Bartonella bacilliformis is the etiologic agent of Carrion’s disease. This disease has two well established phases, the most
relevant being the so called Oroya Fever, in which B. bacilliformis infect the erythrocytes resulting in severe anemia and
transient immunosuppression, with a high lethality in the absence of adequate antibiotic treatment. The presence of
B. bacilliformis was studied in 113 blood samples suspected of Carrion’s disease based on clinical criteria, despite the
absence of a positive thin blood smear, by two different PCR techniques (using Bartonella-specific and universal 16S rRNA
gene primers), and by bacterial culture. The specific 16S rRNA gene primers revealed the presence of 21 B. bacilliformis
and 1 Bartonella elizabethae, while universal primers showed both the presence of 3 coinfections in which a concomitant
pathogen was detected plus Bartonella, in addition to the presence of infections by other microorganisms such as
Agrobacterium or Bacillus firmus. These data support the need to implement molecular tools to diagnose Carrion’s
disease.
Authors: Del Valle Mendoza, Juana; Silva Caso, Wilmer; Tinco Valdez, Carmen; Pons, Maria J.; Del Valle, Luis J.;Casabona Oré, Verónica; Champin Michelena, Denisse; Bazán Mayra, Jorge; Zavaleta Gavidea, Víctor; Vargas, Martha; Ruiz, Joaquim
Source: PLoS ONE
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10757/315714
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