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Presentation Abstract
Session:
Poster Session C Presentations and Light Lunch
Abstract Number:
LB-2399
Title:
Five Years’ Experience with the Novel Human
Ehrlichia sp.
in the Upper Midwestern United States: 2009 - 2013
Presentation Start:
11/16/2013 12:00:00 PM
Presentation End:
11/16/2013 1:45:00 PM
Authors:
Diep K. Hoang Johnson
1
, David F. Neitzel
2
, Tracy K. Miller
3
, Michelle A. Feist
3
, Lynne M. Sloan
4
, Marina E. Eremeeva
5
, Thomas R. Fritsche
6
, Timothy S. Uphoff
6
, Julie Ray
2
, Elizabeth Schiffman
2
, Darby Murphy
7
,
Bobbi S. Pritt
4
1
Wisconsin Division of Public Health, Madison, WI, United States,
2
Minnesota Department of Health, St. Paul, MN, United States,
3
North Dakota Department of Health, Bismarck, ND, United States,
4
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, United States,
5
Georgia Southern University, Statesboro, GA, United States,
6
Marshfield Clinic, Marshfield, WI, United States,
7
University of Minnesota, Center for Animal Health and Food Safety, St. Paul, MN, United States
Abstract:
We recently discovered a novel human pathogen closely related to
Ehrlichia muris
detected using PCR, culture, and serology in clinical specimens from Minnesota and Wisconsin (Pritt et al., N. Engl. J. Med. 2011). We now present our 5 years’ experience (2009-2013) of human infections with this bacterium. Blood from patients with suspected ehrlichiosis or anaplasmosis was tested using PCR targeting the
Ehrlichia/Anaplasma
GroEL
Heat Shock Operon gene. Epidemiologic data was gathered using a standardized questionnaire. During 6/1/2009-8/19/2013, blood from 30 MN and 28 WI patients tested PCR positive for this new
Ehrlichia
sp. This result was also detected in residents from North Dakota (3), Indiana (1) and Michigan (1) with recent travel to WI or MN (total cases=63). Patient specimens (n=11,046) from 44 other states tested negative. The
Ehrlichia
sp. was cultured from the blood of one WI patient. Patients comprised 40 men and 23 women, ages 23 - 94 years (median=62 years). Among patients with available data, infection manifested with fever (53/60), headache (40/57), lymphopenia (16/28), and thrombocytopenia (28/43); 11 of 48 were hospitalized (3-15 days, median 4 days) and 55 received doxycycline treatment and made a full recovery, while one patient recovered without treatment. Treatment or outcome data were unavailable for 7 patients.
Conclusion
: The novel
Ehrlichia
sp. appears to circulate in a region where ehrlichiae have not historically been known to be endemic and causes a disease which is clinically similar to human monocytic ehrlichiosis due to
E. chaffeensis
and anaplasmosis due to
Anaplasma phagocytophilum
. These findings should be taken into consideration for diagnosis and surveillance in residents or individuals with travel to MN and WI states.
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