| Literature DB >> 31722678 |
Divyalakshmi Bhaskaran1,2, Sarabjit Singh Chadha3, Sanjay Sarin3, Rajashree Sen3, Sonia Arafah4, Sabine Dittrich4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute febrile illness (AFI) is characterized by malaise, myalgia and a raised temperature that is a nonspecific manifestation of infectious diseases in the tropics. The lack of appropriate diagnostics for the evaluation of AFI leads to increased morbidity and mortality in resource-limited settings, specifically low-income countries like India. The review aimed to identify the number, type and quality of diagnostics used for AFI evaluation during passive case detection at health care centres in South India.Entities:
Keywords: Acute febrile illness; Dengue; Diagnostic tests; Diagnostics; Fever; Infectious diseases; Leptospirosis; Malaria; Scrub typhus; Tests; Typhoid
Year: 2019 PMID: 31722678 PMCID: PMC6854686 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-019-4589-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Adapted from PRISMA study flow diagram [source: Mohr et al. [47]]
Fig. 2Distribution of studies in South India [Source: created from mapchart.net (https://mapchart.net/)]
Characteristics of patient population described in case-series (A) and case reports (B)
| A | ||
| Name of study | Criteria for inclusion | Socio-demography |
| Kumar et al., 2008 [ | 4 cases: AFI diagnosed as malaria with radiological evidence of splenic involvement as a complication of malaria | Case-1: 42-year -old male |
| Case-2: 38-year-old male | ||
| Case-3: 65-year-old male | ||
| Case-4: 15-year-old male | ||
| All patients were from KA | ||
| Katoch et al., 2016 [ | 4 cases: AFI diagnosed as rickettsial infection with the presence of purpura fulminans | Case-1: 6-month-old infant female |
| Case-2: 12-month-old female | ||
| Case-3:7-month-old female | ||
| Case-4:4 years old male | ||
| All patients from KA | ||
| Saifudheen et al., 2012 [ | 2 cases: AFI with meningoencephalitis diagnosed as scrub typhus | Case-1: 45-year-old male, farmer |
| Case-2: 30-year-old housewife | ||
| Both patients from KE | ||
| Prasannan et al., 2017 [ | 4 cases: AFI with complication of gangrene diagnosed as a rickettsial infection | Case-1: 3-month-old female |
| Case-2: 2-year-old male | ||
| Case-3:12-month-old female | ||
| Case-4: 8-year-old female | ||
| All patients from KA | ||
| B | ||
| Name of study | Case description and participant characteristics | |
| Manickam et al., 2014 [ | A case of scrub typhus pneumonia in a 9-year-old female. Other causes of AFI ruled out before testing for scrub typhus. WFT > 1:160 antibody titre for OX-K antigen was positive while OX-2, OX-19 were negative | |
| Chandy et al., 2009 [ | A case of hantavirus AFI in a 46-year-old male granary worker | |
| Devarajan et al., 2012 [ | A case of a 55-year-old male with symptoms of AFI complicated by haematuria diagnosed as scrub typhus | |
| Thangaratham et al., 2006 [ | A case of a 22-year-old male presenting with symptoms of AFI and diagnosed as coinfection of malaria with dengue | |
| Bhat et al., 2015 [ | Clinical manifestations and lab parameters in a 22-year-old patient with AFI caused by 4 infections- dengue, | |
| Jagdishkumar et al., 2016 [ | A case of a 3-year-old male with AFI diagnosed with dengue and typhoid simultaneously | |
| Kakarapathi et al., 2014 [ | Clinical manifestations of AFI caused by | |
| Madi et al., 2014 [ | Dengue-associated neurological manifestations in a 49-year-old male who presented with AFI | |
| Sitalakshmi et al., 2005 [ | Description of AFI in a 27-year-old male diagnosed with | |
Fig. 3(a) Percentage distribution of different types of studies in private and public sector health care settings (b) Distribution of studies evaluating individual causes/pathogens of AFI among different states of South India
Fig. 4Types of tests used for diagnosis of specific causes of AFI: (a) Malaria (b) Dengue (c1) Scrub typhus (c2) Types of diagnostic platforms for IgM detection in Scrub Typhus (d) Leptospirosis (e) Typhoid
Fig. 5Percentage distribution of studies using different test platforms for IgM, IgG and NS 1 detection
Fig. 6Distribution of dengue cases detected by NS1, IgM and IgG tests in 3 studies of different sample sizes (n)
Breakpoint titre threshold for positive WFT
| Study | Positive threshold | Threshold for convalescent sera |
|---|---|---|
| Kumar et al., 2012 [ | ≥ 1:80 | – |
| Mathai et al., 2003 [ | ≥ 1:80 | – |
| Razak et al., 2010 [ | ≥ 1:160 | 4-fold rise starting from 1:40 |
| Stephen et al., 2015 [ | ≥ 1:320 | 4-fold rise starting from 1:40 |
| Subbalaxmi et al., 2014 [ | ≥ 1:80 | – |
| Viswanathan et al., 2013 [ | ≥ 1:20 | – |
| Vivekanandan et al., 2010 [ | ≥ 1:80 | – |
| Katoch et al., 2016 [ | ≥ 1:320 | 4-fold increase in paired sera |
| Manickam et al., 2014 [ | ≥ 1:160 | – |
| Prasannan et al., 2017 [ | ≥ 1:320 | – |
Fig. 7Percentage of scrub typhus cases diagnosed at different thresholds of antibody detection on WFT in 3 studies [50, 63, 71]