Bartonella henselae: Difference between revisions
From IDWiki
Bartonella henselae
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** Bacilli may be seen with Warthin-Starry staining |
** Bacilli may be seen with Warthin-Starry staining |
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* PCR of node aspirate is the best and most sensitive test |
* PCR of node aspirate is the best and most sensitive test |
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* Serology |
* Serology is fairly non-specific |
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** 1:64 is suggestive, 1:256 is strongly suggestive, and a four-fold rise from acute to convalescent titres is diagnostic |
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** Cross-reacts with other ''[[Bartonella]]'' species, but possibly also with ''[[Chlamydia]]'' and ''[[Coxiella burnetii]]'' |
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{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Bartonella henselae''}} |
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Bartonella henselae''}} |
Revision as of 01:13, 16 May 2020
Background
- Causes cat-scratch disease
Epidemiology
- Present worldwide
- Main reservoir is cats, and especially kittens
- Infections are more common in children, likely due to increased exposure to kittens
- Transmitted to humans by inoculation of cat flea (Ctenocephalides felis) feces into a cat scratch or bite
Clinical Presentation
- Typical cat-scratch disease is a self-limited febrile illness with regional lymphadenopathy
- Following an incubation period of 3 to 10 days, and initial pustule develops at site of inoculation which may last for up to 3 weeks
- This is followed in 1 to 7 weeks by ipsilateral lymphadenopathy (usually the head or neck)
- May involve one or more lymph nodes
- May drain pus
- Will eventually resolve, over months or longer
- There may be a concurrent low-grade fever for several days, with malaise or fatigue
- May have headache, sore throat, transient rash, or, rarely, erythema nodosum
- May have mild leukocytosis (neutrophils or eosinophils)
- CSD may be complicated by encephalopathy in 2 to 4% of cases
- Headache is common, and they may develop seizures and neurologic deficits
- Resolves over weeks to months (to as long as a year)
- CSF is usually normal, although lymphocytic pleiocytosis and elevated protein are seen in one third
- MRI brain is almost always normal
- EEG is nonspecific
- Proportionally less common in children
- Other syndromes include:
- Parinaud oculoglandular syndrome, with granulomatous conjunctivitis and ipsilateral (usually preauricular) lymphadenopathy
- Neuroretinitis and other ophthalmic complications
- Fever of unknown origin, in children
- Culture-negative endocarditis in patients with existing valve abnormalities
- Chronic endocarditis, with vasculitis and glomerulonephritis
- Disseminated disease is possible in immunocompromised patients, including bacteremia, disseminated skin lesions, and hepatosplenic lesions
Diagnosis
- Histopathology of node aspirate shows nonspecific inflammation, with granulomas and stellate ncerosis
- Microabscesses are classic finding
- Bacilli may be seen with Warthin-Starry staining
- PCR of node aspirate is the best and most sensitive test
- Serology is fairly non-specific
- 1:64 is suggestive, 1:256 is strongly suggestive, and a four-fold rise from acute to convalescent titres is diagnostic
- Cross-reacts with other Bartonella species, but possibly also with Chlamydia and Coxiella burnetii