نتایج جستجو برای: babesia microti

تعداد نتایج: 2530  

2004
Barbara L. Herwaldt Guy de Bruyn Norman J. Pieniazek Mary Homer Kathryn H. Lofy Susan B. Slemenda Thomas R. Fritsche David H. Persing Ajit P. Limaye

Most reported U.S. zoonotic cases of babesiosis have occurred in the Northeast and been caused by Babesia microti. In Washington State, three cases of babesiosis have been reported previously, which were caused by WA1 (for "Washington 1")-type parasites. We investigated a case of babesiosis in Washington in an 82-year-old man whose spleen had been removed and whose parasitemia level was 41.4%. ...

2016
Marta Arsuaga Luis M. Gonzalez Cheryl A. Lobo Fernando de la Calle Jose M. Bautista Isabel G. Azcárate Sabino Puente Estrella Montero

Babesiosis is an emerging zoonosis now found in several areas of the world. Using PCR and indirect immunofluorescence assay, we have diagnosed the first case of human babesiosis caused by Babesia microti in Spain. Diagnosis was delayed because of the nonspecific clinical symptoms that occurred in an immunocompetent patient.

2004
Mary S. Holman Diane A. Caporale John Goldberg Eleanor Lacombe Charles Lubelczyk Peter W. Rand Robert P. Smith

Ixodes scapularis (deer ticks) from Maine were tested for multiple infections by polymerase chain reaction and immunofluorescence. In 1995, 29.5%, 9.5%, and 1.9% of deer ticks were infected with Borrelia burgdorferi, Anaplasma phagocytophilum, and Babesia microti, respectively. In 1996 and 1997, the number of A. phagocytophilum-infected ticks markedly declined. In 1995 through 1996, 4 (1.3%) of...

2017
Jiajun Wu Jie Cao Yongzhi Zhou Houshuang Zhang Haiyan Gong Jinlin Zhou

Babesiosis caused by Babesia microti parasite is an emerging tick borne zoonotic disease that was confirmed recently in China. To understand the epidemiology characteristics of this emerging disease, infectivity of B. microti to domestic animals and ticks outside the genus Ixodes was evaluated in this study. Different domestic animals, chick, pig, goat, dog and the reference host rat were exper...

2014
Robert P. Smith Susan P. Elias Timothy J. Borelli Bayan Missaghi Brian J. York Robert A. Kessler Charles B. Lubelczyk Eleanor H. Lacombe Catherine M. Hayes Michael S. Coulter Peter W. Rand

We observed an increase in the ratio of pathogenic Babesia microti to B. odocoilei in adult Ixodes scapularis ticks in Maine. Risk for babesiosis was associated with adult tick abundance, Borrelia burgdorferi infection prevalence, and Lyme disease incidence. Our findings may help track risk and increase the focus on blood supply screening.

2003
Joseph Z. Lux Don Weiss Jeanne V. Linden Debra Kessler Barbara L. Herwaldt Susan J. Wong Jan Keithly Phyllis Della-Latta Brian E. Scully

We describe a 54-year-old spleen-intact man with transfusion-associated Babesia microti infection after a heart transplant. Adult respiratory distress syndrome developed in the patient, and he required mechanical ventilation. Our experiences with this patient suggest that babesiosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of transplant patients who have fever and hemolytic anemia.

2016
Simona Gabrielli Valentina Totino Fabio Macchioni Freddy Zuñiga Patricia Rojas Yuni Lara Mimmo Roselli Alessandro Bartoloni Gabriella Cancrini

To investigate human babesiosis in the Bolivian Chaco, in 2013 we tested blood samples from 271 healthy persons living in 2 rural communities in this region. Microscopy and PCR indicated that 3.3% of persons were positive for Babesia microti parasites (US lineage); seroprevalence was 45.7%. Appropriate screening should mitigate the risk for transfusion-associated babesiosis.

2017
Sandra Antunes Catarina Rosa Joana Couto Joana Ferrolho Ana Domingos

Understanding host-pathogen-tick interactions remains a vitally important issue that might be better understood by basic research focused on each of the dyad interplays. Pathogens gain access to either the vector or host during tick feeding when ticks are confronted with strong hemostatic, inflammatory and immune responses. A prominent example of this is the Babesia spp.-tick-vertebrate host re...

2015
Jing Li Patrick Kelly Jilei Zhang Chuanling Xu Chengming Wang

BACKGROUND Babesia spp. are tick-borne protozoan hemoparasites and the second most common blood-borne parasites of mammals, in particular domestic animals. We used the Clustal Multiple Alignment program and 18S rRNA gene sequences of 22 Babesia species from GenBank to develop a PCR that could detect a wide variety of Babesia spp. in a single reaction. The pan-Babesia FRET-qPCR we developed reli...

2010

Background: Babesia microti, a tick-borne parasite endemic to the northeast and upper Midwest, is the primary cause of human babesiosis in the United States. Although these infections are usually subclinical or self-limited in immunocompetent people, severe disease can be present in susceptible populations (including the elderly or immunocompromised). Here, infections result in hemolytic anemia...

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