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Volume 22, Number 5—May 2016
Dispatch

Q Fever, Scrub Typhus, and Rickettsial Diseases in Children, Kenya, 2011–2012

Alice N. MainaComments to Author , Christina M. Farris, Antony Odhiambo, Ju Jiang, Jeremiah Laktabai, Janice Armstrong, Thomas Holland, Allen L. Richards, and Wendy P. O’Meara
Author affiliations: Naval Medical Research Center, Silver Spring, Maryland, USA (A.N. Maina, C.M. Farris, A. Odhiambo, J. Jiang, A.L. Richards); Moi University College of Health Sciences, Eldoret, Kenya (J. Laktabai, J. Armstrong, W.P. O’Meara); Duke Global Health Institute and Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA (T. Holland, W.P. O’Meara)

Main Article

Figure

Western blot analysis, using Orientia 56Kpr recombinant protein, of serum samples from febrile children in western Kenya, November 2011–December 2012. Lane 1, positive control; lane 2, negative control; lanes 3–4, Coxiella burnetii–positive patients; lane 5, Orientia spp.–negative patient; lanes 6–14, Orientia spp.–positive patients.

Figure. Western blot analysis, using Orientia 56Kpr recombinant protein, of serum samples from febrile children in western Kenya, November 2011–December 2012. Lane 1, positive control; lane 2, negative control; lanes 3–4, Coxiella burnetii–positive patients; lane 5, Orientia spp.–negative patient; lanes 6–14, Orientia spp.–positive patients.

Main Article

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Page updated: April 13, 2016
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