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Revision as of 23:15, 14 August 2019
Human monocytotropic ehrlichiosis (Ehrlichia spp.)
aka. "Rocky Mountain spotless fever"
Microbiology
- Small, obligately intracellular Gram-negative bacteria
- Related to Anaplasma and Rickettsia
- E. chaffeensis is the most common cause of human infection
- E. ewingii, E. muris, R. muris-like agent, E. canis, and E. ruminantium can all cause human disease, with slightly different tick vectors and mammalian hosts
- Cells have two ultrastructural forms: larger reticulate cells (RC) and small, dense core cells (DC)
- Intracellularly, they form aggregates called morulae (mulberries)
Epidemiology
- E. chaffeensis is primarily found in south-central and eastern North America
- E. chafeensis is transmitted by Amblyomma americanum ticks (the Lone Star tick)
- A. americanum and Dermacentor variabilis for E. ewingii
- Ixodes persulcatus and Haemaphysalis flava for E. muris
- I. scapularis for E. muris-like agent
- White-tailed deer are the reservoir
- Also humans, dogs, coyotes, and marsh deer (E. chaffeensis)
- Dogs, humans deer (E. ewingii)
- Not transmitted transovarially
- Incidence peaks in May to August
- Exposure is rural or suburban, and usually involves recreational, peridomestic, occupational, and military acitivities
- Therefore, 60% male
Pathophysiology
- After innoculation, spread lymphangitically and hematogenously to reach and invade macrophages and granulocytes
- Intracellular morulae also found in blood, bone marrow, liver, lymph nodes, spleen, and CSF macrophages
- Affects almost any organ except for endothelium
- Surface porin proteins are responsible for antigenic variation and host cell adhesion
- The dense core cells also secrete TRP120, which is involved adhesion but also has effects on host cell DNA and DNA transcription
- DC cells predominate soon after infection, then give way to RC cells
- Most of the pathology is caused by host responses, including toxic shock
- Increased TNF-alpha, IL 1-alpha and 1-beta, IL-6, IL-10, and defective Th1 cytokines (IFN-gamma and IL-2)
Clinical Presentation
E. chaffeensis (human monocytotropic ehrlichiosis; HME)
- Usually causes a mild-to-severe multisystem illness in immunocompetent
- Can cause overwhelming infection in immunosuppressed, especially HIV/AIDS
- Incubation period of 7 days
- Fever, headache, myalgia, and malaise are most common
- Nausea and vomiting in a half, and weight loss
- Can also have diarrhea, rash, cough, altered mentation
- Rash is maculopapular or petechial, and more frequent in children
- Often accompanied by leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and anemia
- Likely from peripheral consumption rather than bone marrow suppression
- Causes leuneutropenia and lymphopenia
- Thrombocytopenia usually not severe
- Bone marrow may show a compensatory hypercellularity
- Elevated liver enzymes is almost universal, and AKI in a third of patients
- Severe compplications include ARDS, DIC, and death
- Also, hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis with E. chaffeensis
- 50% of cases require hospitalization, and 10% have severe complications, and 2-3% die
- The illness usually lasts about 3 weeks (1 week in hospital), followed by prolonged convalescence
E. ewingii and E. muris
- Mostly in immunocompromised patients
- Presents similarly to HME, but less severe
Differential Diagnosis
- Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF)
Diagnosis
- Should be treated empirically without waiting for diagnosis
- Major method of diagnosis is IFA serology, looking for a fourfold rise in titres over the course of disease, with a minimum peak of 1:64
- Usually peaks at 6 weeks
- Diagnosis can be suggested by morulae on blood film (in monocytes), but insensitive unless overwhelming infection
- Culture not used outside of research
- PCR is possible
Management
- Doxycycline 100 mg po bid
- Can use rifampin as second-line, for pregnant women and children