Carrion's disease after blood transfusion

Publication date

2016-02-03T14:41:44Z

2016-02-03T14:41:44Z

2015-11-05

2016-02-02T15:34:42Z

Abstract

Bartonella bacilliformis is a pathogen that is endemic in some areas of the Andean region of Peru, southern Ecuador and southern Colombia. This pathogen causes so-called Carrion's disease, a biphasic disease with acute and chronic phases (called Oroya fever and "Peruvian wart" respectively). In the absence or delay of antibiotic treatment, the mortality rate in the acute phase is up to 88%1. The acute phase is characterised by fever and severe anaemia and may be followed, several weeks or months later, by the chronic eruptive phase due to endothelial cell proliferation2. No animal reservoir has been identified to date and it is considered that healthy carriers act as a pathogen reservoir in endemic areas.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Edizioni SIMTI

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.2450/2015.0036-15

Blood Transfusion, 2016, vol. 14, num.6, p. 527-530

http://dx.doi.org/10.2450/2015.0036-15

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(c) Edizioni SIMTI, 2015

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