Displaying publications 21 - 40 of 226 in total

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  1. Ganesan N, Embi N, Hasidah MS
    Trop Biomed, 2020 Jun 01;37(2):303-317.
    PMID: 33612800
    Burkholderia pseudomallei is the etiologic agent of melioidosis, a major cause of community-acquired pneumonia and sepsis in the endemic areas. The overall mortality of patients with severe melioidosis remains high due to severe sepsis attributed to overwhelming inflammatory cytokine response in spite of recommended antibiotic therapy. It is crucial that therapeutic approaches beyond just effective antibiotic treatment such as adjunct therapy be considered to mitigate the dysregulated inflammatory signaling and augment host defenses. In an acute B. pseudomallei infection model, we have previously demonstrated that treatment with anti-malarial drug, chloroquine, modulated inflammatory cytokine levels and increased animal survivability via Akt-mediated inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase-3β (GSK3β). GSK3β is a downstream effector molecule within the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/ Akt axis which plays a pivotal role in regulating the production of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines. Here we evaluate the effect of chloroquine treatment in combination with a subtherapeutic dose of the antibiotic doxycycline on animal survivability, cytokine levels and phosphorylation states of GSK3β (Ser9) in a murine model of acute melioidosis infection to investigate whether chloroquine could be used as an adjunct therapy along with doxycycline for the treatment of melioidosis. Our findings revealed that 50 mg/kg b.w. chloroquine treatment together with a dose of 20 mg/kg b.w. doxycycline improved survivability (100%) of mice infected with 3 X LD50 of B. pseudomallei and significantly (P<0.05) lowered the bacterial loads in spleen, liver and blood compared to controls. B. pseudomallei-infected mice subjected to adjunct treatment with chloroquine and doxycycline significantly (P<0.05) reduced serum levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IFN-γ and IL-6) but increased levels of antiinflammatory cytokines (IL-4 and IL-10). Western blot analysis demonstrated that the intensities of pGSK3β (Ser9) in liver samples from mice treated with chloroquine and doxycycline combination were significantly (P<0.05) higher suggesting that the adjunct treatment resulted in significant inhibition of GSK3β. Taken together the bacteriostatic action of doxycycline coupled with the cytokine-modulating effect of chloroquine gave full protection to B. pseudomallei-infected mice and involved inhibition of GSK3β. Findings from the present study using B. pseudomallei-infected BALB/c mice suggest that chloroquine is a plausible candidate for repurposing as adjunct therapy to treat acute B. pseudomallei infection.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis/drug therapy*
  2. Yip CH, Ghazali AK, Nathan S
    Biochem Soc Trans, 2020 04 29;48(2):569-579.
    PMID: 32167134 DOI: 10.1042/BST20190836
    Burkholderia pseudomallei (Bp) is the causative agent of melioidosis, a disease of the tropics with high clinical mortality rates. To date, no vaccines are approved for melioidosis and current treatment relies on antibiotics. Conversely, common misdiagnosis and high pathogenicity of Bp hamper efforts to fight melioidosis. This bacterium can be isolated from a wide range of niches such as waterlogged fields, stagnant water bodies, salt water bodies and from human and animal clinical specimens. Although extensive studies have been undertaken to elucidate pathogenesis mechanisms of Bp, little is known about how a harmless soil bacterium adapts to different environmental conditions, in particular, the shift to a human host to become a highly virulent pathogen. The bacterium has a large genome encoding an armory of factors that assist the pathogen in surviving under stressful conditions and assuming its role as a deadly intracellular pathogen. This review presents an overview of what is currently known about how the pathogen adapts to different environments. With in-depth understanding of Bp adaptation and survival, more effective therapies for melioidosis can be developed by targeting related genes or proteins that play a major role in the bacteria's survival.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis
  3. Chang CY, Lau NLJ, Currie BJ, Podin Y
    BMC Infect Dis, 2020 Mar 06;20(1):201.
    PMID: 32143598 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-020-4937-8
    BACKGROUND: Melioidosis is a potentially life-threatening infection caused by the Gram-negative bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei. Melioidosis is difficult to diagnose due to its diverse clinical manifestations, which often delays administration of appropriate antibiotic therapy.

    CASE PRESENTATION: Melioidosis is uncommon in pregnancy but both spontaneous abortion and neonatal melioidosis have been reported. We report a case of bacteraemic melioidosis in a young woman with a subsequent spontaneous abortion, with B. pseudomallei cultured from a high vaginal swab as well as blood.

    CONCLUSION: It remains unclear in this and previously reported cases as to whether the maternal melioidosis was sexually transmitted.

    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis/diagnosis*; Melioidosis/drug therapy; Melioidosis/microbiology
  4. Choi JY, Hii KC, Bailey ES, Chuang JY, Tang WY, Yuen Wong EK, et al.
    Am J Trop Med Hyg, 2020 02;102(2):388-391.
    PMID: 31769397 DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.19-0625
    Burkholderia pseudomallei infections are prevalent in Southeast Asia and northern Australia and often misdiagnosed. Diagnostics are often neither sensitive nor rapid, contributing up to 50% mortality rate. In this 2018 pilot study, we enrolled 100 patients aged 6 months-79 years from Kapit Hospital in Sarawak, Malaysia, with symptoms of B. pseudomallei infection. We used three different methods for the detection of B. pseudomallei: a real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay, a rapid lateral flow immunoassay, and the standard-of-care bacterial culture-the gold standard. Among the 100 participants, 24 (24%) were positive for B. pseudomallei by one or more of the detection methods. Comparing the two individual diagnostic methods against the gold standard-bacterial culture-of any positive test, there was low sensitivity for each test (25-44%) but high specificity (93-98%). It seems clear that more sensitive diagnostics or a sensitive screening diagnostic followed by specific confirmatory diagnostic is needed for this disease.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis/diagnosis*; Melioidosis/microbiology*; Melioidosis/epidemiology
  5. Subakir H, Chong YM, Chan YF, Hasan MS, Jamaluddin MFH, Pang YK, et al.
    J Med Microbiol, 2020 Jan;69(1):49-51.
    PMID: 31750812 DOI: 10.1099/jmm.0.001108
    Introduction.Burkholderia pseudomallei (melioidosis) is an important cause of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in the tropics. Selective medium is recommended for laboratory diagnosis with non-sterile respiratory samples, while PCR is not routinely used due to variable reported performance. The effectiveness of these diagnostic modalities varies by site.Aim. To compare selective media and real-time PCR (qPCR) with routine media in detecting B. pseudomallei in CAP respiratory samples in a low-incidence setting in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.Methodology. Respiratory samples were routinely cultured on blood, chocolate and MacConkey agar (RESP-ROUTINE), and compared to culture on selective Ashdown medium (RESP-SELECTIVE) and qPCR. The gold standard was routine culture of B. pseudomallei from any site (ALL-ROUTINE).Results.B. pseudomallei was detected in 8/204 (3.9 %) samples. Overall sensitivity rates differed (P=0.03) for qPCR (100%), RESP-SELECTIVE (87.5%) and RESP-ROUTINE (50%). There was a trend towards lower median days to positive culture for RESP-SELECTIVE (1 day) compared to RESP-ROUTINE (2 days, P=0.08) and ALL-ROUTINE (2 days, P=0.06). Reagent costs for each additional detection were USD59 for RESP-SELECTIVE and USD354 for PCR.Conclusions. In a low-incidence setting, selective culture of respiratory samples on Ashdown was more sensitive and allowed quicker identification than routine media, at reasonable cost. Blood cultures are critical, confirming four cases missed by routine respiratory culture. Selective medium is useful in early pneumonia (pre-sepsis) and resource-limited settings where blood cultures are infrequently done. Real-time PCR is costly, but highly sensitive and useful for high-risk patients with diabetes, cancer or immunosuppressants, or requiring ventilation or intensive care.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis/diagnosis*; Melioidosis/epidemiology
  6. Menon N, Mariappan V, Vellasamy KM, Samudi C, See JX, Ganesh PS, et al.
    Access Microbiol, 2020;2(5):acmi000110.
    PMID: 32974575 DOI: 10.1099/acmi.0.000110
    Burkholderia pseudomallei is the causative agent for melioidosis. Because of its intracellular nature, the bacterium is capable of replicating within a plethora of eukaryotic cell lines. B. pseudomallei can remain dormant within host cells without symptoms for years, causing recrudescent infections. Here, we investigated the pathogenesis mechanism behind the suppression of T cell responses by B. pseudomallei . Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (1×106 cells/well) isolated by Ficoll Paque (Sigma-Aldrich) density gradient centrifugation were incubated with optimized concentrations of bacterial crude culture filtrate antigens (CFAs) (10 ug ml-1) and heat-killed bacteria [1 : 10 multiplicity of infection (m.o.i.)]. Following incubation, cells were investigated for surface expression of coinhibitory molecules by flow cytometry. We found that B. pseudomallei induced the upregulation of programmed death 1 (PD-1), a molecule responsible for T cell exhaustion, on T cells in vitro following exposure to crude CFAs of B. pseudomallei . This upregulation of PD-1 probably contributes to poor immune surveillance and disease pathogenesis.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis
  7. Marilyn Charlene Montini Maluda, Michelle May D. Goroh, Tan, Eric Chee How, Syed Sharizman Syed Abdul Rahim, Richard Avoi, Mohammad Saffree Jeffree, et al.
    MyJurnal
    Introduction: Melioidosis, also known as Whitmore disease, is caused by the gram-negative bacillus, Burkholderia pseudomallei and remains a public health concern in Southeast Asia and northern parts of Australia. This study attempts to identify all possible complications of melioidosis and its outcomes.
    Methods: Literature search was conducted from databases such as PubMed, Science Direct and Scopus from 1st January 2000 to 31st August 2019. Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) search strategy was used with the terms ‘Melioidosis’ or ‘Burkholderia pseudomallei’ and ‘Complications’.
    Results: A total of 162 titles were identified and 22 articles were included in the review. Findings showed that among the 22 articles, the ratio of male to female melioidosis incidence was 2.3 to 1, with most cases (86.4%) aged older than 14 years old and showed a mean age of 46 years old. A third (7/22) of the papers reported the involvement of the nervous system as a complication of melioidosis followed by cardiovascular complications. Among the 23 cases reported, 13 had underlying medical conditions with most of them (84.6%) having diabetes mellitus or newly diagnosed with diabetes mellitus. Overall, only one case (4.3%) had resulted in mortality, while 17.4% developed complications and 78.3% managed a full recovery after undergoing treatment for melioidosis.
    Conclusion: The most commonly found complication of melioidosis involved the nervous system but patient outcomes were favourable. Rare complications included mycotic aneurysm that can be fatal. Melioidosis can affect almost any organ leading to various complications.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis
  8. Zhu X, Chen H, Li S, Wang LC, Wu DR, Wang XM, et al.
    Front Microbiol, 2020;11:778.
    PMID: 32457710 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.00778
    Melioidosis is a common infectious disease in Southeast Asia and Northern Australia. In Hainan, several cases have been reported, but no systematic study has yet been done on the molecular epidemiology profiles of the organism. An investigation of the molecular epidemiology links and population structure of Burkholderia pseudomallei would help to better understand the clonally of the isolates and differences among them. In this study, multilocus variable-number tandem repeat analysis (MLVA), and multilocus sequence typing (MLST) were applied to examine the epidemiological relatedness and population structure of 166 B. pseudomallei isolates obtained during 2002-2014 in Hainan, China. Both the MLVA_4 and MLST approaches had high discriminatory power for this population, with diversity indices of 0.9899 and 0.9457, respectively. However, the MLVA_4 assay showed a higher discriminatory power than the MLST approach, and a variable-number tandem repeat (VNTR3 933) found by the MLVA approach was the most useful in discriminating strains from this province. A total of 166 strains yielded 99 MLVA_4 genotypes, of which 34 genotypes were shared by 101 isolates, for a clustering rate of 60.8% (101/166), which suggested that some cases may have a common source. Additionally, 65 isolates showed distinct genotypes, indicating that more than 39.2% (65/166) of melioidosis cases in Hainan had epidemiologically unrelated or sporadic characteristics. The 166 isolates were resolved into 48 STs, of which five STs (ST55, -70, -46, -50, and -58) were here found to be predominant. Phylogenetic analysis of 116 isolates conducted using the eBURST v3 segregated the 48 STs into eight groups with ST50 as predicted founder, and 21 STs were found to be singletons, which suggest that the strains in the Hainan region represent a high diversity of ST clones, indicating that many B. pseudomallei clone groups are endemic to this region. Moreover, ST50 had 5 SLV, 7 DLV, 6 TLV, and 29 satellite STs and formed a radial expansion pattern, suggesting that the melioidosis epidemic in this study was mainly caused by the clonal expansion of ST 50. Phylogenetic analysis on global scale suggests that China's isolates are closely related to isolates from Southeast Asia, particularly from Thailand and Malaysia.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis
  9. Chua KH, Tan EW, Chai HC, Puthucheary SD, Lee PC, Puah SM
    PeerJ, 2020;8:e9238.
    PMID: 32518734 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.9238
    Background: Burkholderia pseudomallei causes melioidosis, a serious illness that can be fatal if untreated or misdiagnosed. Culture from clinical specimens remains the gold standard but has low diagnostic sensitivity.

    Method: In this study, we developed a rapid, sensitive and specific insulated isothermal Polymerase Chain Reaction (iiPCR) targeting bimA gene (Burkholderia Intracellular Motility A; BPSS1492) for the identification of B. pseudomallei. A pair of novel primers: BimA(F) and BimA(R) together with a probe were designed and 121 clinical B. pseudomallei strains obtained from numerous clinical sources and 10 ATCC non-targeted strains were tested with iiPCR and qPCR in parallel.

    Results: All 121 B. pseudomallei isolates were positive for qPCR while 118 isolates were positive for iiPCR, demonstrating satisfactory agreement (97.71%; 95% CI [93.45-99.53%]; k = 0.87). Sensitivity of the bimA iiPCR/POCKIT assay was 97.52% with the lower detection limit of 14 ng/µL of B. pseudomallei DNA. The developed iiPCR assay did not cross-react with 10 types of non-targeted strains, indicating good specificity.

    Conclusion: This bimA iiPCR/POCKIT assay will undoubtedly complement other methodologies used in the clinical laboratory for the rapid identification of this pathogen.

    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis
  10. Tang RY, Lim SH, Lam JE, Nurasykin S, Eileen T, Chan YW
    Med J Malaysia, 2019 12;74(6):472-476.
    PMID: 31929471
    INTRODUCTION: Melioidosis is caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei, a gram-negative aerobic bacillus, found in the soil and surface water. Treating melioidosis has been a challenge in district hospitals due to high usage of broad spectrum antibiotics and prolonged hospitalisation. This study is to review the patients' demography, clinical presentations and microbiological data.

    METHODS: A 5-year retrospective study was carried out on patients admitted with culture positive for melioidosis from year 2013 to 2017 in Hospital Teluk Intan, Perak.

    RESULTS: There were a total of 46 confirmed cases of melioidosis. Majority of the patients were working in the agricultural and farming (28.6%), and factories (25.7%). Thirty-one patients had diabetes mellitus (71.1%). Presentations of patients with melioidosis included pneumonia (54.3%), skin and soft tissue infection (19.6%), deep abscesses (15.2%) and bone and joint infections (13%). An average of 5.8 days was needed to confirm the diagnosis of melioidosis via positive culture. However, only 39.4% of these patients were started on ceftazidime or carbapenem as the empirical therapy. The intensive care unit (ICU) admission rate for melioidosis was 46% and the mortality rate was 52%. Our microbial cultures showed good sensitivity towards cotrimoxazole (97.1%), ceftazidime (100%) and carbapenem (100%).

    CONCLUSION: Melioidosis carries high mortality rate, especially with lung involvement and bacteremia. Physicians should have high clinical suspicion for melioidosis cases to give appropriate antimelioidosis therapy early.

    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis/drug therapy*; Melioidosis/microbiology; Melioidosis/epidemiology
  11. Hong KW, Tee KK, Yin WF, Roberts RJ, Chan KG
    Microbiol Resour Announc, 2019 Oct 24;8(43).
    PMID: 31649075 DOI: 10.1128/MRA.00898-19
    Burkholderia pseudomallei is the etiological agent of melioidosis, which has been studied by transcriptome and secretome analyses. However, little is known about the methylome of this pathogen. Here, we present the complete genome and methylome of melioidosis-causing B. pseudomallei strain 982.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis
  12. Che Rahim MJ, Mohammad N, Kamaruddin MI, Wan Ghazali WS
    BMJ Case Rep, 2019 Jul 01;12(7).
    PMID: 31266760 DOI: 10.1136/bcr-2019-229974
    We reported a case of a young female patient presented with sepsis and diagnosed with melioidosis and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) within the same admission. She presented with 1-week history of productive cough, progressive dyspnoea together with prolonged fever, arthralgia, rashes and oral ulcers. She had septicemic shock, respiratory failure requiring intubation and ventilation in intensive care unit and subsequently developed acute renal failure requiring haemodialysis. Antibiotics and immunosuppressive treatment including low-dose intravenous cyclophosphamide were commenced. She had a remarkable recovery and was discharged after 6 weeks. There was no evidence of active SLE or relapse of melioidosis during clinic follow-ups.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis/complications*; Melioidosis/diagnosis*; Melioidosis/drug therapy
  13. Auvens C, Neuwirth C, Piroth L, Blot M
    BMJ Case Rep, 2019 May 22;12(5).
    PMID: 31122956 DOI: 10.1136/bcr-2018-228856
    Melioidosis is a protean disease which is endemic to Southeast Asia and northern Australia. Here, we report a case of infected aortic aneurysm due to Burkholderia pseudomallei in an immunocompetent man 6 months after a trip to northern Malaysia. This patient initially received inappropriate surgical and antibiotic treatment, leading to a peri-prosthetic aortic infection with lumbar spondylitis and contiguous psoas muscle abscess. This case highlights the difficulty of diagnosing melioidosis given its diverse clinical manifestations and the limits of routine microbiological methods to identify B. pseudomallei Melioidosis should be considered a possible diagnosis in individuals with unexplained fever subsequent to travel in an endemic area.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis/complications; Melioidosis/diagnosis*; Melioidosis/microbiology
  14. Rodríguez JY, Álvarez-Moreno CA, Cortés JA, Rodríguez GJ, Esquea K, Pinzón H, et al.
    Biomedica, 2019 05 01;39:10-18.
    PMID: 31529845 DOI: 10.7705/biomedica.v39i3.4534
    Melioidosis is an infectious disease caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei whose clinical diagnosis can be difficult due not only to its varied clinical presentation but also to the difficulties in the microbiological diagnosis.Thus, it may be necessary to use molecular techniques for its proper identification once it is suspected.
    There are few antibiotics available for the treatment of this disease, which must be used over a long period of time. Although it is known to be endemic in Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam, and Australia, in Colombia there are few reported cases.
    We describe a case of melioidosis in the northern region of Colombia. Additionally, we review its clinical characteristics and treatment and we describe the local epidemiology of this disease.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis/diagnosis; Melioidosis/drug therapy; Melioidosis/epidemiology*
  15. Tan RZ, Mohd Nor F, Shafie S, Tan LJ
    Forensic Sci Med Pathol, 2019 03;15(1):151-154.
    PMID: 30293222 DOI: 10.1007/s12024-018-0026-3
    Melioidosis is an infectious disease caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei, a gram-negative intracellular bacillus. Tuberculosis, also an infectious disease, is caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, an acid fast bacillus. In both diseases, patients commonly present with fever and respiratory symptoms due to sepsis which might lead to respiratory failure or sudden death if left untreated. Not only are these two entities similar in clinical presentation, but the autopsy findings may mimic each other, giving rise to difficulties in determining the cause of death. We report a case of melioidosis and compare it to a typical case of miliary tuberculosis. Similarities between the cases on gross and histopathological examinations are discussed. In such circumstances, microbiological culture of bodily fluids and internal organs should be performed to ascertain the correct cause of death.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis/diagnosis*
  16. Abu Hassan MR, Aziz N, Ismail N, Shafie Z, Mayala B, Donohue RE, et al.
    PLoS Negl Trop Dis, 2019 03;13(3):e0007243.
    PMID: 30883550 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0007243
    BACKGROUND: Melioidosis, a fatal infectious disease caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei, is increasingly diagnosed in tropical regions. However, data on risk factors and the geographic epidemiology of the disease are still limited. Previous studies have also largely been based on the analysis of case series data. Here, we undertook a more definitive hospital-based matched case-control study coupled with spatial analysis to identify demographic, socioeconomic and landscape risk factors for bacteremic melioidosis in the Kedah region of northern Malaysia.

    METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We obtained patient demographic and residential information and clinical presentation and medical history data from 254 confirmed melioidosis cases and 384 matched controls attending Hospital Sultanah Bahiyah (HSB), the main tertiary hospital of Alor Setar, the capital city of Kedah, during the period between 2005 and 2011. Crude and adjusted odds ratios employing conditional logistic regression analysis were used to assess if melioidosis in this region is related to risk factors connected with socio-demographics, various behavioural characteristics, and co-occurring diseases. Spatial clusters of cases were determined using a continuous Poisson model as deployed in SaTScan. A land cover map in conjunction with mapped case data was used to determine disease-land type associations using the Fisher's exact test deploying simulated p-values. Crude and adjusted odds ratios indicate that melioidosis in this region is related to gender (males), race, occupation (farming) and co-occurring chronic diseases, particularly diabetes. Spatial analyses of disease incidence, however, showed that disease risk and geographic clustering of cases are related strongly to land cover types, with risk of disease increasing non-linearly with the degree of human modification of the natural ecosystem.

    CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These findings indicate that melioidosis represents a complex socio-ecological public health problem in Kedah, and that its control requires an understanding and modification of the coupled human and natural variables that govern disease transmission in endemic communities.

    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis
  17. Shrestha N, Adhikari M, Pant V, Baral S, Shrestha A, Basnyat B, et al.
    BMC Infect Dis, 2019 Feb 19;19(1):176.
    PMID: 30782129 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-019-3793-x
    BACKGROUND: Melioidosis is a life-threatening infectious disease that is caused by gram negative bacteria Burkholderia pseudomallei. This bacteria occurs as an environmental saprophyte typically in endemic regions of south-east Asia and northern Australia. Therefore, patients with melioidosis are at high risk of being misdiagnosed and/or under-diagnosed in South Asia.

    CASE PRESENTATION: Here, we report two cases of melioidosis from Nepal. Both of them were diabetic male who presented themselves with fever, multiple abscesses and developed sepsis. They were treated with multiple antimicrobial agents including antitubercular drugs before being correctly diagnosed as melioidosis. Consistent with this, both patients were farmer by occupation and also reported travelling to Malaysia in the past. The diagnosis was made consequent to the isolation of B. pseudomallei from pus samples. Accordingly, they were managed with intravenous meropenem followed by oral doxycycline and cotrimoxazole.

    CONCLUSION: The case reports raise serious concern over the existing unawareness of melioidosis in Nepal. Both of the cases were left undiagnosed for a long time. Therefore, clinicians need to keep a high index of suspicion while encountering similar cases. Especially diabetic-farmers who present with fever and sepsis and do not respond to antibiotics easily may turn out to be yet another case of melioidosis. Ascertaining the travel history and occupational history is of utmost significance. In addition, the microbiologist should be trained to correctly identify B. pseudomallei as it is often confused for other Burkholderia species. The organism responds only to specific antibiotics; therefore, correct and timely diagnosis becomes crucial for better outcomes.

    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis/diagnosis*; Melioidosis/drug therapy
  18. Sahrol Nizam Bin Abu Bakar, Al-Afiq Alias, Masrah Tata
    MyJurnal
    Introduction:Transfusion Transmitted Infections is occurring worldwide. The common organisms related reported in literature were Human Immunodefiency Virus, Hepatitis B and C Virus, bacterial contamination and Malaria par-asites. Meanwhile, Melioidosis is endemic disease in Malaysia and especially Sabah. Mortality due to Melioidosis septicaemia was also high. It ranges between 60%-80%. In Sabah, 74% of Thalassemia children were diagnosed with Bacteraemia Melioidosis and 50% had died due to the organisms. The incidence of Melioidosis Transfusion Transmitted Infection is rarely reported in the literature. Case Description: A 17-year-old girl was diagnosed having Beta thalassemia major since 5 years old and splenectomised 8 years ago. Currently on prophylaxis Penicillin and Ex-jade. She was admitted into hospital for monthly blood transfusion. Two days prior to admission, patient complained of having sore throat and cough but no fever and other complained. On examination, the tonsil enlarged and was treated as exudative tonsillitis. She was transfused with 2 pint packed cells within 2 days. No transfusion reaction noted. Day seven admission, she had high grade fever and redness of the right hand cannulation site and was treated as right hand cellulitis with intravenous Cloxacillin. Full blood count shows Total White Cell count was 24.9 x109 /L, Haemoglobin level was 9.3 g/dl and Platelets was 462x109/L. Blood for culture and sensitivity was taken and Chest X-ray noted haziness over the left mid and lower zone of the lung and was treated as Hospital Acquired Pneumonia. She was referred to tertiary hospital for further management. Her conditioned deteriorated and died at the casualty unit in the tertiary hospital. Blood culture was positive for Burkholderia pseudomallei. The case was reported to Dis-trict health office for further investigation. Blood donor tracing was done and was positive for Melioidosis through Elisa Antibody titre IgM for Melioidosis (1:320). The patient’s house and school were visited and investigated. All environmental samples were negative for Burkholderia pseudomallei. Conclusion: Its shows a relationship between blood donations infected with Burkholderia pseudomallei causing mortality of Beta Thalassemia patients. It is highly recommended to screen all blood products for communicable disease fatal organisms.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis
  19. Aulia Z, Wan Ali WASR, Shahar MA
    Saudi J Kidney Dis Transpl, 2018 12 28;29(6):1484-1487.
    PMID: 30588983 DOI: 10.4103/1319-2442.248318
    Burkholderia pseudomallei is a known motile organism in soil. Its infection is usually described in immunocompromised patients. It inflicts serious infection with high mortality and morbidity rate. We report a rare case of an end-stage renal disease patient on regular continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (PD) who developed melioidosis PD peritonitis. Within a short period of time, she developed encapsulating peritoneal sclerosis evidenced by the intraoperative findings of intraabdominal cocooning. Choice and duration of antibiotic are important for proper eradication of the organism. Early diagnosis and treatment of both conditions also may improve the prognoses.
    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis
  20. Sadiq MA, Hassan L, Aziz SA, Zakaria Z, Musa HI, Amin MM
    Vet World, 2018 Nov;11(10):1404-1408.
    PMID: 30532493 DOI: 10.14202/vetworld.2018.1404-1408
    Background: Melioidosis is a fatal emerging infectious disease of both man and animal caused by bacteria Burkholderia pseudomallei. Variations were suggested to have existed among the different B. pseudomallei clinical strains/genotypes which may implicate bacterial susceptibility and resistance toward antibiotics.

    Aim: This study was designed to determine whether the phenotypic antibiotic resistance pattern of B. pseudomallei is associated with the source of isolates and the genotype.

    Materials and Methods: A collection of 111 B. pseudomallei isolates from veterinary cases of melioidosis and the environments (soil and water) were obtained from stock cultures of previous studies and were phylogenetically characterized by multilocus sequence typing (ST). The susceptibility to five antibiotics, namely meropenem (MEM), imipenem, ceftazidime (CAZ), cotrimoxazole (SXT), and co-amoxiclav (AMC), recommended in both acute and eradication phases of melioidosis treatment were tested using minimum inhibitory concentration antibiotics susceptibility test.

    Results: Majority of isolates were susceptible to all antibiotics tested while few resistant strains to MEM, SXT, CAZ, and AMC were observed. Statistically significant association was found between resistance to MEM and the veterinary clinical isolates (p<0.05). The likelihood of resistance to MEM was significantly higher among the novel ST 1130 isolates found in veterinary cases as compared to others.

    Conclusion: The resistance to MEM and SXT appeared to be higher among veterinary isolates, and the novel ST 1130 was more likely to be resistant to MEM as compared to others.

    Matched MeSH terms: Melioidosis
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