Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
1,338
result(s) for
"Scrub typhus"
Sort by:
A review of the global epidemiology of scrub typhus
by
Melby, Peter C.
,
Arcari, Christine M.
,
Jupiter, Daniel
in
Agglutination tests
,
Analysis
,
Antibiotics
2017
Scrub typhus is a serious public health problem in the Asia-Pacific area. It threatens one billion people globally, and causes illness in one million people each year. Caused by Orientia tsutsugamushi, scrub typhus can result in severe multiorgan failure with a case fatality rate up to 70% without appropriate treatment. The antigenic heterogeneity of O. tsutsugamushi precludes generic immunity and allows reinfection. As a neglected disease, there is still a large gap in our knowledge of the disease, as evidenced by the sporadic epidemiologic data and other related public health information regarding scrub typhus in its endemic areas. Our objective is to provide a systematic analysis of current epidemiology, prevention and control of scrub typhus in its long-standing endemic areas and recently recognized foci of infection.
Journal Article
Orientia tsutsugamushi Antibodies in Patients with Eschars and Suspected Tickborne Disease
2025
To investigate local transmission of Orientia tsutsugamushi by chiggers in North Carolina, USA, we tested remnant serum specimens from patients with eschar undergoing testing for suspected tickborne disease. We identified 11 persons with O. tsutsugamushi antibodies, including 4 who were positive by both assays; none had severe clinical manifestations consistent with scrub typhus.
Journal Article
Endemic Scrub Typhus in South America
2016
Scrub typhus, caused by
Orientia tsutsugamushi,
has been thought to be geographically restricted to the “tsutsugamushi triangle” in the Asia–Pacific region. In this report, a potential focus in southern Chile is identified.
Scrub typhus is a vector-borne zoonosis caused by
Orientia tsutsugamushi
. The infection is transmitted by “chiggers” (i.e., the larvae of trombiculid mites of the genus leptotrombidium). Although chiggers feed on various vertebrates, the main reservoir is the vector itself, which maintains orientia organisms through transstadial and transovarial transmission.
1
After the bite of an infective chigger, a characteristic necrotic inoculation lesion, termed eschar, can develop, which typically contains high bacterial loads. The microorganism then spreads through the lymphatic fluid and blood, causing systemic manifestations that include fever, rash, and laboratory abnormalities such as elevated levels of C-reactive protein and liver . . .
Journal Article
Association of Scrub Typhus in Children with Acute Encephalitis Syndrome and Meningoencephalitis, Southern India
by
Kinhal, Uddhava V.
,
Ravi, Vasanthapuram
,
Yadav, Ravi
in
acute febrile encephalopathy
,
Acute Febrile Encephalopathy - diagnosis
,
Acute Febrile Encephalopathy - epidemiology
2023
Scrub typhus is an established cause of acute encephalitis syndrome (AES) in northern states of India. We systematically investigated 376 children with AES in southern India, using a stepwise diagnostic strategy for the causative agent of scrub typhus, Orientia tsutsugamushi, including IgM and PCR testing of blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to grade its association with AES. We diagnosed scrub typhus in 87 (23%) children; of those, association with AES was confirmed in 16 (18%) cases, probable in 55 (63%), and possible in 16 (18%). IgM detection in CSF had a sensitivity of 93% and specificity of 82% compared with PCR. Our findings suggest scrub typhus as an emerging common treatable cause of AES in children in southern India and highlight the importance of routine testing for scrub typhus in diagnostic algorithms. Our results also suggest the potential promise of IgM screening of CSF for diagnosis of AES resulting from scrub typhus.
Journal Article
Incidence of Scrub Typhus in Rural South India
2025
Scrub typhus is a leading cause of severe undifferentiated fever in Asia. This community-based surveillance study assessed the epidemiologic characteristics of scrub typhus in an area of India where the disease is endemic.
Journal Article
Role of Adjunctive corticoSTEROIDs on clinical outcomes in severe Scrub typhus pneumonitis: ASTEROIDS study protocol – a randomised controlled trial
by
Ray, Sumit
,
Krishna, Bhuvana
,
Chaudhry, Dhruva
in
Adult intensive & critical care
,
Clinical outcomes
,
Clinical Trial
2025
IntroductionRecent studies have demonstrated a beneficial role of steroids in severe community-acquired pneumonia, severe COVID-19 infection and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) of diverse aetiology. This multicentre randomised controlled trial in severe scrub typhus pneumonitis and ARDS will compare the effects of 6 mg of dexamethasone once per day with placebo, in addition to standard treatment, on ventilator-free days (VFD), mortality and ventilatory requirement.Methods and analysisThe study, involving six sites, will recruit 440 patients with severe scrub typhus pneumonitis or ARDS to concealed, block-randomised, site-specific assignment of dexamethasone or placebo for 4–7 days. The primary outcome will be VFD, defined as days alive and free of ventilation at 28 days. Secondary outcomes will include 28-day mortality, need and duration of ventilation, and treatment failure, defined as death, or escalation of respiratory support from simple devices (nasal cannula, mask) to non-invasive or invasive ventilation, or the use of open-labelled steroids for worsening shock. The study will also ascertain if antinuclear antibody (ANA) expression during the acute phase of illness will predict steroid responsiveness. Subgroup analyses will be conducted a priori on ANA expression and the need for ventilation. All analyses will be conducted on an intention-to-treat basis. The trial, which commenced in April 2025, would clarify the role of corticosteroids in scrub typhus pneumonitis.Ethics and disseminationThe Institutional Review Board and Ethics Committee of the lead site, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India, has approved the study (IRB Min No 15920 (INTERVE) dated 22 November 2023). The remaining five sites have obtained approval from their respective ethics committees. Study results will be published in an international peer-reviewed journal.Trial registration numberCTRI/2024/12/077709. Registered 5 December 2024.
Journal Article
Environmental, Occupational, and Demographic Risk Factors for Clinical Scrub Typhus, Bhutan
by
Phuentshok, Yoenten
,
Dorji, Kezang
,
McKenzie, Joanna
in
Aged patients
,
Animals
,
Annual reports
2023
Underdiagnosis and underreporting of scrub typhus has increasingly affected public health in Bhutan since its initial detection in 2008. Identifying scrub typhus risk factors would support early diagnosis and treatment for this nonspecific febrile disease, reducing the incidence of potentially fatal complications. We conducted a hospital-based, case‒control study during October‒December 2015 in 11 scrub typhus‒prone districts. We identified harvesting cardamom as the major risk factor (odds ratio 1,519; p<0.001); other factors were traditional housing, largely caused by an outside toilet location, as well as owning a goat and frequently sitting on grass. Harvesting vegetables, herding cattle in the forest, and female sex were protective. Age had a nonlinear effect; children and the elderly were more likely to seek treatment for clinical scrub typhus. This study has informed public health policies and awareness programs for healthcare workers through development of National Guidelines for Prevention, Treatment and Control of Scrub Typhus in Bhutan.
Journal Article
Scrub Typhus — Scientific Neglect, Ever-Widening Impact
2016
Detection of scrub typhus, a vectorborne infectious disease, in Chile and Africa highlights the fact that we have heretofore paid too little attention to this systemic, life-threatening disease and have developed too little relevant expertise.
Scrub typhus, a systemic, life-threatening disease with an enormous incidence in Asia and the islands of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, remains remarkably neglected. Discovery of this vectorborne infectious disease on Chiloé Island in Chile (see report by Weitzel et al., pages 954–61) and its detection in Africa highlight the fact that we have heretofore paid too little attention to it and developed too little relevant expertise.
1
The Allied armies were caught flat-footed during World War II when 18,000 of their troops became ill with scrub typhus in the Pacific theater, and the disease remained a major cause of severe, . . .
Journal Article
Leptotrombidium imphalum Chiggers as Vector for Scrub Typhus in Human Settlements, India, 2022–2023
by
Devamani, Carol S.
,
Cameron, Mary
,
Chandramohan, Daniel
in
Animals
,
bacteria
,
Bacterial diseases
2026
Scrub typhus is a common bacterial infection in many parts of Asia. The causative agent, Orientia tsutsugamushi, is transmitted by trombiculid mite (chigger) larvae that require small mammals as maintaining hosts. We studied the prevalence of O. tsutsugamushi infection in mites and small mammals in villages and land surrounding them in South India to determine high-risk settings. We identified 12,431 mite larvae on 883 small mammals, 32% of which were bandicoot rats, 31% black rats, and 31% Asian house shrews. Leptotrombidium imphalum was the most common mite species and the only species associated with O. tsutsugamushi infection (prevalence 3.6%). Orientia infection increased with mite population size on a host. Host numbers, the L. imphalum index, and the prevalence of Orientia infection in chiggers were considerably higher within human settlements than in surrounding fields, suggesting that most human scrub typhus infection occurs inside villages rather than during agricultural work.
Journal Article
Detection of Orientia spp. Bacteria in Field-Collected Free-Living Eutrombicula Chigger Mites, United States
2023
Scrub typhus, a rickettsial disease caused by Orientia spp., is transmitted by infected larval trombiculid mites (chiggers). We report the molecular detection of Orientia species in free-living Eutrombicula chiggers collected in an area in North Carolina, USA, to which spotted fever group rickettsiae infections are endemic.
Journal Article