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Table 2 Clinical and laboratory findings of acute Q fever patients

From: Clinical characteristics of acute Q fever patients in South Korea and time from symptom onset to serologic diagnosis

Symptoms and laboratory findings

 

Symptoms

 Fever, n (%)

48 (100)

 Myalgia, n (%)

44 (91.7)

 Headache, n (%)

30 (62.5)

 Cough, n (%)

11 (22.9)

 Joint pain, n (%)

7 (14.6)

 Rash, n (%)

5 (10.4)

Pneumonia, n (%)

5 (10.4)

Elevated transaminases (> 3-fold higher than the upper normal limits), n (%)

11 (22.9)

Autoantibody tests performed, n (%)

24 (50.0)

Tested positive for autoantibodies, n (%)

16 (66.6%)

Initial laboratory test results

 White blood cell count (/μl), median (IQR)

5.98 (4.99–9.27)

  Leukopenia (<  4000/μl), n (%)

2 (4.1)

  Leukocytosis (>  10,000/μl), n (%)

10 (20.8)

 Platelet count (×  1000/μl), median (IQR)

169.0 (133.0–247.5)

 Thrombocytopenia (<  140,000/μl), n (%)

15 (31.2)

 CRP (mg/dL), median (IQR)

7.7 (5.2–11.2)

 AST (IU/L), median (IQR)

72.0 (50.0–98.7)

 ALT (IU/L), median (IQR)

76.5 (53.2–97.5)

 Elevated ALT (>  40 IU/L), n (%)

41 (85.4)

 Elevated transaminases (>  3-fold higher than the upper normal limits), n (%)

11 (22.9)

 Bilirubin (mg/dL), median (IQR)

0.65 (0.47–0.95)

Interval between illness onset and seeking of medical care, days, median (IQR)

6.5 (4.0–14.0)

Hospitalization, n (%)

43 (89.6)

Length of hospital stay, days, median (IQR)

6.5 (3.0–10.0)

Time to defervescence, days, median (IQR)

10.0 (7.0–22.8)

Time to serologic diagnosis, days, median (IQR)

21.0 (15.0–40.0)