Clinical guideline for diagnosis and management of melioidosis

Melioidosis is an emerging infection in Brazil and neighbouring South American countries. The wide range of clinical presentations include severe community-acquired pneumonia, septicaemia, central nervous system infection and less severe soft tissue infection. Diagnosis depends heavily on the clinical microbiology laboratory for culture. Burkholderia pseudomallei, the bacterial cause of melioidosis, is easily cultured from blood, sputum and other clinical samples. However, B. pseudomallei can be difficult to identify reliably, and can be confused with closely related bacteria, some of which may be dismissed as insignificant culture contaminants. Serological tests can help to support a diagnosis of melioidosis, but by themselves do not provide a definitive diagnosis. The use of a laboratory discovery pathway can help reduce the risk of missing atypical B. pseudomallei isolates. Recommended antibiotic treatment for severe infection is either intravenous Ceftazidime or Meropenem for several weeks, followed by up to 20 weeks oral treatment with a combination of trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole and doxycycline. Consistent use of diagnostic microbiology to confirm the diagnosis, and rigorous treatment of severe infection with the correct antibiotics in two stages; acute and eradication, will contribute to a reduction in mortality from melioidosis.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Inglis,Timothy J.J., Rolim,Dionne B., Rodriguez,Jorge L.N.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo 2006
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46652006000100001
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spelling oai:scielo:S0036-466520060001000012006-03-09Clinical guideline for diagnosis and management of melioidosisInglis,Timothy J.J.Rolim,Dionne B.Rodriguez,Jorge L.N. Melioidosis Clinical guideline Diagnosis Antibiotics Burkholderia pseudomallei Melioidosis is an emerging infection in Brazil and neighbouring South American countries. The wide range of clinical presentations include severe community-acquired pneumonia, septicaemia, central nervous system infection and less severe soft tissue infection. Diagnosis depends heavily on the clinical microbiology laboratory for culture. Burkholderia pseudomallei, the bacterial cause of melioidosis, is easily cultured from blood, sputum and other clinical samples. However, B. pseudomallei can be difficult to identify reliably, and can be confused with closely related bacteria, some of which may be dismissed as insignificant culture contaminants. Serological tests can help to support a diagnosis of melioidosis, but by themselves do not provide a definitive diagnosis. The use of a laboratory discovery pathway can help reduce the risk of missing atypical B. pseudomallei isolates. Recommended antibiotic treatment for severe infection is either intravenous Ceftazidime or Meropenem for several weeks, followed by up to 20 weeks oral treatment with a combination of trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole and doxycycline. Consistent use of diagnostic microbiology to confirm the diagnosis, and rigorous treatment of severe infection with the correct antibiotics in two stages; acute and eradication, will contribute to a reduction in mortality from melioidosis.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessInstituto de Medicina Tropical de São PauloRevista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo v.48 n.1 20062006-02-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46652006000100001en10.1590/S0036-46652006000100001
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
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author Inglis,Timothy J.J.
Rolim,Dionne B.
Rodriguez,Jorge L.N.
spellingShingle Inglis,Timothy J.J.
Rolim,Dionne B.
Rodriguez,Jorge L.N.
Clinical guideline for diagnosis and management of melioidosis
author_facet Inglis,Timothy J.J.
Rolim,Dionne B.
Rodriguez,Jorge L.N.
author_sort Inglis,Timothy J.J.
title Clinical guideline for diagnosis and management of melioidosis
title_short Clinical guideline for diagnosis and management of melioidosis
title_full Clinical guideline for diagnosis and management of melioidosis
title_fullStr Clinical guideline for diagnosis and management of melioidosis
title_full_unstemmed Clinical guideline for diagnosis and management of melioidosis
title_sort clinical guideline for diagnosis and management of melioidosis
description Melioidosis is an emerging infection in Brazil and neighbouring South American countries. The wide range of clinical presentations include severe community-acquired pneumonia, septicaemia, central nervous system infection and less severe soft tissue infection. Diagnosis depends heavily on the clinical microbiology laboratory for culture. Burkholderia pseudomallei, the bacterial cause of melioidosis, is easily cultured from blood, sputum and other clinical samples. However, B. pseudomallei can be difficult to identify reliably, and can be confused with closely related bacteria, some of which may be dismissed as insignificant culture contaminants. Serological tests can help to support a diagnosis of melioidosis, but by themselves do not provide a definitive diagnosis. The use of a laboratory discovery pathway can help reduce the risk of missing atypical B. pseudomallei isolates. Recommended antibiotic treatment for severe infection is either intravenous Ceftazidime or Meropenem for several weeks, followed by up to 20 weeks oral treatment with a combination of trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole and doxycycline. Consistent use of diagnostic microbiology to confirm the diagnosis, and rigorous treatment of severe infection with the correct antibiotics in two stages; acute and eradication, will contribute to a reduction in mortality from melioidosis.
publisher Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo
publishDate 2006
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46652006000100001
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