Spirillum minus: Difference between revisions
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Spirillum minus
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Revision as of 19:46, 15 August 2019
Spirillum minus (Asian rat-bite fever)
- Also known as sodoku (rat-poison) in Japan
Microbiology
- Short, thick, Gram-negative rod in a tight coil
- Two to six helical turns, with terminal polytrichous flagella
Epidemiology
- From exposure, usually bite or scratch, of a rat or other rodent
- S. minus is found in 25% of rats in Asia
Pathophysiology
- Relapses may relate to reactivation at the site of the original bite
Clinical Presentation
- Incubaction period of 1 to 4 weeks
- Initial bite heals but then becomes painful, swollen, and purple
- Local lymphangitis and lymphadenitis
- Fevers, chills, headache, and malaise
- Arthralgias/myalgias are rare
- Bite site becomes chancroid and indurated, with an eschar
- A rash develops, which is blotchy, reddish-brown, and macular, on the extremities, face, scalp, and trunk
- Fades during afebrile periods
- May be urticarial
- Leukocytosis, and 50% have false-positive nontreponemal syphilis test
- Fever is relapsing-remitting (on for 3 to 4 days, with a 3 to 9 day interval)
- May spontaneously resolve in 1 to 2 months, but can last years
- Can cause endocarditis; also, myocarditis, pleural effusions, hepatitis, splenomegaly, meningitis, epididymitis, conjunctivitis, and anemia
- Mortality 5-10% without antibiotics
Diagnosis
- Can be sen on blood and lymph node tissue with Giemsa stain, Wright stain, or darkfield microscopy
- Can also be intraperitoneally innoculated into mice or guinea pigs, and recovered at 1 to 3 weeks
- No current serology or PCR
Management
- Same as [Streptococcus moniliformis](Streptobacillus moniliformis (rat-bite fever).md)