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      Human Infection with Rickettsia sp. related to R. japonica, Thailand

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          Abstract

          To the Editor: Although rickettsioses caused by scrub typhus and typhus group rickettsiae are well recognized in Thailand, few spotted-fever group rickettsiae (SFGR), including Rickettsia honei TT118 and R. felis, have been documented to be associated with human illnesses ( 1 , 2 ). We report a case of human infection with an SFGR species closely related to R. japonica in Thailand. In January 2005, a 36-year-old man with prolonged fever, pneumonia, and septic shock was transferred from a private hospital to Phramongkutklao Army Hospital in Bangkok. Two weeks before the onset of fever, the patient had camped at Khao Yai National Park, ≈175 km northeast of Bangkok. The park is a popular location for tourists and the largest national park declared as a natural wildlife reserve area. The patient reported the presence of wild deer around the camping area but did not recall being bitten by an arthropod. Ten days before hospitalization, he developed flulike symptoms, fever, and sore throat. Six days later, he noted petechiae on his lower extremities, and his condition worsened. At the time of hospital admission, the patient had fever of 38.6°C, tachycardia, dyspnea, hypotension, nausea, vomiting, generalized maculopapular rash, and subconjunctival hemorrhage. Laboratory investigation showed thrombocytopenia (platelets 64,000/mm3), leukocytosis (14,000/mm3), and elevated levels of serum hepatic enzymes (aspartate aminotransferase 287 IU/L [reference 5–50 IU/L]; alanine aminotransferase 186 IU/L [reference 5–40 IU/L]). Chest radiograph showed interstitial pneumonitis. Serum antibody test results were negative for leptospira and dengue virus; blood smear was negative for malaria. Samples of the patient’s whole blood were collected in EDTA on days 10, 18, 20, and 25 after illness onset, and each sample was sent at the time of collection to the Armed Forces Research Institute of Medical Sciences, Bangkok, to be investigated for rickettsial infection. Plasma was separated and tested for scrub typhus, typhus group, and SFGR-specific immunoglobulin M (IgM) and IgG by immunofluorescence assay by using Orientia tsutsugamushi Karp-Kato-Gilliam strains and R. typhi Wilmington and R. honei TT118 whole cell antigens. No antibodies to rickettsiae were detected in the initial sample. On day 18, only antibodies against R. honei TT118 antigen were detected at a low titer, 50 for IgM and 200 for IgG, while antibodies to scrub typhus and typhus group rickettsiae remained negative (titers <50). Antibody level was unchanged on days 20 and 25. At the time of admission, the patient began receiving 2 g of intravenous ceftriaxone and 200 mg of oral doxycycline daily. Three days later, treatment with doxycycline was stopped because the initial serologic results for rickettsia were negative. However, doxycycline was resumed on day 21, after antibodies to Thai tick typhus agent were detected in a second specimen. Within 3 days, the patient was afebrile and asymptomatic. He was discharged from the hospital and continued oral doxycycline for an additional 7 days. At 2-week follow up, he had completely recovered. To identify which SFGR was responsible for the patient's illness, we used molecular approaches. We extracted DNA from the patient’s blood specimens by using QIAamp Mini blood kit (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA, USA) and subjected it to duplex nested–PCR assays targeting a 343-bp fragment of the rickettsial genus–specific 17-kDa antigen gene ( 3 ) and a 690 bp-portion of the Orientia 56-kDa antigen gene ( 4 ). An appropriate control panel included DNA from a reference sample of human blood, Coxiella sp., and Leptospira interrogans. Platinum Taq DNA Polymerase High Fidelity (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) enzyme mixture was used in PCR. By resolution on agarose gel, a PCR fragment of the expected size for the 17-kDa antigen gene was observed from the day-10 sample but not from the control samples. AluI restriction pattern of amplified 17-kDa fragment was similar to that of SFGR. Additional rickettsial gene fragments, 630 nt-ompA (nt 70–701) and 945 nt-gltA (RpCS.193F-5′-GTAGGGTATCTGCGGAAGCC-3′, RpCS.1143R-5′-GAGCGAGAGCTTCAAGTTCTATTGC-3′), were also amplified from the day-10 specimen. All amplicons were excised from agarose gels, purified by QIAEX II Gel Extraction Kit (QIAGEN), and then sequenced. BLAST analysis of 17-kDa antigen gene (GenBank accession no. DQ909071), gltA (DQ909073), and ompA (DQ909072) segments obtained from this patient showed 99% identity to corresponding genes of R. japonica. Phylogenetic analysis of these 3 genes indicates that the Rickettsia sp. from this patient is closely related and clustered within the same clade of R. japonica (Figure). Isolation of this rickettsial agent from the patient’s blood by animal inoculation and by cell culture methods is ongoing. Figure Phylogenetic relationships between Rickettsia sp. and rickettsial genes amplified from the patient (PMK 94) inferred from comparison with the rickettsial 17-kDa antigen gene, gltA, and ompA sequences by the neighbor-joining method. Bootstrap values of 1,000 replicates are indicated. Persons visiting Khao Yai National Park are at risk for rickettsioses, particularly SFGR. Vectors for SFGR have been found in this area ( 5 ). The clinical and molecular findings in this case add to the accumulating data on the emerging rickettsial agents and their geographic distribution in Thailand.

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          Most cited references5

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          Emerging Rickettsioses of the Thai-Myanmar Border1

          To investigate the presence of rickettsioses in rural residents of the central Thai-Myanmar border, we tested the blood of 46 patients with fever. Four patients had murine typhus, three patients had scrub typhus, and eight patients had spotted fever group rickettsioses, including the first case of Rickettsia felis infection reported in Asia.
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            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
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            Phylogenetic analysis of Orientia tsutsugamushi strains based on the sequence homologies of 56-kDa type-specific antigen genes.

            Close and distant relationship among 31 strains of Orientia tsutsugamushi (20, two, one and eight strains were isolated in Japan, Korea, China and southeast Asia, respectively) were clarified using phylogenetic analyses based on homologies of 56-kDa type-specific antigen genes. Isolates in Japan, Korea and China were located in eight separate clusters in the phylogenetic tree, and each was designated as JG (Japanese Gilliam type), JP-1 and JP-2 (Japanese Karp 1 and 2 types), Kato, Kawasaki, Kuroki, Shimokoshi and LX-1 types. All isolates originated in southeast Asia, including the prototype Gilliam and Karp strains isolated in Burma and New Guinea, respectively, were distantly located in the phylogenetic tree from those isolates in Japan, Korea and China, indicating that strains of O. tsutsugamushi distributed in northeastern and southeastern Asia are different types.
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              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: found
              Is Open Access

              Human Infection with Rickettsia honei, Thailand

              Human spotted fever rickettsiosis was detected molecularly by 2 real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays performed on DNA extracted from a Thai patient's serum sample. Sequences of PCR amplicons from 5 rickettsial genes used for multilocus sequence typing were 100% identical with those deposited with GenBank for Rickettsia honei TT-118.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Emerg Infect Dis
                EID
                Emerging Infectious Diseases
                Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
                1080-6040
                1080-6059
                April 2007
                : 13
                : 4
                : 657-659
                Affiliations
                [* ]Armed Forces Research Institute of Medical Sciences, Bangkok, Thailand
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence: Jariyanart Gaywee, Department of Epidemiology, Research Division, Armed Forces Research Institute of Medical Sciences (AFRIMS) 315/6 Rajvithi Road, Rajthawee, Bangkok 10400, Thailand; email: jariyanartg@ 123456afrims.org
                Article
                06-0585
                10.3201/eid1304.060585
                2725953
                17561570
                be539376-d96a-485f-afd4-727ed83eaafa
                History
                Categories
                Letters to the Editor

                Infectious disease & Microbiology
                nucleotide sequence analysis,thailand,tick-borne rickettsiae,rickettsiosis,letter,polymerase chain reaction,febrile illness,rickettsia japonica,indirect fluorescence assay,spotted fever

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