Cheyletiella

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Cheyletiella /
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Background

  • Genus of mite

Epidemiology

  • Live on dogs, cats, and rabbits, but can incidentally infect humans
    • On animals, usually on the backs and can cause dandruff-like scales ("walking dermatitis", "walking dandruff", or dorsal seborrhea sicca)
  • Human are an incidental host
  • Life cycle completed within 21 days on one host
  • Adult females can survive off of hose for up to 10 days
  • Eggs can be shed with animal's hair, creating an environmental reservoir for reinfestation

Clinical Manifestations

  • Can be asymptomatic
    • Source animal may be asymptomatic
  • Causes cheyletiellosis, or Cheylatiella dermatitis
  • Multiple erythematous pruritic papules on arms, trunk, and buttocks
    • May have area of central necrosis
    • May develop papulovesicles, urticarial weals, vesicobullous eruptions, or excoriated erosions
    • Distribution is essentially the areas of the body that most commonly contact the pet
  • Presents similar to scabies, but recurs despite treatment

Diagnosis

  • Diagnosis made based on diagnosis of pet (dorsal seborrhea sicca) using skin scrapings or acetate tape impressions that demonstrated mites or eggs
  • Mites are not usually seen on human hosts (they "bite and run" back to their animal host)

Management

  • Mainstay of treatment is to treat the pet, since the human is an incidental host
    • Treatments include mite-icidal shampoos, such as ivermectin, phoxim, and moxidectin
    • May need multiple treatments
  • Lesions in pet owner typically resolve within 3 weeks