Infect Chemother.  2010 Dec;42(6):404-406. 10.3947/ic.2010.42.6.404.

Importance of Culture for Diagnosing Human Brucellosis

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Internal Medicine, Chonbuk National University Medical School, Jeonju, Korea. lcsmd@jbnu.ac.kr
  • 2Research Institute of Clinical Medicine, Chonbuk National University Medical School, Jeonju, Korea.

Abstract

Human brucellosis is a newly emerging infectious disease in Korea, and the number of the patients with this disease has rapidly increased in recent years. To evaluate the most reliable method in diagnosing human brucellosis, a retrospective study was conducted. Medical records of patients admitted or followed-up at the outpatient department of a tertiary care university hospital during the past 5 years were reviewed. Among a total of 32 human brucellosis patients (24 males and 8 females), 21 (65.6%) were positive for standard tube agglutination test (STA) but negative for blood or bone marrow culture, 7 (21.9%) were positive for both STA and culture, and 4 (12.5%) were STA negative but culture positive. Based on these findings, we recommend that physicians include blood and/or bone marrow culture to obtain definitive diagnosis when clinical symptoms and signs strongly suggest the human brucellosis, even when STA is negative.

Keyword

Brucellosis; Standard tube agglutination; Culture

MeSH Terms

Agglutination Tests
Bone Marrow
Brucellosis
Communicable Diseases, Emerging
Humans
Korea
Male
Medical Records
Outpatients
Retrospective Studies
Tertiary Healthcare

Reference

1. Corbel MJ. Brucellosis: an overview. Emerg Infect Dis. 1997. 3:213–221.
Article
2. Pappas G, Papadimitriou P, Akritidis N, Christou L, Tsianos EV. The new global map of human brucellosis. Lancet Infect Dis. 2006. 6:91–99.
Article
3. Pappas G, Akritidis N, Bosilkovski M, Tsianos E. Brucellosis. N Engl J Med. 2005. 352:2325–2336.
Article
4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Case definitions for infectious conditions under public health surveillance. MMWR Recomm Rep. 1997. 46:1–55.
5. Memish Z, Mah MW, Al Mahmoud S, Al Shaalan M, Khan MY. Brucella bacteraemia: clinical and laboratory observations in 160 patients. J Infect. 2000. 40:59–63.
Article
Full Text Links
  • IC
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr