Tick- and louse-borne relapsing fever: Difference between revisions
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*Infections caused by ''[[Borrelia]]'' spp. |
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**'''[[Tick-borne relapsing fever]]''' (TBRF) is caused by non-Lyme ''Borrelia'' species |
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**'''[[Louse-borne relapsing fever]]''' (LBRF) is caused by ''B. recurrentis'' |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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= Microbiology = |
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!Species |
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!Vector |
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* '''Tick-borne relapsing fever (TBRF)''' is caused by multiple non-Lyme ''Borrelia'' species with global distribution |
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!Distribution |
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* '''Louse-borne relapsing fever (LBRF)''' is caused by '''''B. recurrentis''''' |
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!Reservoir |
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* Other non-Lyme ''Borrelia'' species include ''B. miyamotoi'' and ''B. lonestari'', although ''B. lonestari'' may also be able to cause TBRF |
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* ''Borrelia'' are spirochetes |
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* Serotypes are determined by the outer membrane variable major proteins (vmp) |
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* Grow in modified Kelly medium and stained by Wright stain (in peripheral blood film) |
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{| |
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! Species |
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! Vector |
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! Distribution |
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! Reservoir |
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! colspan="4" |Tick-borne relapsing fever (TBRF) |
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| TBRF |
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|''B. hermsii'' |
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|''Ornithodoros hermsii'' |
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|Western US and Canada (most common) |
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|Rodent |
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|''B. turicatae'' |
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|''Ornithodoros turicata'' |
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|Southwestern US |
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|Rodent |
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|''B. parkeri'' |
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|''Ornithodoros parkeri'' |
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|Western US and Baja California |
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|Rodent |
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|''B. mazzottii'' |
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|''Ornithodoros talaje'' |
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|Mexico and Central America |
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|Rodent |
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|''B. venezuelensis'' |
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|''Ornithodoros rudis'' |
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|South America |
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|Rodent |
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|''B. crocidurae'' |
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|''Ornithodoros erraticus'' |
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|Middle East |
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|Rodent |
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|''B. hispanica'' |
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|''Ornithodoros marocanus'' |
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|Iberian peninsula and North Africa |
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! colspan="4" |Louse-borne relapsing fever (LBRF) |
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| LBRF |
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|''[[Borrelia recurrentis|B. recurrentis]]'' |
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|''Pediculus humanus'' |
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|Ethiopia/Eastern Africa (previously worldwide) |
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! colspan="4" |Other |
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|''B. miyamotoi'' |
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|''Ixodes dammini'' and ''I. scapularis'' |
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|US, Russia, and Japan |
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|Deer |
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|''B. lonestari'' |
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|''Amblyomma americanum'' |
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|Southern US |
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|Deer & lizards |
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= Epidemiology = |
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* TBRF is transmitted by ''Ornithodoros'' species ticks, with rodent reservoirs |
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** Present on every continent except Australia and Antarctica |
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** In North America, it is mostly in the Rocky Mountain regions above 1500 feet elevation |
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*** Most have exposure to woodpiles or cabins with rodents |
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** Spirochetes can survive in the tick for years, and can be transmitted vertically within ticks |
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*** Doesn't need its mammalian host to complete its life cycle |
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** Ticks feed for short periods (20 min) and are painless, so is often not noticed |
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** Can be transmitted vertically, by transfusion, and from laboratory exposure |
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* LBRF was present nearly worldwide prior to World War II, but is now present in Ethiopia |
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** Associated with homelessness and refugee camps |
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= Pathophysiology = |
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* During febrile periods, spirochetes divide rapidly and cause a spirochetemia |
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* This is followed by an immune response to the vmp proteins, which clears the spirochetemia and the patient becomes afebrile |
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* The vmp proteins undergo rearrangement, evading the immune system and allowing another spirochetemia |
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** This is the cause of the relapsing fever |
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= Clinical Presentation = |
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* Incubation period of 7 days (range 2 to 18 days) |
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* Relapsing fevers: febrile for 3 days, afebrile for 7 days |
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* TBRF can relapse up to 30 times, whereas LBRF is usually self-limited after a single relapse |
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** Febrile periods may be associated with headache, myalgia, arthralgia, dizziness, and vomiting |
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** Each relapse is usually less severe |
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* Some patients will have lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and a rash |
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* Rare complications include lymphocytic meningitis, Bell palsy and other cranial nerve palsies, paralysis, seizure, uveitis, endophthalmitis, ARDS, and myocarditis |
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* Can cause spontaneous abortion in pregnant women |
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* May be septic, with multiple organ involvement |
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* May have a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction following empiric antibiotics |
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= Differential Diagnosis = |
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== Tick-borne relapsing fever == |
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* Colorado tick fever (Coltivirus) |
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* Brucellosis |
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* Tularemia |
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* Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis |
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* Leptospirosis |
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* Occult malignancy |
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* Lyme disease |
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== Louse-borne relapsing fever == |
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* Typhus |
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* '''Malaria''' |
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* Typhoid fever |
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* Leptospirosis |
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* Hepatitis |
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* Dengue |
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= Diagnosis = |
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* Often seen on blood film |
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** Giemsa or Wright stains |
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** 70% sensitive during febrile period for TBRF, lower for LBRF |
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* Acute-convalescent serology with IFA/EIA |
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** May cross-react with Lyme disease |
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* Can cause a false-positive VDRL |
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* Can be cultured with modified Kelly medium |
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= Management = |
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== Tick-borne relapsing fever == |
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* First-line: Doxycycline 100 mg po bid for 7 to 10 days |
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* Alternatives: erythromycin 500 mg qid for 10 days |
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* If CNS involvement: |
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** Penicillin G 3 mU IV q4h for 10-14 days, or |
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** Ceftriaxone 2 g IV q24h for 10-14 days |
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== Louse-borne relapsing fever == |
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* First-line: Doxycycline 200 mg po once |
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* Alternatives: |
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** Penicillin G 400-800 kU IM once |
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** Erythromycin 500 mg po once |
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= Prevention = |
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* Can do post-exposure prophylaxis with doxycycline 200 mg po once followed by 100 mg daily for 4 days |
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[[Category:Borrelioses]] |
[[Category:Borrelioses]] |
Latest revision as of 23:51, 30 July 2020
- Infections caused by Borrelia spp.
- Tick-borne relapsing fever (TBRF) is caused by non-Lyme Borrelia species
- Louse-borne relapsing fever (LBRF) is caused by B. recurrentis
Species | Vector | Distribution | Reservoir |
---|---|---|---|
Tick-borne relapsing fever (TBRF) | |||
B. hermsii | Ornithodoros hermsii | Western US and Canada (most common) | Rodent |
B. turicatae | Ornithodoros turicata | Southwestern US | Rodent |
B. parkeri | Ornithodoros parkeri | Western US and Baja California | Rodent |
B. mazzottii | Ornithodoros talaje | Mexico and Central America | Rodent |
B. venezuelensis | Ornithodoros rudis | South America | Rodent |
B. crocidurae | Ornithodoros erraticus | Middle East | Rodent |
B. hispanica | Ornithodoros marocanus | Iberian peninsula and North Africa | |
Louse-borne relapsing fever (LBRF) | |||
B. recurrentis | Pediculus humanus | Ethiopia/Eastern Africa (previously worldwide) | |
Other | |||
B. miyamotoi | Ixodes dammini and I. scapularis | US, Russia, and Japan | Deer |
B. lonestari | Amblyomma americanum | Southern US | Deer & lizards |