Rickettsioses
From IDWiki
| Species | Disease | Vector | Geographic Area | Eschar | Rash | Lymphadenopathy | Other Symptoms | Mortality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rickettsiae: Spotted Fever Group (Tick-Borne) | ||||||||
| Rickettsia rickettsii | Rocky Mountain spotted fever | Multiple Dermacentor, Amblyomma, and Rhipicephalus ticks | Americas | rare | yes; centripetal | no | fever | high |
| Rickettsia conorii | Boutonneuse fever, Mediterranean spotted fever | Rhipicephalus sanguineus ticks | Southern Europe, Africa, and southern Asia | frequent | maculopapular | no | fever | mild to moderate |
| Rickettsia japonica | Oriental spotter fever | Dermacentor, Haemaphysalis, or Ixodes ticks | Rash with eschar, acquired in Asia | |||||
| Rickettsia sibirica mongolitimonae | Rhipicephalus sanguineus | Rash with eschar, acquired in Europe, Africa, or Asia | ||||||
| Rickettsia sibirica sibirica | Dermacentor ticks | Rash with eschar, acquired in Asia or southern Russia | ||||||
| Rickettsia australis | Ixodes ticks | Vesicular rash with eschar, acquired in Australia | ||||||
| Rickettsia slovaca | Tick-borne lymphadenopathy | Dermacentor marginatus | Eschar (often scalp) with regional lymphadenopathy, acquired in Europe | |||||
| Rickettsia africae | African tick-bite fever | Amblyomma hebraeum and Amblyomma variegatum | Vesicular rash with eschar, acquired in Africa or the Caribbean | |||||
| Rickettsia honei | Bothriocroton, Haemaphysalis, Ixodes, or Rhipicephalus ticks | Rash with eschar acquired in Flinders Islands, eastern Australia, Thailand, or Nepal | ||||||
| Rickettsia aeschlimanii | Hyalomma or Rhipicephalus ticks | Rash with eschar, acquired in Africa or Europe | ||||||
| Rickettsia helvetica | Tick | |||||||
| Rickettsia parkeri | Amblyomma maculatum ticks | Rash with eschar, acquired in the Americas | ||||||
| Rickettsia heilongjianghensis | Dermacentor or Haemaphysalis ticks | Rash with eschar, acquired in Asia | ||||||
| Rickettsia raoultii | Dermacentor ticks | Eschar (often scalp) with regional lymphadenopathy, acquired in Europe | ||||||
| Rickettsia massiliae | Rhipicephalus sanguineus | Rash with eschar, acquired in Europe, Africa, and the Americas | ||||||
| Rickettsia amblyommii | Tick | |||||||
| Rickettsia monacensis | Tick | |||||||
| Rickettsia philipii strain 364D | Dermcentor occidentalis | Eschar (often scalp) with regional lymphadenopathy, acquired in California | ||||||
| Rickettsiae: Spotted Fever Group (Flea-, Louse, and Mite-Borne) | ||||||||
| Rickettsia felis | Flea | Rash with eschar and flea exposure | ||||||
| Rickettsia akari | Rickettsialpox | Liponyssoides sanguineus house mouse mites | Vesicular rash with eschar, worldwide | |||||
| Rickettsiae: Typhus Group | ||||||||
| Rickettsia typhi | Endemic (murine) typhus | Xenopsylla cheopis (rat flea) and Ctenocephalides felis (cat flea) | May have centrifugal rash without eschar in the tropics or subtropics, with flea exposure | |||||
| Rickettsia prowazekii | Epidemic (louse-borne) typhus | Pediculus humanus humanus (human body louse) | More common in homeless shelters. May have centrifugal rash without eschar, with exposure to flying squirrel or other | |||||
| Rickettsiae: Scrub Typhus Group | ||||||||
| Orientia tsutsugamushi | Scrub typhus | Leptotrombidium mites (chiggers, trombiculid mites) | Rash with eschar, acquired in Asian Pacific, Chile, or Dubai | |||||
| Anaplasma | ||||||||
| Amblyomma phagocytophilum | Human granulocytotropic anaplasmosis | Tick | ||||||
| Ehrlichia | ||||||||
| Ehrlichia chaffeensis | Human granulocytotropic anaplasmosis | Amblyomma americanum ticks (the Lone Star tick) | ||||||
| Ehrlichia ewingii | Human granulocytotropic anaplasmosis | Amblyomma americanum and Dermacentor variabilis ticks | ||||||
| Ehrlichia canis | Tick | |||||||
| Other Related Organisms | ||||||||
| Neoehrlichia mikurensis | Tick | |||||||
| Neorickettsia sennetsu | Raw fish | |||||||
| Wolbachia species | Helminths | |||||||
Diagnosis
- The mainstay of diagnosis is serology
- Indirect immunofluorescence antibody assays of IgG antibodies
- IgM do not appear any earlier in the course of disease and are less specific
- Usually as acute and convalescent titres drawn 2 to 4 weeks apart showing a 4-fold increase in titres
- Rickettsia africae may take up to 4 weeks after onset of illness to seroconvert
- Cross-reactivity is common within each group
- Serologic tests for Rickettsia conorii or Rickettsia rickettsii may be used to diagnosis other spotted fever group diseases such as Rickettsia africae, Rickettsia akari, Rickettsia australis, and Rickettsia sibirica
- Serologic tests for Rickettsia typhi may be used to diagnose other typhus group diseases such as Rickettsia prowazekii
- Cross-reactivity also common between the two groups, but the titres will usually be highest in the group containing the causative organism
- Indirect immunofluorescence antibody assays of IgG antibodies
- PCR is becoming more widely available
- Blood and tissue (e.g. eschar biopsy)
- Done as PCR for the group followed by species-specific sequencing
Management
- First-line for essentially all infections is doxycycline 100 mg po BID, continue for 3 days following resolution of symptoms
- Alternatives include azithromycin and chloramphenicol
Further Reading
- Syndromic classification of rickettsioses: an approach for clinical practice. Int J Infect Dis. 2014;28:126-39. doi: 10.1016/j.ijid.2014.05.025