Article
Coxiella burnetii, the agent of Q fever in Brazil: its hidden role in seronegative arthritis and the importance of molecular diagnosis based on the repetitive element IS1111 associated with the transposase gene
Registro en:
ROZENTAL, Tatiana; et al. Coxiella burnetii, the agent of Q fever in Brazil: its hidden role in seronegative arthritis and the importance of molecular diagnosis based on the repetitive element IS1111 associated with the transposase gene. Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz, v.107, n.5, p.695-697, Aug. 2012.
0074-0276
1678-8060
Autor
Rozental, Tatiana
Mascarenhas, Luis Filipe
Rozenbaum, Ronaldo
Gomes, Raphael
Mattos, Grasiely Souza
Magno, Cecília Carlos
Almeida, Daniele Nunes de
Rossi, Maria Inês Doria
Favacho, Alexsandra R. M.
Lemos, Elba Regina Sampaio de
Resumen
Coxiella burnetii is the agent of Q fever, an emergent worldwide zoonosis of wide clinical spectrum. Although C. burnetii infection is typically associated with acute infection, atypical pneumonia and flu-like symptoms, endocarditis, osteoarticular manifestations and severe disease are possible, especially when the patient has a suppressed immune system; however, these severe complications are typically neglected. This study reports the sequencing of the repetitive element IS1111 of the transposase gene of C. burnetii from blood and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) samples from a patient with severe pneumonia following methotrexate therapy, resulting in the molecular diagnosis of Q fever in a patient who had been diagnosed with active seronegative polyarthritis two years earlier. To the best of our knowledge, this represents the first documented case of the isolation of C. burnetii DNA from a BAL sample.