4.5 Article

Unsuspected Leptospirosis Is a Cause of Acute Febrile Illness in Nicaragua

Journal

PLOS NEGLECTED TROPICAL DISEASES
Volume 8, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002941

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health Junior Faculty Grant
  2. Clinician Scientist Career Development Award from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
  3. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health [K23AIO83931]
  4. [R01 AI052473]
  5. [U01 AI088752]
  6. [R01 TW009504]

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Background: Epidemic severe leptospirosis was recognized in Nicaragua in 1995, but unrecognized epidemic and endemic disease remains unstudied. Methodology/Principal Findings: To determine the burden of and risk factors associated with symptomatic leptospirosis in Nicaragua, we prospectively studied patients presenting with fever at a large teaching hospital. Epidemiologic and clinical features were systematically recorded, and paired sera tested by IgM-ELISA to identify patients with probable and possible acute leptospirosis. Microscopic Agglutination Test and PCR were used to confirm acute leptospirosis. Among 704 patients with paired sera tested by MAT, 44 had acute leptospirosis. Patients with acute leptospirosis were more likely to present during rainy months and to report rural residence and fresh water exposure. The sensitivity of clinical impression and acute-phase IgM detected by ELISA were poor. Conclusions/Significance: Leptospirosis is a common (6.3%) but unrecognized cause of acute febrile illness in Nicaragua. Rapid point-of-care tests to support early diagnosis and treatment as well as tests to support population-based studies to delineate the epidemiology, incidence, and clinical spectrum of leptospirosis, both ideally pathogen-based, are needed.

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