Scientists find deadly scrub typhus
bacteria in South America
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[September 08, 2016]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Scrub typhus, a deadly
disease common in southeast Asia and spread by microscopic biting mites
known as chiggers, has now taken hold in a part of South America and may
have become endemic there, scientists said on Wednesday.
The tropical disease, which kills at least 140,000 people a year in the
Asia-Pacific region, has been confirmed in a cluster of cases on a large
island off Chile, some 12,000 kilometres from its usual haunts on the
other side of the Pacific.
Scrub typhus has been known of for years and the bacteria that causes it
was first identified in Japan in 1930.
It is caused by the bacteria, Orientia tsutsugamushi, transmitted by
chiggers, and spreads through the lymphatic fluid. Those infected find
the illness can begin quite suddenly, with shaking chills, fever, severe
headache, infection of the mucous membrane in the eyes, and lymph node
swelling.
Until 2006, scrub typhus was thought to be limited to an area called the
"tsutsugamushi triangle", from Pakistan in the west to far eastern
Russia in the east to northern Australia in the south.
But writing in the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers from
Britain's Oxford University and the Pontificia Universidad Católica and
Universidad del Desarrollo in Chile the cases found off of Chile’s
mainland "suggest there may be a much wider global distribution than
previously understood."
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In 2006, two cases of scrub typhus were found outside the triangle.
One, in the Middle East, was caused by a previously unrecorded
bacteria related to tsutsugamushi and named Orientia Chuto. The
second was found on Chiloé island, just off mainland Chile.
In January 2015 and again in early 2016, three more cases were
discovered in Ancud, on the northern coast of Chiloé.
"Scrub typhus is a common disease but a neglected one," said Paul
Newton, director of the Lao–Oxford–Mahosot Hospital Wellcome Trust
Research Unit, which collaborated in the study.
"Given that it is known to cause approximately a million clinical
cases, and kills at least 140,000 people each year, this evidence of
an even bigger burden of disease in another part of the world
highlights the need for more research and attention to it."
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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