Abstract

International Journal of Medicine and Public Heal,2020,10,4,180-183.DOI:10.5530/ijmedph.2020.4.39Published:November 2020Type:Original ArticleClinical Manifestation and Complications of Scrub Typhus Cases: A Hospital-based Observational Study from Rural Part of West BengalKalyan Sarkar, Amitava Acharyya, Susmita Ghosh, Manas Ghosh, Ambarish Bhattacharya, and Kaushik Ghosh Kalyan Sarkar1, Amitava Acharyya2, Susmita Ghosh3, Manas Ghosh1, Ambarish Bhattacharya4, Kaushik Ghosh1,* 1Department of Medicine, Murshidabad Medical College, Berhampore, Murshidabad, West Bengal, INDIA. 2Central Sector Scheme of Grant-in-Aid for Promotion of Ayush Intervention in PHI-Ministry of AYUSH (Govt of India), New Delhi, INDIA. 3Department of Anaesthesiology, Murshidabad Medical College, Berhampore, Murshidabad, West Bengal, INDIA. 4Department of Medicine and Critical Care Nightingle and Monmohini Hospital, Kolkata, West Bengal, INDIA. Abstract:Introduction: Scrub typhus is very common re-emerging Rickettsia infection in India and many other South East Asian countries. The unplanned urbanization, deforestation and easy transportation leads to changes of place of occurrence of scrub typhus from hilly and forest terrains to plan land with different clinical manifestation. Aim: This study was conducted to identify the regional characteristic of clinical sign, symptom and treatment outcome of scrub typhus patients admitted in a tertiary level hospital of Murshidabad district of West Bengal. Methods: An observational cross sectional study was conducted among 82 hospitalized scrub typhus patients during September, 2019 to March, 2020. Patients were selected by purposive sampling procedure. Data were analyzed in descriptive statistic. Results: All study participants presented with acute febrile illness with other symptoms like headache, cough, dyspnea, nausea, generalized weakness, abdominal pain and myalgia. On examination, patients had hepatosplenomegaly (21%), lymphadenopathy (7%), pedal edema (14%), Icterus (12%) and eschar (4%). On investigation, elevated ALT (37%), elevated AST (36%), Low platelet count (25%), low Hb% (52%), elevated WBC count (37%) levels were the most common findings. Interestingly few patients diagnosed with co-morbid infections eg: enteric fever (12%), Urinary tract infection (12%), respiratory tract infection (27%), dengue fever (5%) and malaria (2%). Low mortality rate (4%) was observed due to tertiary level health care services and increased awareness among local medical fraternities on scrub typhus apart from lower virulence or indigenous resistance as host or environment factor. Conclusion: Scrub typhus is an important zoonotic disease of variable presentation with low fatality if diagnosed and treated early. It is necessary to include scrub typhus serology test as routine blood test for all acute febrile illness patients for this area. Keywords:Complications, Murshidabad, observational study, Scrub typhusView:PDF (311.91 KB)

Highlights

  • Scrub typhus is very common re-emerging Rickettsia infection in India and many other South East Asian countries

  • Aim: This study was conducted to identify the regional characteristic of clinical sign, symptom and treatment outcome of scrub typhus patients admitted in a tertiary level hospital of Murshidabad district of West Bengal

  • Scrub typhus has re-emerged to become the major cause of Acute Febrile illness (AFI ) in many parts of India (Shivalik ranges from Kashmir to Assam, Eastern and Western Ghats and the Vindhyachal and Satpura ranges in the central part of India) with myriad clinical presentation.[2]

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Summary

Introduction

Scrub typhus is very common re-emerging Rickettsia infection in India and many other South East Asian countries. Aim: This study was conducted to identify the regional characteristic of clinical sign, symptom and treatment outcome of scrub typhus patients admitted in a tertiary level hospital of Murshidabad district of West Bengal. Scrub typhus is a zoonotic infectious disease caused by an intracellular parasite Orientia tsutsugamushi, a Gram-negative proteobacterium of family Rickettsiaceae, first identified in Japan in 1899.1 Humans are accidental host after exposed with chigger mite infested rural or semi urban fields crop fields. It was considered a deadly disease in pre antibiotics era where as they have been brought under control in most of developed Asian nations. Bihar witness a massive scrub typhus outbreak as most common cause of Acute Encephalytic Syndrome on 2018.3 Himachal Pradesh, Sikkim and Darjeeling (West Bengal) witnessed scrub typhus outbreak during 2003–2004 and 2007.2 In a study published from Rajasthan, authors noted scrub typhus as an emergent cause of acute renal failure.[4]

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