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Human Q Fever on the Guiana Shield and Brazil: Recent Findings and Remaining Questions.

Loïc EpelboinCarole EldinPauline ThillVincent Pommier de SantiPhilippe AbboudGaëlle WalterAlessia MelzaniPaule Letertre-GibertLucas PerezMagalie DemarMathilde BoutrouJorlan FernandesJulman Rosiris CermeñoMaria Mercedes PanizoStephen Gs VredenFélix DjossouEmmanuel BeillardJacobus H de WaardElba Regina Sampaio de Lemos
Published in: Current tropical medicine reports (2021)
Q fever is a bacterial zoonosis due to Coxiella burnetii that has been reported worldwide. On the Guiana Shield, a region mostly covered by Amazonian forest, which encompasses the Venezuelan State of Bolivar, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana, and the Brazilian State of Amapá, the situation is very heterogeneous. While French Guiana is the region reporting the highest incidence of this disease in the world, with a single infecting clone (MST 117) and a unique epidemiological cycle, it has hardly ever been reported in other countries in the region. This absence of cases raises many questions and is probably due to massive under-diagnosis. Studies should estimate comprehensively the true burden of this disease in the region.
Keyphrases
  • risk factors
  • emergency department