| Literature DB >> 26991495 |
Nuria Sanchez Clemente1, Cesar Ugarte-Gil2, Nelson Solorzano3, Ciro Maguiña2, David Moore1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bartonellosis affects small Andean communities in Peru, Colombia and Ecuador. Research in this area has been limited.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26991495 PMCID: PMC4798250 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0150525
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Bartonella bacilliformis seen in a blood film with Giemsa staining (1000x magnification).
Intra-erythrocytic bacillary and coccoid forms shown.
Fig 2Cases presenting to Caraz Hospital by age group and disease type.
Fig 3Cases presenting to Caraz Hospital by location of residence.
Fig 4Number of acute and chronic cases presenting per month in Caraz Hospital.
Clinical features experienced by acute and chronic patients presenting to Caraz Hospital.
| Clinical feature | Number (%) of acute patients with feature recorded (n = 70) | Number (%) of chronic patients with feature recorded (n = 121) |
|---|---|---|
| fever | 56 (80%) | 6 (5%) |
| pallor | 39 (55.7%) | 3 (2.5%) |
| malaise | 29 (41.4%) | 0 |
| joint pain | 20 (28.6%) | 22 (18.2%) |
| headache | 16 (22.9%) | 5 (4.1%) |
| anorexia | 14 (20%) | 5 (4.1%) |
| vomiting | 8 (11.4%) | 2 (1.7%) |
| cough | 5 (7.1%) | 6 (5%) |
| jaundice | 3 (4.3%) | 1 (0.8%) |
| dizziness | 1 (1.4%) | 0 |
| diarrhoea | 1 (1.4%) | 0 |
| dehydration | 1 (1.4%) | 0 |
| malnutrition | 1 (1.4%) | 0 |
| rash | 0 | 121 (100%) |
Results of diagnostic methods in acute and chronic patients.
| Diagnostic method | Acute cases | Chronic cases | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Test result | Positive | Negative | Positive | Negative |
| Blood Smear | 31/68 (45.6%) | 37/68 (54.4%) | 3/95 (3.2%) | 92/95 (96.8%) |
| Blood Culture | 81 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
1 only positive culture results were reported so the denominator (number of cultures taken) is not known
Fig 5Treatment flowcharts for acute disease.
Fig 7Treatment flowcharts for chronic disease.
Acute Bartonellosis treatment regimes and outcomes.
| Antibiotic regime | No. of cases treated with regime (n = 54) | Correct dose given | Total cases that responded well to initial dosing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chloramphenicol | 33 (61.1%) | 11 (33.3%) | 25 (75.8%) |
| Ciprofloxacin | 11 (20.3%) | 6 (54.5%) | 8 (72.7%) |
| Ceftriaxone | 2 (3.7%) | 2 (100%) | 2 (100%) |
| Chloramphenicol and Ceftriaxone | 1 (1.9%) | 1 (100%) | 1 (100%) |
| Amoxicillin | 1 (1.9%) | 1 (100%) | 0 |
| Co-amoxiclav | 1 (1.9%) | Unknown | 1 (100%) |
| Co-trimoxazole | 1 (1.9%) | Unknown | 0 |
| Ciprofloxacin and co-trimoxazole | 1 (1.9%) | 1 (100%) | 0 |
| Ceftriaxone and co-trimoxazole | 1 (1.9%) | 1 (100%) | 1 (100%) |
| Erythromycin | 1 (1.9%) | Unknown | 0 |
| Rifampicin | 1 (1.9%) | 1 (100%) | 1 (100%) |
Chronic Bartonellosis treatment regimes and outcomes.
| Antibiotic regime | No. of cases treated with regime (n = 106) | Correct dose given | Total cases that responded well to initial dosing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rifampicin | 103 (97.2%) | 57 (55.3%) | 80 (77.7%) |
| Azithromycin | 2 (1.9%) | Unknown | 2 (100%) |
| Erythromycin | 1 (0.9%) | 1 (100%) | 1 (100%) |
Fig 6Treatment flowcharts for acute disease II.