Browsing by Author "Rajapakse, R.P."
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Item A case series of spotted fever rickettsiosis with neurological manifestations in Sri Lanka(Elsevier, 2012) Kularatne, S.A.; Weerakoon, K.G.; Rajapakse, R.P.; Madagedara, S.C.; Nanayakkara, D.; Premaratna, R.BACKGROUND: Spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsial infections are increasingly detected in Sri Lanka. We describe 17 patients with SFG who developed neurological manifestations. METHODS: The cases were studied prospectively from 2008 at the Teaching Hospital, Peradeniya. An immunofluorescent antibody assay (IFA) was used to confirm the diagnosis. RESULTS: All had an IFA IgG titer ranging from 1/64 to 1/4096 and a positive IFA IgM titer against Rickettsia conorii antigen; in 10 (59%) cases the IgG titers were ≥ 1/256 (definitive cases). The median age of the patients was 62 years (range 26-82 years); 10 were male and seven female. The median duration of fever was 12 days (range 4-35 days). Neurological manifestations on admission were drowsiness or confusion in 14 (82%) and a semi-comatose state in three (18%). Rigidity of the limbs occurred in 14 (82%), bradykinesia and resting tremors in 12 (71%), which persisted after defervescence, neck stiffness in seven (42%), weakness of the limbs in five (29%), deafness in two (12%), and stupor in three (18%). Electroencephalograms in three (18%) showed generalized slow waves. Cerebrospinal fluid examination showed a cellular reaction, predominantly lymphocytes, in three cases. Two patients died (fatality rate 12%). CONCLUSION: We have documented for the first time the neurological features of SFG rickettsioses in the Central Province, Sri Lanka. These were predominantly extrapyramidal features in patients of older age.Item Etiology of fever of unknown origin in a selected group of Sri Lankan patients with prompt responses to Doxycycline(Centers for disease control and Prevention, 2008) Dasch, G.A.; Premaratna, R.; Rajapakse, R.P.; Chandrasena, T.G.A.N.; Eremeeva, M.E.; de Silva, H.J.BACKGROUND: Most patients with long duration of fever go undiagnosed in settings where diagnostic facilities are inadequate. Untreated rickettsial infections cause extended fevers; while both scrub typhus and tick typhus are re-emerging diseases in Sri Lanka, laboratory facilities to specifically diagnose rickettsial infections in Sri Lanka are not available. METHODS: We collected 2 ml venous blood from febrile patients who had no etiological diagnosis after 7 days of hospital admission, but who showed rapid clinical response to doxycycline, to verify whether they had experienced a rickettsial infection. Acute serum samples were analysed using IFA for rickettsial infections caused by Orientia tsutsugamushi, Rickettsia conorii and Rickettsia typhi. A positive IgG IFA titer >1:128 was used to define a probable case of rickettsial infection. RESULTS: 28 patients [15 males, mean age 32.5 (SD 9.2 yrs)] were studied. Mean duration of fever at admission was 6.1 days (SD 3.1). Two patients had features suggestive of encephalitis and two had erythema nodosum. Others had no specific clinical features. Routine investigations were inconclusive and blood cultures were negative. IgG-IFA titer of >128 was found in 10 for R. conorii, 6 for O. tsutsugamushi and 6 for both R. conorii and O. tsutsugamushi. None were positive for R. typhi. Six were negative for all tests. One patient with encephalitis and one with erythema nodosum had high titers for R. conorii. CONCLUSIONS: The majority of Sri Lankan patients with undiagnosed fever responding promptly to doxycycline had a rickettsial etiology. Patients with rickettsioses exhibit varied clinical presentations so greater use of doxycycline for patients with extended fevers in rickettsial-endemic settings with inadequate diagnostic facilities appears warranted. The high proportion of patients with tick typhus and antibodies against both spotted fever and scrub typhus rickettsiae was unexpected based on previous studies of patients from the same region who were confirmed to have scrub typhus by serology and by the presence of the classic eschar. It is unknown whether the etiology of tick typhus and vector(s) transmitting this agent on the Western lowland region of Sri Lanka are the same as those responsible for spotted fevers in the central hill country of Sri Lanka.Item Evidence of acute rickettsioses among patients presumed to have chikungunya fever during the chikungunya outbreak in Sri Lanka(Elsevier, 2011) Premaratna, R.; Halambarachchige, L.P.; Nanayakkara, D.M.; Chandrasena, T.G.A.N.; Rajapakse, R.P.; Bandara, N.K.B.K.R.G.W.; de Silva, H.J.BACKGROUND: Chikungunya fever (CGF) and rickettsioses are known to cause acute onset febrile illnesses associated with severe arthritis. Rickettsial arthritis is curable with the use of appropriate anti-rickettsial antibiotics, however the arthritis of CGF tends to have a prolonged course leading to protracted disability. The aim of this study was to investigate the contribution of CGF and rickettsioses to cases of fever and arthritis during a presumed CGF outbreak in Sri Lanka. METHODS: Fifty-eight consecutive patients with presumed CGF were further investigated to determine the occurrence of rickettsioses among them, and to identify differences in clinical, hematological, and biochemical parameters between the two diseases. RESULTS: Nearly a third of the patients had serological evidence of rickettsioses accounting for their illness. The presence of a late onset major joint arthropathy sparing the small joints of the hands and feet, and the occurrence of a late onset discrete maculopapular rash over the trunk and extremities, suggested rickettsioses over CGF. White blood cell count, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein, and liver function tests were not helpful in differentiating rickettsioses from CGF. Patients with rickettsioses and arthritis who received an empirical course of doxycycline recovered faster than those who did not receive specific treatment. CONCLUSIONS: The establishment of rapid diagnostic methods able to differentiate the etiological agents of fever and arthritis, such as CGF and rickettsioses, would be beneficial in endemic settingsItem Rickettsioses in the central hills of Sri Lanka: serological evidence of increasing burden of spotted fever group(Elsevier, 2013) Kularatne, S.A.M.; Rajapakse, R.P.; Wickramasinghe, W.M.; Nanayakkara, D.M.; Budagoda, S.S.; Weerakoon, K.G.; Edirisinghe, J.S.; Premaratna, R.OBJECTIVES:To study the epidemiology, clinical features, and changing pattern of rickettsial infections on the western slopes of the hilly Central Province of Sri Lanka over 6 years.METHODS: All patients with rickettsial infections who presented to the Teaching Hospital, Peradeniya were studied prospectively from January 2002 to December 2007. An immunofluorescent antibody assay (IFA) was used to confirm the diagnosis. RESULTS: Of the 371 clinical cases of rickettsial infection, 122 underwent IFA to confirm the diagnosis. Species-specific IgG antibodies were positive in 105/122 (86.1%) cases: 43/105 (40.9%) to Rickettsia conorii and 6/105 (5.7%) to Orientia tsutsugamushi, with mixed antibody reactivity to more than one antigen in 56/105 (53.3%) cases, including Rickettsia typhi in 27/105 (25.7%). Among those with mixed IgG reactivity, IgM assays were used to detect pathogens responsible for acute infections. Finally, a total of 55 spotted fever group (SFG) infections, seven scrub typhus infections, and one case of murine typhus were identified. Of the 105 positive cases, 53 (50.5%) were male and 52 (49.5%) were female, and the mean age was 40 years (range 11-83 years). In the SFG patients, 13/55 (24%) had severe vasculitis with fern leaf type skin necrosis and 17/55 (31%) had arthritis. Three patients (5%) had an altered level of consciousness. A patient with scrub typhus had transient deafness. None of the 105 patients had an eschar. CONCLUSIONS: It appears that SFG rickettsioses are on the rise in the hilly Central Province of Sri Lanka, whilst murine typhus and scrub typhus are present at a lower rate. © 2013 International Society for Infectious Diseases. Published by Elsevier Inc.Item Scrub typhus mimicking enteric fever; a report of three patients(Oxford University Press, 2010) Premaratna, R.; Nawasiwatte, B.M.T.P.; Niriella, M.A.; Chandrasena, T.G.A.N.; Bandara, N.K.B.K.R.G.W.; Rajapakse, R.P.; de Silva, H.J.We report three patients who presented with fever and late onset diarrhoea mimicking enteric fever. All three patients were diagnosed with an Orientia tsutsugamushi infection and responded dramatically to doxycycline treatment. Clinicians practicing in rickettsial disease endemic areas should be made aware of similar clinical presentations in order to prevent morbidity and mortality associated with rickettsioses.