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Detection of co-infection with Orientia tsutsugamushand and hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome by next-generation sequencing.

Qian-Hui XuWenyi ZhangQian WangXuejun FuJing HanYing Huang
Published in: The International journal of neuroscience (2021)
Purpose: The co-infection with Orientia tsutsugamushand and hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome is rare. There are many similarities in early clinical practice between the two diseases, and sometimes it is easy to misdiagnose, especially when co-infection occurs.Methods: We describe a patient who presented with fever and headache after bitten by an insect and whose physical examination showed conjunctival hyperemia, eschar and petechiae in tongue and the soft palate. To lead to a diagnosis, the serum antibody of Hantaan virus, Weil-Felix test and  next-generation sequencing of cerebrospinal fluid was performed.Results: The Weil-Felix test was negative on the 15th day after the onset of the disease and a repeated Weil-Felix test on the 21st day showed a titer of 1:160 and the IgM against Hantaan virus was positive. The number of sequence reads identified corresponding to O. tsutsugamushi was 239 with a genomic coverage of 0.9178%. This patient was diagnosed with intracranial infection with Orientia tsutsugamushi and co-infection with epidemic hemorrhagic fever. The symptoms in our patient quickly decreased after the administration of tetracycline.Conclusion: Next-generation sequencing is helpful for the early diagnosis of scrub typhus, especially when the Weil-Felix test is negative. Clinicians need to be reminded to screen for common pathogens that may be co-infected, such as epidemic hemorrhagic fever.
Keyphrases
  • case report
  • copy number
  • clinical practice
  • healthcare
  • gene expression
  • physical activity
  • high throughput
  • depressive symptoms
  • gram negative
  • optic nerve
  • visible light