Babesia microti
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Babesia microti /
Revision as of 12:11, 16 August 2019 by Aidan (talk | contribs) (Aidan moved page Babesiosis to Babesia microti)
Babesiosis (Babesia microti)
Microbiology
- Tickborne protozoa
- Different species of Babesia exist
- Seen as Maltese cross on blood smear
Epidemiology
- Tickborne by Ixodes scapularis
- Reservoir is white-footed mice
- Can be transmitted by blood transfusion and, rarely, transplacentally (5 cases)
- More common in the northeastern US, including Connecticut, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin
- Highly endemic in Nantucket, Martha's Vineyard, the Elizabeth Islands, Block Island, Shelter Island, eastern Long Island, an Fire Island
Other species
- B. duncani and B. duncani-type organisms are present in the Pacific Coast
- B. divergens in Europe; rarely B. venatorum
Life Cycle
Clinical Presentation
- Incubation period 1 to 6 weeks
- Can have delayed diagnosis
- Symptoms include fatigue, weakness, and malaise, followed by fever and chill, arthralgias, or nausea
- Fever may be intermittent or persistent, and can be high
- Can also cause nuchal rigidity, sore throat, dyspnea, weight loss, vomiting, diarrhea, and dark urine
- Occasionally causes emotional lability, depression, hyperesthesia, photophobia, conjunctival injection, abdominal pain, petechiae, and ecchymoses
- May have erythema chronicum migrans rash in cases of coinfection
- There are some cases of asympatomatic parasitemia
- May experience recrudescence after immunosuppression
- Bloodwork shows anemia, jaundice and other evidence of hemolysis, often with positive direct antiglobulin test
- Also thrombocytopenia and liver enzyme abnormalities
- If neutropenia, suggests coinfection with anaplasmosis
- 40% develop complications, including ARDS, DIC, CHF, coma, AKI, splenic rupture
Transplacentally-acquired neonatal infection
- Five cases
- Symptom onset around 3 to 6 weeks
- Parasitemia 2-15% on diagnosis
Other Babesia species
- B. divergens usually in aplenic patients, causing fulminant disease
Diagnosis
- Parasites visualized on blood film, with parasitemia from 1 to 20% but as high as 85% in splenectomized patients
Management
- Asymptomatic parasitemia: no treatment necessary unless immunocompromised or persists for longer than 3 months
- Mild: atovaquone plus azithromycin
- Severe: clindamycine plus quinine, ± RBC exchange transfusion
- B. divergens: RBC exchange transfusion plus clinda plus quinine
- Duration
- 7 to 10 days for most
- Can relapse when immunocompromised, so these patients need 6+ weeks including 2+ weeks without parasitemia