Clinical, laboratory, and molecular epidemiology of Orientia tsutsugamushi infection from Southwestern India

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Abstract

Scrub typhus is a vector borne disease which in a proportion of patients causes multiorgan involvement and death if untreated. Infecting genotype and virulence factors play a role in severity of infection and outcome. The current prospective cohort study was undertaken to elucidate the severity of illness in scrub typhus patients and to identify the circulating genotypes in Karnataka, India. A total of 214 patients of either gender from 9 districts of Karnataka and one patient each from Andhra Pradesh and Kerala, India were enrolled in the study. With a predefined severity criterion, 132 patients were segregated to the severe group. Multi organ involvement was seen in 59 (44.69%) patients. Phylogenetic analysis revealed JG-v like (48.97%), Karp-like (26.53%), JG-like (22.44%), and Kato-like (2.04%) strains in Karnataka. Patients infected with Orientia tsutsugamushi Karp-like strains had respiratory involvement (69.2%), cardiovascular involvement (46.2%) and thrombocytopenia (23.1%) and required higher hospital resource utilization.

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Chunduru, K., Manoj, A. R., Poornima, S., Hande, M. H., Mridula, M., Varghese, G. M., … Saravu, K. (2023). Clinical, laboratory, and molecular epidemiology of Orientia tsutsugamushi infection from Southwestern India. PLoS ONE, 18(7 July). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0289126

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