Term
Char. of Rickettisia/Ehrlichia/Coxiella |
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Definition
- intracellular organisms
- obligate intracellular except for Coxiella burnetti
- fastidious
- pleomorphic coccobacilli (stain poorly, but classify gram neg.)
- primarily zoonoses
- humars are incidental hosts
- produce similar clinical syndromes and require high clinical suspicion for dx
- know areas of endemnicity who are likely bitten
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Term
Hallmark clinical sign of all Rickettsiae |
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Definition
infect endothelium causing vasculitis |
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Term
Coxiella burnetti causes what? how does it survive |
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Definition
- Q fever
- survival
- forms spores thar resist desiccation and heat (can be transmitted as aerosols)
- intracellular, replicate in phagolysosomes of macrophages (loves the acidic envir.)
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Term
Ehrlichia and Anaplasma (tropism for what cell, structure of cell wall) |
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Definition
- lack LPS in cell wall
- infect WBC's
- form intracellular vacuoles or morulae
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Term
two groups of clinical syndromes of ricketssial infections |
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Definition
- spotted fever group
- R. rickettsia (Rocky mountain spotted fever)
- R. conorii
- R. akari
- typhus group
- R prowazekii- louse borne typhus (epidemic)
- R typhi- murine typhus (endemic)
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Term
Natural courseof bacterial infection |
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Definition
- tick stays attached for 4-48 hrs
- presymp.
- bacteremia is point where you become symptomatic
- you become convalescent
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Term
Epidemiology of RMSF- Arthopod to transmit RMSF, where endemic, what time of year |
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Definition
- Dermacentor spp.
- dog tick
- adult stage only
- tick bites often undetected
- usually in summer
- endemic in in US, Canada, Mexico, Central America, brazil, columbia
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Term
life cycle of R. rickettsii |
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Definition
- tick infects small wild rodents
- infected adult tick will lay eggs
- infected eggs grow into larvae
- larvae take a blood meal on small, wild rodents
- leads to infected nymph
- take a blood meal to infect small wild rodents
Humans incidentally infected by bite of adult tick |
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Term
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Definition
- tick bite intro bacteria to skin
- spread via lymphatics, small bv's
- target vascular endothelial cells by attaching to outer membrane protein A (Omp A)
- ricketsia phagocytosed, escape from phagosome into cytosol
- prolif. intracelluarly
- release via thin cell projections extracellularly or adjacent to cell walls
- direct vascular injury, increased vascular permeability: edema, hemorrhage, hypotension
- express platelet binding substances
- activate coagulation system
- consumption of platelets, leading to thrombocytopenia
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Term
clinical features of RMSF |
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Definition
- classic triad: fever, headach, rash
- rash starts peripherally (ankles, wrist) and spreads centrally
- if severe: hemorrhagic, cause necrosis of digits
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Term
RMSF: higher risk mortality group |
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Definition
- high risk: black males with G6PDH deficiency, elderly, chronic alcoholism
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Term
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Definition
- mainly clinical: presentation, epidemiology clues
- tx: antibiotics
- serology to confirm
- increase IgG
- Ab appear 10-14 days after infection
- immunohistochemical stains
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Term
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Definition
- cover up
- use repellents
- examine skin for ticks frequently
- know seasons, area of risk
Applies to all tick born diseases |
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Term
R. conorri epidemiology- Fievre Boutonneuse |
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Definition
- Africa, Meditteranian, Middle East
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Term
R africae aka African tick bite fever- epidemiology, onset, prognosis |
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Definition
- mainly found in Southern Africa
- tick borne
- onset: fever, headache, myalgias
- tache noire very common at tick bite (black spot)
- eschar with surrounding swelling
- severe disease ONLY with underlying disease (DM, alcoholics)
- otherwise, it will self resolve
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Term
R. akari (epidemiology, clinical course, prognosis) |
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Definition
- reservoir- mice
- transmitted to humans by mites
- bites usually painless
- homeless population at risk
- eschar at mite bite appearing before systemic symptoms
- followed by abrupt onset of fever, chills, headaches, vesiculopapular rash
- complications and death are rare
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Term
louse borne typhus (R prowazeki)/epidemic (epidemiology) |
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Definition
- transmitted person to person via body louse (vector)
- assoc. with crowded, unsanitary conditions (refugee camps, prisons), war, famine, natural disasters
- usually cold climates, during fall winter months (clothing less likely to be changed)
- human most common reservoir, also found in flying squirrel
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Term
R. prowazekii (life cycle) |
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Definition
- louse becomes infected by feeding on infected humans
- louse alimentary tract becomes infected
- when louse takes blood meal it deficates
- irritation cause host to scrate, inoculating bite would
- infection also through mucous membrane
- louse eventually die from intestinal obstruction
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Term
clinical features of louse borne typhus |
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Definition
- onset: 7-10 days
- maculopular rash develops 3-5 days after ever
- usually does not involve palms, soles, face
- high mortality esp. in elderly
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Term
Louse borne disease: how can it establish latent infection? whats it called |
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Definition
- can relapse after many years with wanning immunity or immunosup.
- Brill Zinsser Disease
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Term
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Definition
- mainly clinical suspicion
- tx- doxycycline
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Term
epidemiology of endemic/murine typhus |
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Definition
- transmitted by fleas from rats with R. typhi
- coastal urban areas with poor rodent control
- bite rarely reported
- endemic in southern Cali, Texas in summer, early fall
- worldwide zoonosis
- only mild clincal illnes
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Term
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Definition
same as louse born thypus (after bite, deficates, and scatch irritate skin and it pass into system) |
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Term
clinical features of murine typhus |
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Definition
- incubation- 1-2 wks
- rash usually on extremities
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Term
dx/tx/prevention of murine typhus |
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Definition
- serology
- Felix Weil agglutination (test for Ab's)
- also agglutinate some Proteus vulgaris
- tx- doxycycline
- prevent by control vector (fleas) and reservoir (cats)
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Term
scrub typhus aka Orienta tsusugamushi (epidemiology) |
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Definition
- only in eastern and SE Asia, Austrailia
- vector is chiggers (larval stage of mites)
- reservoirs are rodents and chiggars (transovarial transmission
- humans acccidental host (travelers, military)
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Term
clinical symptoms of scrub typhus
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Definition
- HALLMARK- regional lymphadenopathy before systemic symptoms
- papule at site ulcerates, eschar develops
- chiggar feeds on host, inoculates at site of bite
- incubation- 10-14 days
- can have CNS complications
- delirium
- deafness
- aggitation
- usually resolve spontaneously in 2 wks
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Term
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Definition
- PCR available
- clinical suspicion
- tx- doxycycline
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Term
coxiella burnetti (characteristics of survival) |
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Definition
- more related to Legionella, Francisella
- intracellular organism
- infects macrophage where multiply in phagolysosome
- undergo sporulation
- allow survival in external environment
- survives harsh conditions (cold, heat)
- disseminated as an aerosol
- highly infectious- takes only one organsim to cause infection
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Term
C. burnettii epidemiology |
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Definition
- worldwide
- zoonosis esp. cows, other farm animals
- shed in urine, feces, milk of infected animal
- infection reactivate during preg., cause abortions in animals
- occupational risk of farmers, livestock animals, veterinarians
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Term
C. burnettii clinical symptoms |
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Definition
- incubation of 2-5 wks
- only humans manifest disease
- severity depends on inhaled dose
- acute: self limited (less than 2 weeks)
- pneumonia (usually atypical)
- chronic (more than 6 months)
- endocarditis (negative blood cultures with subacute presentation)
- osteomyelitis
- more common in immunocompromised
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Term
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Definition
- dangerous and difficult to culture the organism
- acute infection usually resolves spontaneously
- chronic infection treated for 18 months with a combination of antibiotics
- serology to dx (positive within 1-2 wks of disease onset)
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Term
Potential agents of bioterrorism |
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Definition
Coxiella burnetti
Rickettsia prowazeki |
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Term
Ehrlichioses (cells they infect, taxonomy) |
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Definition
- emerging tick born infections
- obligate intracellular parasites
- Ehrlichia and Anaplasma
- species that cause disease
- E. chaffensis
- Anaplasma phagocytophilum
- infect leukocytes
- type of WBC depend on species
- bacteria form vacuoles or morulae (clusters of bac.)
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Term
epidemiology of Ehlichioses |
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Definition
- tick born infection
- usually summer peaks
- Ixodes scapularis and Ambylomma americanum (lone star tick) each have diff. species of bact.
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Term
human monocytic ehrlichiosis aka E. chaffensis (epidemiology) |
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Definition
- vector- Amblyomma americanum aka tick
- infect humans, white tailed deer
- found in south central, south east, mid atlantic states
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Term
human granulocytic anaplasmosis (epidemiology) |
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Definition
- vector- Ixodes scapularis (also cause Lyme, babesiosis)
- found in US, Europe, Asia
- US- NE, mid atlantic, upper midwest, pacific northwest
- reservoir- rodents, small mammals
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Term
pathogenesis of erlichiosis |
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Definition
- tick bite innoculate
- lymphatic dissemination
- target WBCs in blood, bone marrow, tissues
- recog. receptors, internalize, survive/multiply within morulae (inh. fusion with lysosomes
- cause leukopenia and thrombocytopenia
- direct cytopathic effect and interferes with immunologic response
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Term
clinical features of human monocytic ehrlichiosis |
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Definition
- incubate: 7-10 days
- maculopapular rash
- complication with immunocompromised
- within days of onset or rarely later
- septic shock like syndrome
- meningits, meningoencephalitis
- may cause death
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Term
clincal features of human granulocytic anaplasmosis |
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Definition
- incubation 7-14 days
- differs from HME w/
- rash uncommon
- rare CNS involvement
- peripheral neuropathies common (facial palsy, brachial plexopathy
- death rare
- similar lab findings: leukopenia, increased liver enzymes, thrombocytopenia
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Term
E. ewingii (epidemiology) |
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Definition
- mainly infects dogs
- can be transmitted to humans through tick bite
- infects neutrophils
- fewer complications and no fatalities
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Term
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Definition
- clinical- tx with doxycycline
- clinical suspicion needed- h/o tick bite leukopenia, elevated liver enzymes
- peripheral blood smear finding morulae
- PCR amplication
- serology (IFA)- 4x increase in convalescent titer
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