PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Physicians should be on alert for group A strep as cases experience historic rise, study finds

2023-04-06
(Press-News.org) The U.S. experienced an unprecedented number of group A streptococcal infections in children from October to December of 2022, which should alert physicians to check for the potentially deadly infectious disease as the country moves out of the pandemic, according to research published by UTHealth Houston.

The study, led by senior author Anthony R. Flores, MD, PhD, MPH, associate professor and chief of pediatric infectious diseases at McGovern Medical School at UTHealth Houston, was published this month in Clinical Infectious Diseases.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the rate of other infectious diseases dropped due to safety measures such as social distancing and mask-wearing, according to researchers. But as those safety measures began to lift, diseases such as respiratory syncytial virus, the flu, and group A strep all experienced a resurgence in cases.

Infectious disease experts first noticed the rise in cases in the UK, now with 355 deaths of which 40 were children dying from severe group A strep infections. Researchers such as Flores then turned to what was occurring in the U.S.

“In 2020 and 2021, the overall number of infections that we saw due to group A strep were far lower than what we had seen before the pandemic,” Flores said. “When we look at the number of infections by quarter, historically, pre-pandemic cases of group A strep were pretty consistent from quarter to quarter with a little variation and more infections in the winter months. But during the last quarter of 2022, the number of infections we saw, including invasive infections, were far greater than what we’d ever seen before.”

In 2022, a total of 318 individual group A strep cases were identified in young children in Houston. Researchers looked at three group A strep disease types: invasive group A strep (iGAS), skin and soft tissue infections (SSTI), and pharyngeal, or throat, infections (PHG). The study found that group A strep strains derived from iGAS accounted for 31.4%, SSTI for 17.6%, and pharyngeal for 50.9%.

“Proportionately speaking, if we just looked at the percentage of all infections that were invasive, it was the same as we had seen in the past,” Flores said. “It wasn't like, all of a sudden, 75% of our cases are invasive diseases. What we’re seeing is an increase in the total number of infections.”

The study also found that emm12 group A strep strains were disproportionately represented, compared to emm1 group A strep, which was the dominant emm type pre-pandemic. Emm type is a marker that differentiates different strains of group A strep.

“By looking at the molecular epidemiology, we can look at specific things about the bacteria that give us clues as to whether or not something is changing,” Flores said. “What we will be observing as we go forward is whether it will shift back to what it was pre-pandemic, and if it doesn’t, then we hope to have some work underway that is going to tell us why.”

As cases of group A strep continued to be high in the first quarter of 2023 in Houston, the disease is a cause for concern for pediatricians who see children with symptoms of group A strep.

“The reason why this is important is we're seeing group A strep more frequently than what we have seen in the past, and therefore, if a physician has a child coming in with a sore throat or with a skin infection, we should have a high index of suspicion for group A strep,” Flores said.

Co-authors on the paper from McGovern Medical Schools department of pediatrics infectious diseases division included Aya Aboulhosn, MD; Misu A. Sanson-Iglesias, MD, PhD; Luis Alberto Vega, PhD; and Maria G. Segura, MD.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Chemistry’s Michael Schulz awarded National Science Foundation CAREER award

Chemistry’s Michael Schulz awarded National Science Foundation CAREER award
2023-04-06
Michael Schulz, assistant professor of chemistry within the Virginia Tech College of Science, has received a National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) award. The award, which begins in May, comes on the heels of Schulz receiving a U.S. Department of Energy 2022 Early Career Research Program Award. Schulz received the foundation's five-year $725,000 for the project titled "CAREER: Novel Approaches to Hyperbranched Polymers" to develop ruthenium-catalyzed self-condensing Ring-Opening Metathesis Polymerization to prepare hyperbranched polymers. The award comes ...

Virginia Tech researchers to investigate transcriptional regulation of cannabinoid synthesis in industrial hemp

Virginia Tech researchers to investigate transcriptional regulation of cannabinoid synthesis in industrial hemp
2023-04-06
Industrial cultivation of hemp is seeing a massive expansion in the United States due to new federal laws and consumer demand. Because of these changes in regulation, part of the Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018, researchers are legally able to perform tests on hemp and growers can produce plants. In 2021, hemp, which has a THC concentration of less than 0.3 percent on a dry weight basis, was grown on 54,000 acres with a value of more than $824 million, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In partnership with York University in Ontario, Canada, and the ...

Blood-based biomarkers accurately predict neuroendocrine tumor response to radiopharmaceutical therapy

2023-04-06
Reston, VA—A simple blood draw can provide physicians with valuable information that can determine if peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) is likely to be effective in a patient with neuroendocrine cancer. The blood-based biomarker PPQ can predict which patients will respond to PRRT with 96 percent accuracy; changes in another biomarker, NETest, correctly correlate with PRRT response in 90 percent of patients. The study, published in the April issue of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine, ...

Fully recyclable printed electronics ditch toxic chemicals for water

Fully recyclable printed electronics ditch toxic chemicals for water
2023-04-06
DURHAM, N.C. – Engineers at Duke University have produced the world’s first fully recyclable printed electronics that replace the use of chemicals with water in the fabrication process. By bypassing the need for hazardous chemicals, the demonstration points down a path industry could follow to reduce its environmental footprint and human health risks. The research appeared online Feb. 28 in the journal Nano Letters. One of the dominant challenges facing any electronics manufacturer is successfully securing several layers of components on ...

Model simulates variable flap stiffness for the best lift

Model simulates variable flap stiffness for the best lift
2023-04-06
There is extensive research on how a fixed-position flap affects lift in the realm of fluid-structure interaction. However, taking the conversation in a new direction, researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign conducted a bio-inspired study with a novel twist—variable stiffness—to learn more about how it affects lift. The researchers wondered if they could model a flap on an airfoil, or wing, with varying stiffnesses over time much like a bird can tense, or stiffen, the musculature and tendons connected to covert feathers. “We know from previous studies ...

Broccoli consumption protects gut lining, reduces disease, in mice

2023-04-06
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Broccoli is known to be beneficial to our health. For example, research has shown that increased consumption of the cruciferous vegetable decreases incidences of cancer and type 2 diabetes. In a recent study, researchers at Penn State found that broccoli contains certain molecules that bind to a receptor within mice and help to protect the lining of the small intestine, thereby inhibiting the development of disease. The findings lend support to the idea that broccoli truly is a ‘superfood.’  “We ...

UNLV, SNWA study makes case for Candida auris wastewater surveillance

UNLV, SNWA study makes case for Candida auris wastewater surveillance
2023-04-06
A rapid spike in cases of a potentially deadly, drug-resistant fungus has concerned public health officials across the nation. But a team of Southern Nevada researchers hope their new study applying wastewater surveillance can help health officials get a step ahead of this emerging global public health threat. The Pathogen Problem Candida auris is a fungus that can cause serious infections, particularly in patients who are immunocompromised, have pre-existing health conditions, are in long-term healthcare settings, or are undergoing treatment with invasive medical devices such as a catheter. Infection prevention ...

Giving pregnant women routine third trimester ultrasound scans could reduce rates of undetected breech pregnancy by 71%, enabling better care before and during labor and improved outcomes for newborns

Giving pregnant women routine third trimester ultrasound scans could reduce rates of undetected breech pregnancy by 71%, enabling better care before and during labor and improved outcomes for newborns
2023-04-06
Giving pregnant women routine third trimester ultrasound scans could reduce rates of undetected breech pregnancy by 71%, enabling better care before and during labor and improved outcomes for newborns In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Medicine: http://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article?id=10.1371/journal.pmed.1004192 Article Title: Impact of point-of-care ultrasound and routine third trimester ultrasound on undiagnosed breech presentation and perinatal outcomes: An observational multicentre cohort study Author Countries: United Kingdom, Turkey Funding: The author(s) received no specific funding for this work. END ...

Implant treats dangerously low blood pressure in people with spinal cord injury

2023-04-06
An implant that delivers electrical stimulation to a select group of spinal neurons can treat dangerously low blood pressure in people with spinal cord injuries, addressing an often “invisible” consequence of paralysis. For his work in developing this treatment, called the neuroprosthetic baroreflex, Jordan W. Squair is the winner of the 2023 BioInnovation Institute & Science Prize for Innovation. The prize seeks to reward scientists who deliver research at the intersection of the life sciences and entrepreneurship. “Dr. Squair’s prize-winning research on epidural electrical stimulation restores blood pressure control in patients ...

Editorial: Share SARS-CoV-2 data immediately

2023-04-06
In an editorial, Maria Van Kerkhove – who serves as the technical lead for the COVID-19 response at the World Health Organization (WHO) – outlines how earlier this month (March 2023), WHO learned that scientists in China possessed data on viral samples from Wuhan that had been gathered in January 2020. “These should have been shared immediately—not 3 years later,” she writes. “The lack of data disclosure is simply inexcusable.” WHO continues to call on China and all countries to share any data on the origins of SARS-CoV-2 immediately. “China has advanced technical capabilities,” Van ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Massage Therapy Foundation awards $300,000 research grant to the University of Denver

Gastrointestinal toxicity linked to targeted cancer therapies in the United States

Countdown to the Bial Award in Biomedicine 2025

Blood marker from dementia research could help track aging across the animal world

Birds change altitude to survive epic journeys across deserts and seas

Here's why you need a backup for the map on your phone

ACS Central Science | Researchers from Insilico Medicine and Lilly publish foundational vision for fully autonomous “Prompt-to-Drug” pharmaceutical R&D

Increasing the number of coronary interventions in patients with acute myocardial infarction does not appear to reduce death rates

Tackling uplift resistance in tall infrastructures sustainably

Novel wireless origami-inspired smart cushioning device for safer logistics

Hidden genetic mismatch, which triples the risk of a life-threatening immune attack after cord blood transplantation

Physical function is a crucial predictor of survival after heart failure

Striking genomic architecture discovered in embryonic reproductive cells before they start developing into sperm and eggs

Screening improves early detection of colorectal cancer

New data on spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) – a common cause of heart attacks in younger women

How root growth is stimulated by nitrate: Researchers decipher signalling chain

Scientists reveal our best- and worst-case scenarios for a warming Antarctica

Cleaner fish show intelligence typical of mammals

AABNet and partners launch landmark guide on the conservation of African livestock genetic resources and sustainable breeding strategies

Produce hydrogen and oxygen simultaneously from a single atom! Achieve carbon neutrality with an 'All-in-one' single-atom water electrolysis catalyst

Sleep loss linked to higher atrial fibrillation risk in working-age adults

Visible light-driven deracemization of α-aryl ketones synergistically catalyzed by thiophenols and chiral phosphoric acid

Most AI bots lack basic safety disclosures, study finds

How competitive gaming on discord fosters social connections

CU Anschutz School of Medicine receives best ranking in NIH funding in 20 years

Mayo Clinic opens patient information office in Cayman Islands

Phonon lasers unlock ultrabroadband acoustic frequency combs

Babies with an increased likelihood of autism may struggle to settle into deep, restorative sleep, according to a new study from the University of East Anglia.

National Reactor Innovation Center opens Molten Salt Thermophysical Examination Capability at INL

International Progressive MS Alliance awards €6.9 million to three studies researching therapies to address common symptoms of progressive MS

[Press-News.org] Physicians should be on alert for group A strep as cases experience historic rise, study finds