11 research outputs found

    Bowel obstruction from wild bananas: a neglected health problem in Laos

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    We investigated the significance and risk factors of bowel obstruction caused by the consumption of wild bananas (BOWB) in Laos. Of six patients with BOWB in Luang Namtha, North Laos, five required enterotomy for phytobezoars. All had eaten wild banana (WB) seeds

    Fatal Chromobacterium violaceum septicaemia in northern Laos, a modified oxidase test and post-mortem forensic family G6PD analysis

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p><it>Chromobacterium violaceum </it>is a Gram negative facultative anaerobic bacillus, found in soil and stagnant water, that usually has a violet pigmented appearance on agar culture. It is rarely described as a human pathogen, mostly from tropical and subtropical areas.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>A 53 year-old farmer died with <it>Chromobacterium violaceum </it>septicemia in Laos. A modified oxidase method was used to demonstrate that this violacious organism was oxidase positive. Forensic analysis of the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase genotypes of his family suggest that the deceased patient did not have this possible predisposing condition.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p><it>C. violaceum </it>infection should be included in the differential diagnosis in patients presenting with community-acquired septicaemia in tropical and subtropical areas. The apparently neglected but simple modified oxidase test may be useful in the oxidase assessment of other violet-pigmented organisms or of those growing on violet coloured agar.</p

    Chromoblastomycosis after a leech bite complicated by myiasis: a case report

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    Background Chromoblastomycosis is a chronic mycotic infection, most common in the tropics and subtropics, following traumatic fungal implantation. Case presentation A 72 year-old farmer was admitted to Luang Namtha Provincial Hospital, northern Laos, with a growth on the left lower leg which began 1 week after a forefoot leech bite 10 years previously. He presented with a cauliflower-like mass and plaque-like lesions on his lower leg/foot and cellulitis with a purulent tender swelling of his left heel. Twenty-two Chrysomya bezziana larvae were extracted from his heel. PCR of a biopsy of a left lower leg nodule demonstrated Fonsecaea pedrosoi, monophora, or F. nubica. He was successfully treated with long term terbinafin plus itraconazole pulse-therapy and local debridement. Conclusions Chromoblastomycosis is reported for the first time from Laos. It carries the danger of bacterial and myiasis superinfection. Leech bites may facilitate infection.This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited

    Statistical comparison of the different diagnostic techniques.

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    <p>NPV: negative predictive value.</p><p>CI: confidence interval.</p><p>Sensitivity and negative predictive values (NPV) of one slide examination for the detection of <i>Paragonimus</i> eggs in sputum samples (n = 100) of patients with chronic cough.</p

    Characteristics of study participants (n = 43) from Luang Namtha province, Laos.

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    a<p>: Including 1 patient whose 2 sputum samples were negative but had <i>Paragonimus</i> eggs in a sample examined outside of the study.</p>b<p>: p = 0.045, all other variables p>0.05.</p><p>AFB: Acid-fast bacilli.</p

    Microscopic appearance of <i>Paragonimus</i> eggs after different staining techniques.

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    <p>Brownish to reddish colored <i>Paragonimus</i> eggs in Ziehl-Neelsen stained sputum (10× objective, 100× magnification) (<b>A</b> and <b>B</b>). <i>Paragonimus</i> egg in the Ziehl-Neelsen stained sputum with 100× objective (1000× magnification) (<b>C</b>). Auramine stain examined by fluorescence microscopy with 60× objective (600× magnification) (<b>D</b>). Wet slide after the bleach concentration technique (<b>E</b>); from left to right: <i>Paragonimus</i> egg that is empty, one that appears unchanged, and one egg without the operculum examined with 10× objective (100× magnification).</p

    Bartonella and Rickettsia in arthropods from the Lao PDR and from Borneo, Malaysia

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    Rickettsioses and bartonelloses are arthropod-borne diseases of mammals with widespread geographical distributions. Yet their occurrence in specific regions, their association with different vectors and hosts and the infection rate of arthropod-vectors with these agents remain poorly studied in South-east Asia. We conducted entomological field surveys in the Lao PDR (Laos) and Borneo, Malaysia by surveying fleas, ticks, and lice from domestic dogs and collected additional samples from domestic cows and pigs in Laos. Rickettsia felis was detected by real-time PCR with similar overall flea infection rate in Laos (76.6%, 69/90) and Borneo (74.4%, 268/360). Both of the encountered flea vectors Ctenocephalides orientis and Ctenocephalides felis felis were infected with R. felis. The degrees of similarity of partial gltA and ompA genes with recognized species indicate the rickettsia detected in two Boophilus spp. ticks collected from a cow in Laos may be a new species. Isolation and further characterization will be necessary to specify it as a new species. Bartonella clarridgeiae was detected in 3/90 (3.3%) and 2/360 (0.6%) of examined fleas from Laos and Borneo, respectively. Two fleas collected in Laos and one flea collected in Borneo were co-infected with both R. felis and B. clarridgeiae. Further investigations are needed in order to isolate these agents and to determine their epidemiology and aetiological role in unknown fever in patients from these areas
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