Clinical Progress and Risk Factors for Death in Severe Fever with Thrombocytopenia Syndrome PatientsZhongtao Gai, Y. Zhang, Mifang Liang et al.|The Journal of Infectious Diseases|2012 BACKGROUND: Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is an emerging infectious disease caused by the SFTS virus (SFTSV) with an average fatality rate of 12%. The clinical factors for death in SFTS patients remain unclear. METHODS: Clinical features and laboratory parameters were dynamically collected for 11 fatal and 48 non-fatal SFTS cases. Univariate logistic regression was used to evaluate the risk factors associated with death. RESULTS: Dynamic tracking of laboratory parameters revealed that during the initial fever stage, the viral load was comparable for the patients who survived as well as the ones that died. Then in the second stage when multi-organ dysfunction occurred, from 7-13 days after disease onset, the viral load decreased in survivors but it remained high in the patients that died. The key risk factors that contributed to patient death were elevated serum aspartate aminotransferase, lactate dehydrogenase, creatine kinase, and creatine kinase fraction, as well as the appearance of CNS (central nervous system) symptoms, hemorrhagic manifestation, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and multi-organ failure. All clinical markers reverted to normal in the convalescent stage for SFTS patients who survived. CONCLUSIONS: We identified a period of 7-13 days after the onset of illness as the critical stage in SFTS progression. A sustained serum viral load may indicate that disease conditions will worsen and lead to death.
Person-to-Person Transmission of Severe Fever With Thrombocytopenia Syndrome Bunyavirus Through Blood ContactZhongren Gai, Ming Liang, Y. Zhang et al.|Clinical Infectious Diseases|2011 Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome bunyavirus is a newly discovered bunyavirus with high pathogenicity to human. The transmission model has been largely uncharacterized. Investigation on a cluster of severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome cases provided evidence of person-to-person transmission through blood contact to the index patient with high serum virus load.
Probable aerosol transmission of severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus in southeastern ChinaZhenyu Gong, Shuyan Gu, Y. Zhang et al.|Clinical Microbiology and Infection|2015 Phenotypic homogeneity of emetic <i>Bacillus cereus</i> isolates in ChinaY. Yang, Jeffrey T. Foster, Ming Yi et al.|Letters in Applied Microbiology|2021 Emetic Bacillus cereus strains produce a potent cereulide cytotoxin, which can cause acute and fatal cases of food poisoning. We isolated 18 emetic B. cereus strains from a food poisoning event, and from clinical and non-random food surveillance in China and phenotypic characteristics of haemolysis, starch hydrolysis, salicin fermentation, gelatin liquefaction, cytotoxicity, and susceptibility to antibiotics were assessed. All isolates were positive for haemolysis and gelatin liquefaction, and negative for starch hydrolysis and salicin fermentation. Their haemolytic potentials were intermediate to Bacillus anthracis and B. cereus ATCC 14579 (a non-emetic strain). All isolates were cytotoxic to CHO, Hep-2, and Vero cells, and were sensitive to ampicillin. The homogeneous phenotypes of emetic isolates from China are similar to the corresponding traits of European and Japanese isolates that have been characterized, suggesting highly similar phenotypes of emetic B. cereus worldwide.
Channel Controlled ARQ Protocol Design for OCDM-Based Data TransmissionsChannel controlled automatic retransmission request (CC-ARQ) has shown potential in reducing complexity and bit error rate (BER) in wireless links. In this paper, we design an ARQ protocol transmission scheme for OCDM-based data transmissions. By employing retransmission threshold design based on orthogonality deficiency (od) of the channel matrix, the data transmissions receiver can enjoy the enough diversity offered by the wireless OCDM links with linear equalizers, which is essential for low-complexity communication environments, e.g., sensor cyber systems.