Orientia tsutsugamushi: Difference between revisions

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Orientia tsutsugamushi
m (Text replacement - "[[Has Gram stain::" to "Stain::")
m (Text replacement - "Clinical Presentation" to "Clinical Manifestations")
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* Most common in rural Asia and western Australia, as well as other parts of eastern Asia, including Russia and India
 
* Most common in rural Asia and western Australia, as well as other parts of eastern Asia, including Russia and India
   
== Clinical Presentation ==
+
== Clinical Manifestations ==
 
* Fever, headache, myalgia, lymphadenopathy, and an eschar
 
* Fever, headache, myalgia, lymphadenopathy, and an eschar
 
** Lymphadenopathy sometimes grouped near the eschar
 
** Lymphadenopathy sometimes grouped near the eschar

Revision as of 10:59, 15 July 2020

  • Chigger-borne rickettsial infection caused by the intracellular Stain::Gram-negative]] bacterium Orientia tsutsugamushi that causes scrub typhus

Background

Life Cycle

  • The entire life cycle is maintained within Leptotrombidium mites by vertical/transovarial transmission
  • Leptotrombidium larvae (called chiggers) normally feed on rodents, and occasionally humans, who are dead-end hosts

Epidemiology

  • Most common in rural Asia and western Australia, as well as other parts of eastern Asia, including Russia and India

Clinical Manifestations

  • Fever, headache, myalgia, lymphadenopathy, and an eschar
    • Lymphadenopathy sometimes grouped near the eschar
    • Should almost always be able to find the eschar if you look hard enough
  • Transient pale macular rash
  • May have cough
  • May have mental status changes and hepatosplenomegaly
  • In severe cases, may progress to multiorgan failure and hemorrhage
  • After treatment, may relapse
  • Infection also decreases HIV viral load and can lead to immune reconstitution

Diagnosis

  • Four-fold rise in immunofluorescence serology
  • PCR on eschar, blood, or lymph node biopsy

Management