Human granulocytotropic anaplasmosis: Difference between revisions

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Human granulocytotropic anaplasmosis (Anaplasma phagocytophilum)

Microbiology

  • Small, obligate intracellular Gram-negative bacterium
  • Related to Ehrlichia and Rickettsiae
  • Tropism for neutrophils

Clinical Presentation

  • Incubation period of 1 to 2 weeks
  • Usually an acute undifferentiated fever
  • Can be mild or severe
  • Fever, headache, malaise, and myalgias are common
  • Can also cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, cough, arthralgias, nuchal rigidity, and confusion
  • Less than 10% have rash, most of which is concurrent Lyme disease
  • 36% of cases require hospitalization, and it is severe in 3 to 7%
  • Severe complications include respiratory failure, septic shock, rhabdomyolysis, hemorrhage, and opportunistic infections
    • Rare meningoencephalitis
  • Higher case-fatality rate in Shandong Province in China, for no clear reason (16% versus 2.6%)
  • Thrombocytopenia, lerkopenia, and mild anemia are common
    • Return to normal range within 14 days, but with persistent left shift
  • Abnormal liver enzymes are common in the first 7 days

Diagnosis

  • 20-80% of patients will have circulating neutrophils with detectable morulae on blood film (in neutrophils/granulocytes)
  • Serology used to diagnose, by measuring IgG levels ≥1:64 or a fourfold rise
    • IgM testing less sensitive and specific
  • Culture not done routinely
  • PCR possible

Management

  • Doxycycline 100 mg po bid