The rate of amoxicillin- and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole-resistant Enterobacteriaceae implies that another antibiotic should be used for empirical treatment and that there is a need for new generic drugs in developing countries, especially in Madagascar.
A study was conducted in agricultural and urban areas in Cambodia to assess the presence of hantaviruses in rodent populations. In 1998, rodents were trapped in two villages and in Phnom Penh city around market places and a rubbish dump. IgG antibodies to Hantaan virus were detected in 54 (8.2%) rodents among 660 tested: 6.4% (13/203) among roof rats (Rattus rattus), 20.9% (39/187) among Norway rats (R. norvegicus), 16.7% (2/12) among unidentified Rattus species and none in 183 Polynesian rats (R. exulans) or in 75 bandicoot rats (Bandicota sp.). The presence of the viral genome was detected by a reverse transcription-PCR amplifying part of the sequence coding for the nucleoprotein in the S segment, in 87% of the seropositive rodents. Thirty-one representative cDNAs were sequenced. Phylogenetic studies of the sequences indicated a close relationship with Seoul virus. However, the Cambodian Seoul virus sequences clustered within two different phylogenetic lineages, one associated with R. rattus and the other with R. norvegicus.
The majority of healthy individuals exposed to Mycobacterium tuberculosis will not develop tuberculosis (TB), though many may become latently infected. More precise measurement of the human immune response to M. tuberculosis infection may help us understand this difference and potentially identify those subjects most at risk of developing active disease. Gamma interferon (IFN-␥) production has been widely used as a proxy marker to study infection and to examine the human immune response to specific M. tuberculosis antigens. It has been suggested that genetically distinct M. tuberculosis strains may invoke different immune responses, although how these differences influence the immune responses and clinical outcome in human tuberculosis is still poorly understood. We therefore evaluated the antigen-specific IFN-␥ production responses in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from two cohorts of subjects recruited in Antananarivo Tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, is a major cause of global morbidity and mortality throughout the world. It is estimated that there are in excess of new 8 million cases of TB each year, and this represents just the tip of the iceberg. Infection with M. tuberculosis leads to clinically active TB in about 5 to 10% of exposed individuals. A much higher proportion of exposed individuals apparently become latently infected, and these individuals may remain noninfectious and symptom free for years. Approximately one-third of the world population is thought to be latently infected with M. tuberculosis. However, under some circumstances (in about 5% of the latently infected people), the host immune response is perturbed and latent M. tuberculosis infection may develop into clinically active TB (52). This process is most prominent in individuals coinfected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), but it can also occur with impairment of the immune system associated with old age, malnutrition, anti-inflammatory drug treatment, etc. Reactivation of latent disease is thought to contribute roughly half of all TB cases, and thus, understanding the factors controlling the development of acute primary TB or latent infection is crucial to TB control (64).Gamma interferon (IFN-␥) production has been widely used to study infection and to examine the human immune response to specific M. tuberculosis antigens. The 6-kDa early secreted antigenic target (ESAT-6) antigen, encoded by genes located within region of difference 1 (RD1) of the M. tuberculosis genome, is much more specific for M. tuberculosis than purified protein derivative (PPD), as these genes were deleted from M. bovis in the development of BCG substrains or are not found in most environmental mycobacteria (29,53). Some studies showed that the level of IFN-␥ release in response to ESAT-6 could identify TB contacts at risk of developing active disease after recent infection (3,18,30). CFP7 or TB10.4 is an immunodominant antigen recognized by TB patients and M. bovis BCG-vaccinated subjects, while ESAT-6 is specific to TB pa-
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