In central Italy, acute lymphocytic meningitis and meningoencephalitis due to a Phlebotomus transmitted virus (Phlebovirus Toscana, TOSv) occurring throughout the summer are frequently observed. Several serum specimens of patients hospitalized with a clinical picture of viral meningitis/meningoencephalitis showed anti TOS-IgG reactivity suggestive of a previous infection occurring at an unknown time in the past. This observation led us to design a serological investigation of 83 household contacts of 46 summertime CNS infection patients (index cases) with the purpose of evaluating the percentage of both IgG and IgM in seropositive healthy individuals, living, like the index cases, in areas at high risk of phlebotomine sandfly bites. The serological study was carried out using an ELISA method: 22% of the sera showed a reactivity for anti-TOS IgG antibodies and 6% resulted IgG/IgM positive; none of them reported having had any symptoms of CNS involvement; the distribution of seropositive cases was similar in contacts of both TOS-confirmed and TOS-negative cases. Our results indicate: (1) that phlebovirus Toscana is frequently implicated in cases with CNS disease as well as in infections occurring without neurological involvement; (2) in our country the ecological requirements encompass the conditions in and around the human settlements for phlebotomine sandflies to become peridomestic thus amplifying the risk of TOSv infections, which are in fact widespread and frequent in Siena and its surroundings.
Toscana virus (TOSv) is a recently discovered Phlebotomus-transmitted human pathogen involved in acute infections of the central nervous system (CNS) occurring during the summer in natural foci in Italy. The purpose of this prospective study was to investigate the role of this virus in 170 patients with meningitis-meningoencephalitis of suspected viral origin, admitted to the Departments of Infectious Diseases at the Siena Hospital from 1990 to 1996. Infections caused by tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEv) and TOSv or other neurotropic viruses were routinely diagnosed by means of conventional virological methods. 89 cases were attributed to TOSv, about 10% of which were Europeans on vacation in Tuscany. All of the TOSv-positive cases were observed during the summer and were residents of hilly areas in Siena and its province at an altitude not above 500 m. An increase in the number of cases was observed over the years, with a higher incidence among younger people. The clinical picture was similar to that observed in other viral infections of the CNS. Evolution was benign in all cases; in 2 subjects symptoms and signs of encephalitis were present.
We describe a case of a febrile patient returning from Senegal in which haemoscopic and molecular investigation confirmed tick-borne relapsing fever (TBRF), suggesting Borrelia crocidurae as the causative agent. This case emphasises the need to include TBRF in the differential diagnosis of fever following a journey from endemic countries, including malarial areas.
A retrospective study of group A streptococcal (GAS) infections was performed for the period 1985-2002 in an area of central Italy. Although very severe diseases such as streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (STSS) were observed, a general increase in invasive infections was not found. Isolates of GAS were classified by M protein genotyping (emm typing) and analysed according to their origin from invasive and non-invasive infections. The predominant emm types were types 1, 4 and 12, followed by types 3, 6 and 28. During the study period the proportion of isolates of types 1 and 12 fell, while other types (3, 6, 22, 28 and 77) appeared. Isolates from invasive and non-invasive infections shared several emm types; however, most invasive strains belonged to five types only (types 1, 4, 12, 28 and 77), while non-invasive isolates were generally more heterogeneous.
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