Bhubaneswar: Mass construction activities and nor’wester, known as ‘Kalabaisakhi’ in local parlance, can cause the deadly infectious Melioidosis, experts said at a workshop in Bhubaneswar on Tuesday.
In the form of sporadic occurrence in India, Melioidosis has now grabbed the attention of the medical community through its presence in Odisha too.
The disease which is endemic in neighboring countries like Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, is caused by environmental Gram-negative bacterium, Burkholderia pseudomallei.
The bacterium inherently present in the soil can be acquired by inoculation, inhalation and ingestion, with most of the cases presenting during monsoon and post monsoon, said experts from different specialties.
They were speaking at a workshop on Melioidosis awareness, Diagnostics and Research jointly organised by Microbiology Department of AIIMS Bhubaneswar and KMC Manipal as part of the Pre-Conference Workshop series of 45th Annual Conference of Medical Microbiologists (MICROCON-2022).
Melioidosis has baffled medical community in having myriad manifestations presenting acutely with high fever, pneumonia, visceral abscesses culminating in life threatening sepsis to indolent presentations of persistent low-grade fever, lymphadenitis and thus has earned a moniker of “great mimicker”, said Dr Bijayini Behera, Additional Professor, Department of Microbiology, AIIMS Bhubaneswar.
Patients with poorly controlled diabetes, hazardous level of alcohol consumption, and exposure to rice paddy fields remain at highest risk of getting the disease. Urban dwelling people with minimum levels of soil exposure like gardening can also get the disease, opined Dr Rashmiranjan Mohanty, Addl Prof, General Medicine, AIIMS Bhubaneswar.
Widespread construction activities and Nor’wester wind (Kalabaisakhi) are also associated environmental factors of acquiring the disease by inhalation routes. The disease, without an accurate diagnosis and treatment, can be fatal in more than half of the cases, said Prof P R Mohapatra, DEAN-Head Pulmonary Medicine.
Dr Prakash Sasmal, Addl Prof General Surgery Department, said that over the last one decade of diagnosing and treating more than 200 cases of melioidosis have been found here at AIIMS, with more than half of the cases from Khorda district.
The KMC Manipal team was headed by Prof Chiranjay Mukhopadhayay, founder of Indian Melioidosis Research Forum. The Workshop was attended by participants from several states. They were offered hands-on training on laboratory diagnosis of Burkholderia pseudomallei by various conventional, molecular and point of care serological methods, adhering to requisite bio-safety precautions.
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