Abstract

With a view to clarifying the actual state of inapparent infection of tsutsugamushi diseases, inhibitants of endemic and nonendemic areas were screened for anti-Rickettsia tsutsugamushi antibody (anti-Rt antibody) by the indirect immunofluorescence test. The anti-Rt antibody-positive rate in the inhabitants of the endemic area (about 50%) was statistically significantly higher than that in the nonendemic area (14.7%). The antibody titer in the inhabitants of the endemic area was 10-160, and the number of inhibitants showing a high antibody titer was 2-4 times larger than that of the nonendemic area. A total of 257 volunteers in the endemic area were analyzed for the changes in anti-Rt antibody titer over 1.5-2 years on an individual basis. An increase in the antibody titer was found in 20 inhabitants. There was no difference in the anti-Rt antibody-positive rate between male and female in either the endemic or the nonendemic area. The positive rate was also compared as to the distribution by 10 years of age. In the endemic area, there were no significant differences in the positive rate between any pair of 10-year age groups from 30s to 60s, whereas in the nonendemic area, the positive rate in the teen-age group was significantly lower than those in the age groups of 20 years or older. In Yamada district, the numbers of serum samples obtained from each age group were about the same, and the distribution of the positive rates showed a normal distribution. The nurse students having their homes in Toyama Prefecture were plotted on the map as for their anti-Rt antibody and geographical distribution. The results showed that many of them having homes in the endemic area were positive for the antibody, while some antibody-positives were scattered all over Toyama Prefecture.

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