City
Epaper

Rising infections from lesser-known bacterium, says PGI Chandigarh

By IANS | Updated: October 30, 2025 17:40 IST

Chandigarh, Oct 30 A scientific team at the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER) in Chandigarh ...

Open in App

Chandigarh, Oct 30 A scientific team at the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER) in Chandigarh has reported a significant rise in infections caused by a lesser-known bacterium that mimics whooping cough (pertussis) in northern India.

The discovery follows the team's earlier identification of Stenotrophomonas sepilia, a new bacterium responsible for sepsis, highlighting PGIMER's leadership in emerging infectious-disease research.

Pertussis, commonly known as whooping cough, is a highly contagious respiratory illness that has historically been a major cause of childhood mortality, with fatality rates reaching 10 per cent in the early 20th century.

In Asia, pertussis continues to pose a significant public health burden, particularly in India and China, primarily affecting young infants and children.

After a brief decline during the Covid-19 pandemic, cases have sharply rebounded: India recently reported nearly 13.6 million cases.

The present study from PGIMER, published in the Emerging Infectious Diseases journal (US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), has analysed 935 suspected pertussis cases between 2019 and 2023.

Researchers discovered that nearly 37 per cent of infections were caused by Bordetella holmesii -- surpassing the number of conventional infections from Bordetella pertussis.

The most significant increase was recorded in 2023, predominantly among children aged between 5-10 years in northern India.

As per the data obtained under the ongoing surveillance programme at PGIMER since 2015, the prevalence of B. pertussis has declined from 15-20 per cent to just 2-5 per cent, while infections from B. holmesii have risen markedly.

This shift signals an evolving pattern in the etiology of pertussis-like respiratory illness in the region.

This long-term research initiative was spearheaded by Vikas Gautam's laboratory at PGIMER, in collaboration with Prabhu Patil of CSIR-IMTECH in Chandigarh.

These findings reinforce PGIMER's pivotal role in identifying emerging pathogens and strengthening infectious-disease surveillance in India.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketJerseys stained, legacy made: Gambhir, Jemimah, the number 5s clutching for India in World Cup knockouts

CricketHarmanpreet hails "mathematician" Jemimah following match-sealing ton against Australia in WC semis

Other SportsIPL chief Dhumal hails India’s ‘phenomenal win’, credits Jay Shah’s vision for women’s cricket

Other Sports‘Proud of our women in blue’: Sehwag, Pant, De Villiers hail India’s epic run chase to reach final

Cricket"What a performance": Indian cricket fraternity hails India's historic win against Australia in Women's CWC

National Realted Stories

NationalK'taka Guv Thawarchand Gehlot hospitalised; CM Siddaramiah wishes him speedy recovery

NationalHyderabad man loses Rs 51 lakh in digital arrest fraud

National‘Remarks distorted by vested interests’: BJP MLC on Savita and Hadapada communities row

NationalNIA court in Lucknow sentences accused in Al Qaeda-linked terror conspiracy case

NationalMaha School Dept to submit report on Rohit Arya's charges of cheating and non payment of dues