Publications by authors named "M V Eremeeva"

Background: This scoping review provides a baseline summary of the current records of the ticks, fleas, and mites of public health importance that are present in Bangladesh. It summarizes their geographic distributions and reports the levels of their infestation of livestock, pets, wildlife, and humans, and the clinical and epidemiological studies pertinent to these vectors and their pathogens.

Methods: Sixty-one articles were identified in a literature search, including 43 published since 2011.

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Article Synopsis
  • * A case study of a 12-year-old girl who died from severe anemia linked to a head louse infestation showed that the lice were present for at least 166 days and had some traits associated with both head and body lice.
  • * The investigation highlighted that chronic head louse infestation can indicate neglect and poor care in children, suggesting that such conditions may need attention from authorities.
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Background: Scrub typhus, an acute febrile disease caused by is transmitted to humans through infected chigger mites. We present a case of scrub typhus in a previously healthy man from Shandong Province diagnosed using next-generation sequencing (NGS) and PCR and review recent literature on NGS for scrub typhus diagnosis.

Methods: NGS was utilized for testing whole blood collected on admission.

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Mediterranean spotted fever (MSF) has been diagnosed clinically in the Crimean Peninsula since the 1930s. We describe the recent illness of an elderly patient from Crimea who had developed a classic triad of MSF symptoms consisting of fever, maculopapular rash, and eschar. Clinical diagnosis of rickettsiosis was confirmed using real-time PCR and sequencing of 4 protein genes.

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Mediterranean spotted fever (MSF) is a tick-borne rickettsiosis caused by subspecies and transmitted to humans by ticks. The disease was first discovered in Tunisia in 1910 and was subsequently reported from other Mediterranean countries. The first cases of MSF in the former Soviet Union were detected in 1936 on the Crimean Peninsula.

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