Francisella tularensis: Difference between revisions
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Francisella tularensis
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== Background == |
== Background == |
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=== Microbiology === |
=== Microbiology === |
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* A fastidious [[Stain::Gram-negative]] [[ |
* A fastidious [[Stain::Gram-negative]] [[Cellular shape::coccobacillus]] |
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=== History === |
=== History === |
Revision as of 13:24, 9 July 2020
- Zoonontic infection carried on rodents and rabbits and transmitted by biting insects
- Presentation depends on route of entry: (ulcero)glandular, oculoglandular, pharyngeal, typhoidal, or pneumonic
- Treatment is streptomycin
Background
Microbiology
- A fastidious Gram-negative coccobacillus
History
- Discovered in 1911 in Tulare county, California
- Many names: deer fly fever, rabbit fever, etc...
Epidemiology
- Zoonotic infection whose main animal reservoirs are rodents and rabbits
- Essentially worldwide Northern Hemisphere distribution, especially in the US, Japan, Russia, and Scandinavian countries
- Transmission:
- Bite of ticks, biting flies, or mosquitoes (Europe)
- Exposure to animal products, including skinning, dressing, and eating wild game
- Also from animal stool or bites, including cats that have killed infected rodents
Clinical Presentation
- Ulceroglandular: ulcer develops at site of inoculation with tender lymphadenopathy and systemic symptoms
- Glandular: ulcer is undetectable or healed, only lymphadenopathy and systemic illness remains
- Oculoglandular: entry through the conjuctiva
- Pharyngeal: entry through the oropharynx, with exudative pharyngitis/tonsillitis
- Typhoidal: febrile illness without lymphadenopathy or ulcer, sometimes with diarrhea; patient often has an underlying chronic disease
- Pneumonic: direct inhalation, often from sheep shearing, landscaping, and microbiology laboratory work
Diagnosis
- Culture
- Grows slowly on standard culture media, needs cystine-rich media (e.g. chocolate agar, BHI, or cystine media)
- Looks bacillary in logarithmic growth phase (small Gram-negative rod), slow-growing only on chocolate agar
- Serology (EIA) can be used in the right context
- PCR
Management
- For severe disease, streptomycin 10 mg/kg (max 1 g) IM q12h for 7 to 10 days
- Alternatives include gentamicin or amikacin
- For mild to moderate disease, alternatives include:
- Doxycycline 100 mg po bid for 14 to 21 days
- Ciprofloxacin 500 mg po bid for 10 to 14 days
- For meningitis, use an aminoglycoside (as above) plus either IV ciprofloxacin, doxycycline, or chloramphenicol for 14 to 21 days
- Aminoglycosides have poor CNS penetration