Literature DB >> 9557424

Duration of symptoms and case fatality of sleeping sickness caused by Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense in Tororo, Uganda.

M Odiit1, F Kansiime, J C Enyaru.   

Abstract

Although there have been recent molecular biological studies for evidence of possible changes in trypanosome biochemistry, such studies are not yet complemented by parallel clinical studies to determine the possible implications to the sleeping sickness patient. The study of the duration of symptoms and the case fatality of T. b. rhodesiense showed that the disease progressed to the stage of central nervous system involvement between three weeks to two months of infection. Most (> 80%) deaths occurred within six months of illness. The case fatality rate of treated sleeping sickness patients was 6% of which the rate in the late-stage of sleeping sickness was more than two and a half times that in the early stage. The incidence of melarsoprol encephalopathy was 2.5% and case fatality due to this condition was 1.0% and similar to previous findings. Thus it appears the virulence of T. b. rhodesiense circulating in south east Uganda has not changed during the past decades.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9557424

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  East Afr Med J        ISSN: 0012-835X


  25 in total

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5.  Safety and efficacy of the 10-day melarsoprol schedule for the treatment of second stage Rhodesiense sleeping sickness.

Authors:  Irene Kuepfer; Caecilia Schmid; Mpairwe Allan; Andrew Edielu; Emma P Haary; Abbas Kakembo; Stafford Kibona; Johannes Blum; Christian Burri
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2012-08-28

6.  Clinical presentation of T.b. rhodesiense sleeping sickness in second stage patients from Tanzania and Uganda.

Authors:  Irene Kuepfer; Emma Peter Hhary; Mpairwe Allan; Andrew Edielu; Christian Burri; Johannes A Blum
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7.  Focus-specific clinical profiles in human African Trypanosomiasis caused by Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense.

Authors:  Lorna M MacLean; Martin Odiit; John E Chisi; Peter G E Kennedy; Jeremy M Sternberg
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2010-12-07

8.  Prevalence and types of coinfections in sleeping sickness patients in kenya (2000/2009).

Authors:  J M Kagira; N Maina; J Njenga; S M Karanja; S M Karori; J M Ngotho
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10.  Socio-economic and cultural determinants of human african trypanosomiasis at the Kenya - Uganda transboundary.

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Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2013-04-25
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