,business.industry ,virus diseases ,Gene Products, env ,HIV ,South America ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Sex Work ,Infectious Diseases ,Transmission (mechanics) ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Logistic Models ,Lentivirus ,Female ,business ,Demography - Abstract
HIV cross-sectional studies were conducted among high-risk populations in 9 countries of South America. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay screening and Western blot confirmatory testing were performed, and env heteroduplex mobility assay genotyping and DNA sequencing were performed on a subset of HIV-positive subjects. HIV prevalences were highest among men who have sex with men (MSM; 2.0%-27.8%) and were found to be associated with multiple partners, noninjection drug use (non-IDU), and sexually transmitted infections (STIs). By comparison, much lower prevalences were noted among female commercial sex workers (FCSWs; 0%-6.3%) and were associated mainly with a prior IDU and STI history. Env subtype B predominated among MSM throughout the region (more than 90% of strains), whereas env subtype F predominated among FCSWs in Argentina and male commercial sex workers in Uruguay (more than 50% of strains). A renewed effort in controlling STIs, especially among MSM groups, could significantly lessen the impact of the HIV epidemic in South America.
- Published
- 2005
43. Seroincidence and phylogeny of human immunodeficiency virus infections in a cohort of commercial sex workers in Montevideo, Uruguay
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Jose, Viñoles, Margarita, Serra, Jose C, Russi, Dora, Ruchansky, Sergio, Sosa-Estani, Silvia M, Montano, Gladys, Carrion, Lindsay M, Eyzaguirre, Jean K, Carr, James G, Olson, Christian T, Bautista, Jose L, Sanchez, and Mercedes, Weissenbacher
- Subjects
Adult ,Adolescent ,Base Sequence ,Incidence ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,HIV Infections ,Sex Work ,Cohort Studies ,Risk Factors ,HIV-1 ,Humans ,Uruguay ,Phylogeny ,DNA Primers - Abstract
A cohort study involving 60 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-negative male transvestite commercial sex workers (CSWs) was conducted in Montevideo, Uruguay in 1999-2001. Serum samples were tested for HIV by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay screening with immunoblot confirmation. Six participants seroconverted for an incidence-density rate of 6.03 (95% confidence interval = 2.21-13.12) per 100 person-years. Inconsistent condom use during client sex (adjusted hazard ratio [AHR] = 6.7), during oral sex (AHR = 5.6), and at the last sexual encounter (AHR = 7.8), and use of marihuana (AHR = 5.4) were marginally associated with HIV seroconversion. Five samples were genotyped in the protease and reverse transcriptase regions; three were subtypes B and two were BF recombinants. Full genome analysis of four samples confirmed all three subtype B samples and one of the two BF recombinants. Male transvestite CSWs sustained a high rate of HIV infection. Larger prospective studies are required to better define subtypes and associated sexual and drug-related risk factors.
- Published
- 2005
44. Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in Central Bolivia: relationships between reservoir hosts, habitats, and viral genotypes
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Darin S, Carroll, James N, Mills, Joel M, Montgomery, Daniel G, Bausch, Patrick J, Blair, James P, Burans, Vidal, Felices, Alberto, Gianella, Naomi, Iihoshi, Stuart T, Nichol, James G, Olson, Duke S, Rogers, Milagros, Salazar, and Thomas G, Ksiazek
- Subjects
Bolivia ,Orthohantavirus ,Genotype ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Animals ,Humans ,RNA, Viral ,Rodentia ,Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome ,Phylogeny ,Disease Reservoirs ,Rats - Abstract
In August 2002, two cases of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) were confirmed in Mineros and Concepcion, within the Santa Cruz Department of Bolivia. Extensive alteration of the native ecosystem, from dense forest to pasture or sugarcane, had occurred in both regions. An ecologic assessment of reservoir species associated with the human disease identified a single hantavirus antibody-positive Oligoryzomys microtis from Mineros and three hantavirus antibody-positive Calomys callosus from Concepcion. In Mineros, the virus from the O. microtis was 90% similar to sequences published for Rio Mamore virus. Viral nucleotide sequences from two C. callosus were 87-88% similar to the sequence of Laguna Negra virus. The viral sequence from the C. callosus was 99% identical to viral sequences obtained from the HPS patient in this area, implicating C. callosus as the host and Laguna Negra virus as the agent responsible for the HPS case near Concepcion.
- Published
- 2005
45. Temporal and geographic patterns of Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) production in Iquitos, Peru
- Author
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Amy C, Morrison, Kenneth, Gray, Arthur, Getis, Helvio, Astete, Moises, Sihuincha, Dana, Focks, Douglas, Watts, Jeffrey D, Stancil, James G, Olson, Patrick, Blair, and Thomas W, Scott
- Subjects
Population Density ,Time Factors ,Geography ,Aedes ,Larva ,Peru ,Pupa ,Urban Health ,Animals ,Humans ,Demography - Abstract
Large-scale longitudinal cohort studies are necessary to characterize temporal and geographic variation in Aedes aegypti (L.) (Diptera: Culicidae) production patterns and to develop targeted dengue control strategies that will reduce disease. We carried out pupal/demographic surveys in a circuit of approximately 6,000 houses, 10 separate times, between January 1999 and August 2002 in the Amazonian city of Iquitos, Peru. We quantified the number of containers positive for Ae. aegypti larvae and/or pupae, containers holding pupae, and the absolute number of pupae by 4-mo sampling circuits and spatially by geographic area by using a geographic information system developed for the city. A total of 289,941 water-holding containers were characterized, of which 7.3% were positive for Ae. aegypti. Temporal and geographic variations were detected for all variables examined, and the relative importance of different container types for production of Ae. aegypti was calculated. Ae. aegypti larvae and pupae were detected in 64 types of containers. Consistent production patterns were observed for the lid status (lids: 32% wet containers, 2% pupal production), container location (outdoor: 43% wet containers, 85% pupal production), and method by which the container was filled with water (rain filled: 15% wet containers, 88.3% pupal production); these patterns were consistent temporally and geographically. We describe a new container category (nontraditional) that includes transient puddles, which were rare but capable of producing large numbers of pupae. Because of high variable pupal counts, four container categories (large tank, medium storage, miscellaneous, and nontraditional) should be targeted in addition to outdoor rain-filled containers that are not covered by a lid. The utility of targeted Ae. aegypti control is discussed, as well as the ability to achieve control objectives based on published but untested threshold values.
- Published
- 2004
46. Documentation of subtype C HIV Type 1 strains in Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay
- Author
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María M. Avila, Jean K. Carr, Adolfo Galeano, A. Romero, A. Barboza, Deborah L. Birx, Juan Perez, Margarita Serra, Victor Alberto Laguna-Torres, Jose Vinoles, P.J. Blair, María A. Pando, Silvia M. Montano, Nicolas Aguayo, Gloria Chauca, Gladys Carrion, James G. Olson, Mercedes Weissenbacher, Dora Ruchansky, J. L. Sanchez, and Lindsay M. Eyzaguirre
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Sequence analysis ,Immunology ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Argentina ,HIV Infections ,Heteroduplex Analysis ,Virus ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,HIV Protease ,Virology ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Sida ,Phylogeny ,biology ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Reverse transcriptase ,HIV Reverse Transcriptase ,Infectious Diseases ,Paraguay ,Lentivirus ,HIV-1 ,Uruguay ,Female ,Viral disease ,Heteroduplex - Abstract
HIV subtypes B, F, and BF recombinants have been previously reported in South America. This report describes the presence of HIV-1 subtype C infection in the countries of Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay dating back to at least 1999. Surveillance for uncommon non-B/non-F subtype viruses circulating in South America has been conducted in samples obtained from nine countries. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), dried filter paper (FP), and fresh blood (FB) samples were collected from HIV-positive patients from Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela, Peru, Chile, Bolivia, Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay. From a total of 2962 HIV seropositive samples examined during a 9-year period (1995-2003), only 11 (0.4%) were found to be infected with non-B/non-F HIV variants. Eight of these 11 strains were determined to be subtype C by heteroduplex mobility assay (HMA). Five of these 8 strains were further characterized by sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of the protease (Pro) and reverse transcriptase (RT) region of the genome and two were sequenced full length. One of the strains was found to be a unique BC recombinant. The spread of a third subtype of HIV, subtype C, should raise the question of its potential future role in the HIV epidemic in this region.
- Published
- 2004
47. Characterization of Spotted Fever Group Rickettsiae in Flea and Tick Specimens from Northern Peru
- Author
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Elizabeth Anaya, Vidal Felices, Leonardo Mendoza, Pablo Villaseca, George B. Schoeler, James G. Olson, Manuel Cespedes, Christopher Cruz, Cecilia Morón, Allen L. Richards, Carolina Guevara, Patrick J. Blair, Ju Jiang, and John W. Sumner
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,DNA, Bacterial ,Epidemiology ,Rocky Mountain spotted fever ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Biology ,Tick ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Microbiology ,Ticks ,Bacterial Proteins ,parasitic diseases ,Peru ,medicine ,Animals ,Amblyomma maculatum ,Rickettsia ,Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever ,Phylogeny ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Rickettsia rickettsii ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Rickettsia felis ,Virology ,Spotted fever ,Rickettsiosis ,bacteria ,Siphonaptera - Abstract
Evidence of spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsiae was obtained from flea pools and individual ticks collected at three sites in northwestern Peru within the focus of an outbreak of febrile disease in humans attributed, in part, to SFG rickettsia infections. Molecular identification of the etiologic agents from these samples was determined after partial sequencing of the 17-kDa common antigen gene ( htrA ) as well as pairwise nucleotide sequence homology with one or more of the following genes: gltA , ompA , and ompB . Amplification and sequencing of portions of the htrA and ompA genes in pooled samples (2 of 59) taken from fleas identified the pathogen Rickettsia felis . Four tick samples yielded molecular evidence of SFG rickettsiae. Fragments of the ompA (540-bp) and ompB (2,484-bp) genes were amplified from a single Amblyomma maculatum tick (tick 124) and an Ixodes boliviensis tick (tick 163). The phylogenetic relationships between the rickettsiae in these samples and other rickettsiae were determined after comparison of their ompB sequences by the neighbor-joining method. The dendrograms generated showed that the isolates exhibited close homology (97%) to R. aeschlimannii and R. rhipicephali . Significant bootstrap values supported clustering adjacent to this nodule of the SFG rickettsiae. While the agents identified in the flea and tick samples have not been linked to human cases in the area, these results demonstrate for the first time that at least two SFG rickettsia agents were circulating in northern Peru at the time of the outbreak. Furthermore, molecular analysis of sequences derived from the two separate species of hard ticks identified a possibly novel member of the SFG rickettsiae.
- Published
- 2004
48. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and other viral co-infections among young heterosexual men and women in Argentina
- Author
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María, de los Angeles Pando, Mirna M, Biglione, Mauro Fernández, Toscano, Jorge A, Rey, Kevin L, Russell, Monica, Negrete, Silvia, Gianni, Liliana, Martinez-Peralta, Horacio, Salomon, Sergio, Sosa-Estani, Silvia M, Montano, James G, Olson, José L, Sanchez, Jean K, Carr, and Maria M, Avila
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Hepatitis B virus ,Human T-lymphotropic virus 1 ,Adolescent ,Human T-lymphotropic virus 2 ,Argentina ,HIV Infections ,Hepacivirus ,Middle Aged ,Antibodies, Viral ,Hepatitis B ,HTLV-I Infections ,Hepatitis C ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Risk Factors ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,HTLV-II Infections ,HIV-1 ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Female ,Heterosexuality - Abstract
Infections with hepatitis C virus, (HCV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), and human T lymphotropic type I/II (HTLV-I/II) virus are commonly found in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). We conducted a seroepidemiologic study among 174 HIV-positive heterosexuals in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1999. Evidence of exposure to HCV, HBV, and HTLV-I/II was found in 32%, 17%, and 5%, respectively. A higher prevalence of HBV infection was observed among males (33%) compared with females (12%; P0.05). Among women, a prior history of a sexually transmitted infection, injecting drug use (IDU), having had more than five lifetime sex partners, and having exchanged sex-for-goods were significantly associated with HCV infection, whereas an IDU history, syringe sharing, and having exchanged sex-for-goods were found to be associated with HBV infection. Among men, an IDU history and syringe/needle sharing were significantly associated with HCV infection. The IDU-related and sexual transmission of hepatitis viruses constitute a significant problem among young, HIV-infected, heterosexuals in Argentina.
- Published
- 2004
49. Evidence of rickettsial and leptospira infections in Andean northern Peru
- Author
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Ricky Luckett, Leonardo Mendoza, Elizabeth Anaya, Vidal Felices, Pablo Villaseca, George B. Schoeler, Allen L. Richards, Carolina Guevara, Patrick J. Blair, Christopher Cruz, Alfredo Huaman, Zonia Rios, John W. Sumner, Cecilia Morón, Roxana Caceda, James G. Olson, and Manuel Cespedes
- Subjects
Adult ,DNA, Bacterial ,Rural Population ,Adolescent ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Microbiology ,Serology ,Disease Outbreaks ,Leptospira ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Virology ,Agglutination Tests ,Peru ,medicine ,Humans ,Rickettsia ,Child ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Indirect ,Aged ,biology ,Outbreak ,Middle Aged ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,medicine.disease ,Coxiella burnetii ,biology.organism_classification ,Leptospirosis ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,Spotted fever ,Infectious Diseases ,Rickettsiosis ,bacteria ,Parasitology ,Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections - Abstract
Between May and October 2002, a cluster of acute febrile illnesses occurred in the subtropical Andean foothills of Peru. Serologic evidence in villages where disease had been documented showed that the prevalence of IgM antibody to Leptospira ranged from 6% to 52%, that of IgM antibody to spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsia ranged from 10% to 19%, and that of IgM antibody to Coxiella burnetii from 1% to 15%. Measurement of IgG antibodies for SFG rickettsiae suggested that this disease was endemic. In contrast, IgG antibodies against C. burnetii were largely absent. In humans, microagglutination tests identified pathogenic variants of Leptospira. The presence of an SFG rickettsial infection was confirmed in four febrile patients following polymerase chain reaction and sequencing of the conserved 17-kD common antigen gene (htrA). Collectively, these analyses indicated that Rickettsia sp., C. burnetii, and Leptospira sp. were circulating in the region during the time of disease outbreak and implicate the involvement of an as yet undetermined SFG rickettsia in northwestern Peru.
- Published
- 2004
50. Isolation of Kaeng Khoi virus from dead Chaerephon plicata bats in Cambodia
- Author
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Ung Sam An, Thomas G. Ksiazek, Stuart T. Nichol, Cynthia S. Goldsmith, Michael Niezgoda, Pierre E. Rollin, Charles E. Rupprecht, Jane C. Osborne, and James G. Olson
- Subjects
biology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,viruses ,Bunyaviridae ,Brain ,Bunyaviridae Infections ,Chaerephon plicata ,Isolation (microbiology) ,biology.organism_classification ,Cercopithecus aethiops ,Virology ,Virus ,Kaeng Khoi virus ,Mice ,Phylogenetics ,Chiroptera ,Chlorocebus aethiops ,Animals ,RNA, Viral ,Cambodia ,Vero Cells ,Phylogeny - Abstract
A virus isolated from dead Chaerephon plicata bats collected near Kampot, Cambodia, was identified as a member of the family Bunyaviridae by electron microscopy. The only bunyavirus previously isolated from Chaerephon species bats in South-East Asia is Kaeng Khoi (KK) virus (genus Orthobunyavirus), detected in Thailand over 30 years earlier and implicated as a public health problem. Using RT-PCR, nucleotide sequences from the M RNA segment of several virus isolates from the Cambodian C. plicata bats were found to be almost identical and to differ from those of the prototype KK virus by only 2·6–3·2 %, despite the temporal and geographic separation of the viruses. These results identify the Cambodian bat viruses as KK virus, extend the known virus geographic range and document the first KK virus isolation in 30 years. These genetic data, together with earlier serologic data, show that KK viruses represent a distinct group within the genus Orthobunyavirus.
- Published
- 2003
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