Spirillum minus: Difference between revisions

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Spirillum minus
m (Aidan moved page Spirillum minus (Asian rat-bite fever) to Spirillum minus without leaving a redirect)
m (Text replacement - "== Clinical Presentation" to "== Clinical Manifestations")
 
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= Spirillum minus (Asian rat-bite fever) =
* Causes '''Asian [[rat-bite fever]]'''

* Also known as sodoku (rat-poison) in Japan
* Also known as sodoku (rat-poison) in Japan


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* Relapses may relate to reactivation at the site of the original bite
* Relapses may relate to reactivation at the site of the original bite


== Clinical Presentation ==
== Clinical Manifestations ==


* Incubaction period of 1 to 4 weeks
* Incubaction period of 1 to 4 weeks
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== Management ==
== Management ==


* Same as [''Streptococcus moniliformis''](Streptobacillus moniliformis (rat-bite fever).md)
* Same as ''[[Streptococcus moniliformis]]''

{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Spirillum minus''}}
[[Category:Gram-negative bacilli]]
[[Category:Fever syndromes]]

Latest revision as of 12:02, 2 August 2020

  • Causes 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 Manifestations

  • 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