Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ida E. Gjørup is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ida E. Gjørup.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2002

Imported Falciparum Malaria in Europe: Sentinel Surveillance Data from the European Network on Surveillance of Imported Infectious Diseases

Tomas Jelinek; C. Schulte; Ron H. Behrens; Martin P. Grobusch; J. P. Coulaud; Zeno Bisoffi; Alberto Matteelli; J. Clerinx; M. Corachán; Sabino Puente; Ida E. Gjørup; G. Harms; Herwig Kollaritsch; Kotlowski A; A. Björkmann; J. P. Delmont; J. Knobloch; L. N. Nielsen; Juan Cuadros; C. Hatz; J. Beran; Matthias L. Schmid; Marco Schulze; R. Lopez-Velez; K. Fleischer; A. Kapaun; Paul McWhinney; Peter Kern; J. Atougia; G. Fry

Malaria continues to have a high morbidity rate associated among European travelers. Thorough recording of epidemiological and clinical aspects of imported malaria has been helpful in the detection of new outbreaks and areas of developing drug resistance. Sentinel surveillance of data collected prospectively since 1999 has begun within TropNetEurop, a European network focusing on imported infectious diseases. TropNetEurop appears to cover approximately 10% of all patients with malaria seen in Europe. Reports of 1659 immigrants and European patients with Plasmodium falciparum malaria were analyzed for epidemiological information and data on clinical features. Regional data were quite diverse, reflecting local patterns of immigration and international travel. By far, the most infections were imported from West Africa. Europeans had more clinical complications; consequently, all deaths occurred in this group. Compared with European standards, the mortality rate was low (0.6% in Europeans). Data from TropNetEurop member sites can contribute to our understanding of the epidemiological and clinical findings regarding imported falciparum malaria.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2002

Epidemiology and Clinical Features of Imported Dengue Fever in Europe: Sentinel Surveillance Data from TropNetEurop

Tomas Jelinek; Nikolai Mühlberger; G. Harms; M. Corachán; Martin P. Grobusch; J. Knobloch; U. Bronner; Hermann Laferl; A. Kapaun; Zeno Bisoffi; J. Clerinx; Sabino Puente; G. Fry; Marco Schulze; Urban Hellgren; Ida E. Gjørup; Pavel Chalupa; C. Hatz; Alberto Matteelli; Matthias L. Schmid; L. N. Nielsen; S. da Cunha; J. Atouguia; B. Myrvang; K. Fleischer

Travelers have the potential both to acquire and to spread dengue virus infection. The incidence of dengue fever (DF) among European travelers certainly is underestimated, because few centers use standardized diagnostic procedures for febrile patients. In addition, DF is currently not reported in most European public health systems. Surveillance has commenced within the framework of a European Network on Imported Infectious Disease Surveillance (TropNetEurop) to gain information on the quantity and severity of cases of dengue imported into Europe. Descriptions of 294 patients with DF were analyzed for epidemiological information and clinical features. By far the most infections were imported from Asia, which suggests a high risk of DF for travelers to that region. Dengue hemorrhagic fever occurred in 7 patients (2.4%) all of whom recovered. Data reported by member sites of the TropNetEurop can contribute to understanding the epidemiology and clinical characteristics of imported DF.


Malaria Journal | 2004

Epidemiology and clinical features of vivax malaria imported to Europe: Sentinel surveillance data from TropNetEurop

Nikolai Mühlberger; Tomas Jelinek; Joaquim Gascón; M Probst; T Zoller; Mirjam Schunk; Jiri Beran; Ida E. Gjørup; Ron H. Behrens; Joannes Clerinx; Anders Björkman; Paul McWhinney; Alberto Matteelli; Rogelio López-Vélez; Zeno Bisoffi; Urban Hellgren; Sabino Puente; Matthias L. Schmid; Bjørn Myrvang; Ml Holthoff-Stich; Hermann Laferl; C. Hatz; Herwig Kollaritsch; A. Kapaun; J. Knobloch; J Iversen; Kotlowski A; Djm Malvy; Peter Kern; G. Fry

BackgroundPlasmodium vivax is the second most common species among malaria patients diagnosed in Europe, but epidemiological and clinical data on imported P. vivax malaria are limited. The TropNetEurop surveillance network has monitored the importation of vivax malaria into Europe since 1999.ObjectivesTo present epidemiological and clinical data on imported P. vivax malaria collected at European level.Material and methodsData of primary cases of P. vivax malaria reported between January 1999 and September 2003 were analysed, focusing on disease frequency, patient characteristics, place of infection, course of disease, treatment and differences between network-member countries.ResultsWithin the surveillance period 4,801 cases of imported malaria were reported. 618 (12.9%) were attributed to P. vivax. European travellers and immigrants were the largest patient groups, but their proportion varied among the reporting countries. The main regions of infection in descending order were the Indian subcontinent, Indonesia, South America and Western and Eastern Africa, as a group accounting for more than 60% of the cases. Regular use of malaria chemoprophylaxis was reported by 118 patients. With 86 (inter-quartile range 41–158) versus 31 days (inter-quartile range 4–133) the median symptom onset was significantly delayed in patients with chemoprophylaxis (p < 0.0001). Common complaints were fever, headache, fatigue, and musculo-skeletal symptoms. All patients survived and severe clinical complications were rare. Hospitalization was provided for 60% and primaquine treatment administered to 83.8% of the patients, but frequencies varied strongly among reporting countries.ConclusionsTropNetEurop data can contribute to the harmonization of European treatment policies.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2011

Intravenous Artesunate for Severe Malaria in Travelers, Europe

Thomas Zoller; Thomas Junghanss; Annette Kapaun; Ida E. Gjørup; Joachim Richter; Mats Hugo-Persson; Kristine Mørch; Behruz Foroutan; Norbert Suttorp; Salih Yürek; Holger Flick

Multicenter trials in Southeast Asia have shown better survival rates among patients with severe malaria, particularly those with high parasitemia levels, treated with intravenous (IV) artesunate than among those treated with quinine. In Europe, quinine is still the primary treatment for severe malaria. We conducted a retrospective analysis for 25 travelers with severe malaria who returned from malaria-endemic regions and were treated at 7 centers in Europe. All patients survived. Treatment with IV artesunate rapidly reduced parasitemia levels. In 6 patients at 5 treatment centers, a self-limiting episode of unexplained hemolysis occurred after reduction of parasitemia levels. Five patients required a blood transfusion. Patients with posttreatment hemolysis had received higher doses of IV artesunate than patients without hemolysis. IV artesunate was an effective alternative to quinine for treatment of malaria patients in Europe. Patients should be monitored for signs of hemolysis, especially after parasitologic cure.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2003

Age as a Risk Factor for Severe Manifestations and Fatal Outcome of Falciparum Malaria in European Patients: Observations from TropNetEurop and SIMPID Surveillance Data

Nikolai Mühlberger; Tomas Jelinek; Ron H. Behrens; Ida E. Gjørup; J. P. Coulaud; Joannes Clerinx; Sabino Puente; Burchard G; Joaquim Gascón; Martin P. Grobusch; Weitzel T; Thomas Zoller; Herwig Kollaritsch; Jiri Beran; J Iversen; C. Hatz; Matthias L. Schmid; Anders Björkman; K. Fleischer; Zeno Bisoffi; Guggemos W; Knobloch J; Alberto Matteelli; Marco Schulze; Hermann Laferl; Annette Kapaun; Paul McWhinney; Rogelio López-Vélez; Fätkenheuer G; Peter Kern

Previous studies have indicated that age is a risk factor for severe falciparum malaria in nonimmune patients. The objectives of this study were to reevaluate previous findings with a larger sample and to find out how strongly clinical outcomes for elderly patients differ from those for younger patients. Results of adjusted analyses indicated that the risks of death due to falciparum malaria, of experiencing cerebral or severe disease in general, and of hospitalization increased significantly with each decade of life. The case-fatality rate was almost 6 times greater among elderly patients than among younger patients, and cerebral complications occurred 3 times more often among elderly patients. Antimalarial chemoprophylaxis was significantly associated with a lower case-fatality rate and a lower frequency of cerebral complications. Women were more susceptible to cerebral complications than were men. Our study provides evidence that falciparum malaria is more serious in older patients and demonstrates that clinical surveillance networks are capable of providing quality data for investigation of rare events or diseases.


Journal of Travel Medicine | 2006

Imported Schistosomiasis in Europe: Sentinel Surveillance Data from TropNetEurop

Martin P. Grobusch; Nikolai Mühlberger; Tomas Jelinek; Zeno Bisoffi; M. Corachán; G. Harms; Alberto Matteelli; G. Fry; C. Hatz; Ida E. Gjørup; Matthias L. Schmid; J. Knobloch; Sabino Puente; U. Bronner; A. Kapaun; Joannes Clerinx; L. N. Nielsen; K. Fleischer; Jiri Beran; S. da Cunha; Marco Schulze; Bjørn Myrvang; Urban Hellgren

BACKGROUND Schistosomiasis is a major parasitic disease, increasingly imported into temperate climates by immigrants from and travelers to endemic areas. METHOD To generate valid data on imported infectious diseases to Europe and to recognize trends over time, the European Network on Imported Infectious Diseases Surveillance (TropNetEurop) was founded in 1999. Three hundred and thirty-three reports of schistosomiasis were analyzed for epidemiologic and clinical features. RESULTS Male patients accounted for 64% of all cases. The average age of all patients was 29.5 years. The majority of patients were of European origin (53%). Europeans traveled predominantly for tourism (52%). Main reasons for travel for people from endemic areas were immigration and refuge (51%) and visits to relatives and friends (28%). The majority of infections were acquired in Africa; 92 infections were clearly attributable to Schistosoma haematobium, 130 to Schistosoma mansoni, and 4 to Schistosoma intercalatum. Praziquantel was the only treatment used. No deaths were recorded. CONCLUSION TropNetEurop sentinel provides valuable epidemiologic and clinical data on imported schistosomiasis to Europe.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2004

Screening for Mutations Related to Atovaquone/ Proguanil Resistance in Treatment Failures and Other Imported Isolates of Plasmodium falciparum in Europe

Ole Wichmann; Nikolai Muehlberger; Tomas Jelinek; Michael Alifrangis; Gabriele Peyerl-Hoffmann; Marion Mühlen; Martin P. Grobusch; Joaquim Gascón; Alberto Matteelli; Hermann Laferl; Zeno Bisoffi; Stephan Ehrhardt; Juan Cuadros; Christoph Hatz; Ida E. Gjørup; Paul McWhinney; Jiri Beran; Saraiva da Cunha; Marco Schulze; Herwig Kollaritsch; Peter Kern; G. Fry; Joachim Richter

BACKGROUND Two single-point mutations of the Plasmodium falciparum cytochrome b gene (Tyr268Asn and Tyr268Ser) were recently reported in cases of atovaquone/proguanil (Malarone) treatment failure. However, little is known about the prevalence of codon-268 mutations and their quantitative association with treatment failure. METHODS We set out to assess the prevalence of codon-268 mutations in P. falciparum isolates imported into Europe and to quantify their association with atovaquone/proguanil treatment failure. Isolates of P. falciparum collected by the European Network on Imported Infectious Disease Surveillance between April 2000 and August 2003 were analyzed for codon-268 mutations, by use of polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment-length polymorphism. RESULTS We successfully screened 504 samples for the presence of either Tyr268Ser or Tyr268Asn. One case of Ser268 and no cases of Asn268 were detected. Therefore, we can be 95% confident that the prevalence of Ser268 in the European patient pool does not exceed 0.96% and that Asn268 is less frequent than 0.77%. In 58 patients treated with atovaquone/proguanil, Tyr268Ser was present in 1 of 5 patients with treatment failure but in 0 of 53 successfully treated patients. CONCLUSIONS Tyr268Ser seems to be a sufficient, but not a necessary, cause for atovaquone/proguanil treatment failure. The prevalence of both codon-268 mutations is currently unlikely to be >1% in the European patient pool.


Critical Care Medicine | 2000

Dependency of cerebral blood flow on mean arterial pressure in patients with acute bacterial meningitis.

Kirsten Møller; Fin Stolze Larsen; Jesper Qvist; Johan Wandall; Gitte M. Knudsen; Ida E. Gjørup; Peter Skinhøj

Objective: Patients with acute bacterial meningitis are often treated with sympathomimetics to maintain an adequate mean arterial pressure (MAP). We studied the influence of such therapy on cerebral blood flow (CBF). Design: Prospective physiologic trial. Setting: The Department of Infectious Diseases, Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark. Patients: Sixteen adult patients with acute bacterial meningitis. Intervention: Infusion of norepinephrine to increase MAP. Measurements: During a rise in MAP induced by norepinephrine infusion, we measured relative changes in CBF by transcranial Doppler ultrasonography of the middle cerebral artery, recording mean flow velocity (Vmean), and by the arterial to jugular oxygen saturation difference. In 10 out of 16 patients, serial measurements were performed until recovery or death. Individual autoregulation curves were analyzed by a computer program. Autoregulation was classified as impaired if Vmean increased by >10% per 30 mm Hg increase in MAP and if no lower limit of autoregulation was identified by the computer program; otherwise, autoregulation was classified as preserved. Main Results: Initially, Vmean increased from a median value of 46 cm/sec (range, 30‐87 cm/sec) to 63 cm/sec (33‐105 cm/sec) (p < .0001), and arterial to jugular oxygen saturation difference decreased from 0.28 (0.16‐0.51) to 0.21 (0.08‐0.39) (p < .001) when MAP was raised from 69 mm Hg (55‐102 mm Hg) to 110 mm Hg (93‐129 mm Hg). CBF autoregulation was restored in eight of ten patients undergoing serial examination after 7 (range, 2‐10) days. Six of these patients had an uncomplicated course, one had a protracted recovery, and one died. Autoregulation was not restored in two patients; one died and one had a protracted recovery. Conclusion: In patients in the early phase of acute bacterial meningitis, CBF autoregulation is impaired. With recovery from meningitis, the cerebral vasculature regains the ability to maintain cerebral perfusion at a constant level despite variations in MAP.


Malaria Journal | 2002

Molecular surveillance of drug resistance through imported isolates of Plasmodium falciparum in Europe

Tomas Jelinek; Gabriele Peyerl-Hoffmann; Nikolai Mühlberger; Ole Wichmann; Michael Wilhelm; Nadja Schmider; Martin P. Grobusch; Frank von Sonnenburg; Joaquim Gascón; Hermann Laferl; Christoph Hatz; Michael Alifrangis; Gerd Burchard; Paul McWhinney; Marco Schulze; Herwig Kollaritsch; Saraiva da Cunha; Jiři Beřan; Peter Kern; Ida E. Gjørup; Juan Cuadros

BackgroundResults from numerous studies point convincingly to correlations between mutations at selected genes and phenotypic resistance to antimalarials in Plasmodium falciparum isolates. In order to move molecular assays for point mutations on resistance-related genes into the realm of applied tools for surveillance, we investigated a selection of P. falciparum isolates that were imported during the year 2001 into Europe to study the prevalence of resistance-associated point mutations at relevant codons. In particular, we tested for parasites which were developing resistance to antifolates and chloroquine. The screening results were used to map the prevalence of mutations and, thus, levels of potential drug resistance in endemic areas world-wide.Results337 isolates have been tested so far. Prevalence of mutations that are associated with resistance to chloroquine on the pfcrt and pfmdr genes of P. falciparum was demonstrated at high levels. However, the prevalence of mutations associated with resistance to antifolates at the DHFR and DHPS genes was unexpectedly low, rarely exceeding 60% in endemic areas.ConclusionsConstant screening of imported isolates will enable TropNetEurop to establish a screening tool for emerging resistance in endemic areas.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2015

Intravenous Artesunate Reduces Parasite Clearance Time, Duration of Intensive Care, and Hospital Treatment in Patients With Severe Malaria in Europe: The TropNet Severe Malaria Study

Florian Kurth; Michel Develoux; Matthieu Mechain; Jan Clerinx; Spinello Antinori; Ida E. Gjørup; Joaquim Gascón; Kristine Mørch; Emanuele Nicastri; Michael Ramharter; Alessandro Bartoloni; Leo G. Visser; Thierry Rolling; Philipp Zanger; Guido Calleri; Joaquín Salas-Coronas; Henrik Nielsen; Gudrun Just-Nübling; Andreas Neumayr; Anna Hachfeld; Matthias L. Schmid; Pietro Antonini; Peter Pongratz; Peter Kern; José Saraiva da Cunha; Antoni Soriano-Arandes; Mirjam Schunk; Norbert Suttorp; Christoph Hatz; Thomas Zoller

Intravenous artesunate improves survival in severe malaria, but clinical trial data from nonendemic countries are scarce. The TropNet severe malaria database was analyzed to compare outcomes of artesunate vs quinine treatment. Artesunate reduced parasite clearance time and duration of intensive care unit and hospital treatment in European patients with imported severe malaria.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ida E. Gjørup's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hermann Laferl

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paul McWhinney

Bradford Royal Infirmary

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sabino Puente

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge