Bartonella bacilliformis

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Bartonella bacilliformis /
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Background

Epidemiology

  • Range is essentially restricted to the Andean mountains in Peru, Ecuador, and Colombia
  • Transmitted by Lutzomyia sand flies
  • Humans are primary reservoir

Clinical Manifestations

  • Traditionally presents as a biphasic illness with an acute phase (Oroya fever) and a late phase (verruga peruana)
  • The acute phase starts after an incubation period of 3 to 12 weeks, and is characterized by fever, malaise, and a hemolytic anemia
    • May only last a week and not present for medical care
    • More severe disease can include high fever, chills, diaphoresis, anorexia, prostration, headache, and altered mental status
    • The anemia can be profound in severe disease
    • May be accompanied by severe myalgias and arthralgias, abdominal pain, emesis, jaundice, lymphadenopathy, thrombocytopenia, seizures, delirium, meningoencephalitis, obtundation, dyspnea, hepatic dysfunction, and angina, likely secondary to anemia and microvascular thrombosis
    • Severe disease has high mortality if untreated, but decreases to 10% if treated
  • The late phase occurs weeks to months after the acute phase, and is characterized by disseminated nodular skin lesions
    • Crops of lesions proceed from miliary, to nodular, to mulaire lesions
    • Mulaire lesions are superficial vascular bulbous lesions that can bleed and ulcerate
    • Lesions can also be internal
    • Lesions can come and go, with recurrences, over weeks to months

Diagnosis

  • During acute phase, may see intraerythrocytic bacteria on blood film

Management