| Literature DB >> 17553137 |
Kenan Midilli1, Ayşen Gargili, Onder Ergonul, Gönül Sengöz, Recep Ozturk, Mehmet Bakar, Frans Jongejan.
Abstract
We described a series of imported cases of Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever (CCHF) in Istanbul and investigated the genetic diversity of the virus. All the suspected cases of CCHF, who were applied to the health centers in Istanbul, were screened for CCHF virus (CCHFv) infection by using semi-nested Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) following RT-PCR. Simultaneous blood samples were also sent to the national reference laboratory in Ankara for serologic investigation. In 10 out of 91 patients, CCHFv was detected by PCR, and among 9 out of 10, anti-CCHFv IgM antibodies were also positive. Clinical features were characterized by fever, myalgia, and hemorrhage. The levels of liver enzymes, creatinine phosphokinase, and lactate dehydrogenase were elevated, and bleeding markers were prolonged. All the cases were treated with ribavirin. There was no fatal case. All the strains clustered within the same group as other Europe/Turkey isolates.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17553137 PMCID: PMC1905914 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-7-54
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1The organization scheme for the suspected cases.
The primers and nucleotide numbers according to the Hodhza strain
| CCF-5F | aaa cac gtg ccg ctt acg cc | (5–24) (this study) | |
| CCF-115F | First round | aar gga aat gga ctt rtg ga | (115–134) (this study) |
| CCF-131F | Second round | tgg aya cyt tca caa act cc | (131–152) * |
| CCF-295F | Sequencing | tgg gty agc tcy acy ggy att gt | (295–312) (this study) |
| CCF-457F | Sequencing | gac ata ggt tty cgt gty aat gc | (457–479) (this study) |
| CCF-479R | Sequencing | gca ttr aca cgr aar cct tat gtc | (479–457) (this study) |
| CCF-759R | First and second round | gca agg cct gtw gcr aca agt gc | (759–736) (this study) |
* Modified from reference [23]
Figure 2The Geographic Origin of the Imported Cases.
Demographic characteristics of the patients
| 10 patients (%) | |
| Number of females | 6 (60) |
| Mean age (range) | 40 (13–67) |
| History of tick bite | 6 (60) |
| Days from symptoms to admission (median, min-max) | 6.5 (3–7) |
| Length of stay in the hospital | 10 (4–13) |
| Symptoms and signs | |
| Fever | 10 (100) |
| Petechia | 8 (80) |
| Maculopapular rash | 6 (60) |
| Myalgia | 8 (80) |
| Headache | 8 (80) |
| Gingival bleeding | 4 (40) |
| Vaginal bleeding | 1 (10) |
| Epistaxis | 5 (5) |
| Hematuria | 1 (10) |
| Somnolence | 0 |
Pathologic laboratory findings of the patients
| 10 patients (%) Median (min-max) | |
| Longest Prothrombin time, s | 11.6 (9.8–15.2) |
| Longest activated partial thromboplastin time, s | 31.9 (26.6–40) |
| Lowest platelet count, platelets/mm3 | 50,000 (20,000–140,000) |
| Lowest WBC, WBCs/mm3 | 2900 (1800–3500) |
| Highest alanine transferase level, U/L | 151 (53–319) |
| Highest aspartate transferase level, U/L | 308 (47–581) |
| Highest lactic dehydrogenase level, U/L | 940 (494–1657) |
| Highest creatinine phosphokinase level, U/L | 266 (250–583) |
Figure 3Phylogenetic tree for the CCHF strains. *: New Turkish strains detected by this study. I: West Africa. II: Democratic Republic of Congo. III: South/West Africa. IV: Asia/Middle East. V:Europe/Turkey. VI: Greece