1418 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
Outbreaks may result from exposure to floodwaters contaminated
by urine from infected animals, as has been reported from several
countries. However, it is also true that outbreaks may occur without
floods, and floods often occur without outbreaks.
The vast majority of infections
with Leptospira cause no or only mild
disease in humans. A small percentage of infections (~1%) lead to severe,
potentially fatal complications. The
proportion of leptospirosis cases that
are mild is unknown because patients
either do not seek or do not have
access to medical care or because
the nonspecific symptoms are interpreted as an influenza-like illness.
Reported cases surely represent a
significant underestimation of the
total number. Certain occupational
groups are at especially high risk,
including veterinarians, agricultural
workers, sewage workers, slaughterhouse employees, and workers in the
fishing industry. Risk factors include
direct or indirect contact with animals, including exposure to water
and soil contaminated with animal
urine. Leptospirosis has also been
recognized in deteriorating inner cities
and suburban areas where rat and
mouse populations are expanding.
Recreational exposure and
domestic-animal contact are prominent sources of leptospirosis. Recreational freshwater activities, such as
canoeing, windsurfing, swimming,
and waterskiing, place persons at risk
FIGURE 184-2 Transmission electron microscopic image of Leptospira interrogans
invading equine conjunctival tissue. (Image kindly provided by Dr. JE Nally, National
Animal Disease Center, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Ames, IA.)
Approximate time scale
Incubation period
Incubation
Leptospires present in
Antibody titers
Laboratory investigations
Culture/PCR
PCR
Serology
Phases
High
Low
“Negative”
Blood
CSF
Urine
2-30 days
4 Months-years Years
Uveitis
? Interstitial nephritis
Convalescent shedder
Reservoir host
Titers decline at
varying rates Delayed
Normal response
Early treatment
Anamnestic
Convalescent
stage
Acute
stage
Fever
Blood
Urine
Urine
1 2 3 4 5
CSF
Week 1 2 3
Leptospiremia Leptospiruria and immunity
FIGURE 184-3 Biphasic nature of leptospirosis and relevant investigations at different stages of disease. Specimens
1 and 2 for serology are acute-phase serum samples; specimen 3 is a convalescent-phase serum sample that may
facilitate detection of a delayed immune response; and specimens 4 and 5 are follow-up serum samples that can provide
epidemiologic information, such as the presumptive infecting serogroup. CSF, cerebrospinal fluid. (Republished with
permission of American Society for Microbiology, from Leptospirosis, PN Levett, 14:296, 2001; permission conveyed through
Copyright Clearance Center, Inc.)
for infection. Several outbreaks have followed sporting events. For
example, an outbreak took place in 1998 among athletes after a triathlon in Springfield, Illinois. Ingestion of one or more swallows of
lake water during the swimming leg of the triathlon was a prominent
risk factor for illness. Heavy rains that preceded the triathlon, with
consequent agricultural runoff, are likely to have increased the level of
leptospiral contamination in the lake water. In another outbreak, 42%
of participants contracted leptospirosis during the 2000 Eco-Challenge-Sabah multisport endurance race in Malaysian Borneo. Swimming in the Segama River was shown to be an independent risk factor.
Furthermore, outbreaks among athletes participating in the recently
popular mud-runs are increasingly reported.
In addition, leptospirosis is a traveler’s disease. Large proportions
of patients acquire the infection while traveling in tropical countries,
usually during adventurous activities such as whitewater rafting, jungle
trekking, and caving. Recent data from the GeoSentinel Global Surveillance Network described in detail 180 returned travelers (mostly male;
74%) with leptospirosis from January 1997 through December 2016.
Infection was predominantly acquired in Southeast Asia (52% [n=93];
mainly [n=52] from Thailand); overall 110 patients (59%) were hospitalized, and one patient died. Transmission via laboratory accidents
has been reported but is rare. New data indicate that leptospirosis may
develop after unanticipated immersion in contaminated water (e.g.,
in an automobile accident) more frequently than has generally been
thought and can also result from an animal bite.
■ PATHOGENESIS
Transmission occurs through cuts, abraded skin, or mucous membranes, especially the conjunctival and oral mucosa. After entry, the
highly motile organisms proliferate, cross tissue barriers, and disseminate hematogenously to all organs (leptospiremic phase). During
this initial incubation period, leptospires can be isolated from the
bloodstream (Fig. 184-3). Clearly, Leptospira are able to survive in
the nonimmune host by evading parts of the innate immune response
such as complement-mediated killing and phagocytosis; however,
1419CHAPTER 184 Leptospirosis
earlier studies have highlighted the relation between an exaggerated
proinflammatory immune response and mortality. During the immune
phase, the appearance of antibodies coincides with the disappearance
of leptospires from the blood. However, the bacteria persist in various
organs, including liver, lung, kidney, heart, and brain. Autopsy findings
illustrate the involvement of multiple organ systems in severe disease.
Renal pathology shows both acute tubular damage and interstitial
nephritis. Acute tubular lesions progress in time to interstitial edema
and acute tubular necrosis. Severe nephritis is observed in patients
who survive long enough to develop it and seems to be a secondary
response to acute epithelial damage. The reported deregulation of the
expression of several transporters along the nephron contributes to
impaired sodium absorption, tubular potassium wasting, and polyuria. Histopathology of the liver shows focal necrosis (widespread
hepatocellular necrosis is usually not found), foci of inflammation,
and plugging of bile canaliculi. Hepatocyte apoptosis has also been
documented. Experimental work showed infiltration of Leptospira in
Disse space (perisinusoidal space) and migration between hepatocytes with detachment of the intercellular junctions and disruption
of bile canaliculi leading to bile leakage. Petechiae and hemorrhages
are observed in the heart, lungs (Fig. 184-4), kidneys (and adrenals),
pancreas, liver, gastrointestinal tract (including retroperitoneal fat,
mesentery, and omentum), muscles, prostate, testes, and brain (subarachnoid bleeding). Several studies show an association between hemorrhage and thrombocytopenia. Although the underlying mechanisms
of thrombocytopenia have not been elucidated, it seems likely that
platelet consumption plays an important role. A consumptive coagulopathy may occur, with elevated markers of coagulation activation
(thrombin–antithrombin complexes, prothrombin fragments 1 and 2,
d-dimer), diminished anticoagulant markers (antithrombin, protein
C), and deregulated fibrinolytic activity. Overt disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) has been documented in several studies.
Elevated plasma levels of soluble E-selectin and von Willebrand
factor in patients with leptospirosis reflect endothelial cell activation.
Experimental models show that pathogenic leptospires or leptospiral
proteins are able to activate endothelial cells in vitro and to disrupt
endothelial-cell barrier function, promoting dissemination. Platelets
have been shown to aggregate on activated endothelium in the human
lung, whereas histology reveals swelling of activated endothelial cells
but no evident vasculitis or necrosis. Immunoglobulin and complement deposition have been demonstrated in lung tissue involved in
pulmonary hemorrhage.
Leptospira species have a typical double-membrane cell wall structure harboring a variety of membrane-associated proteins, including
an unusually high number of lipoproteins. The peptidoglycan layer is
located close to the cytoplasmic membrane. The lipopolysaccharide
(LPS) in the outer membrane has an unusual structure with relatively low endotoxic potency. However, host immunity depends on
the production of circulating antibodies to serovar-specific LPS. It is
unclear whether other antigens play a significant role in protective
humoral immunity.
Pathogenic Leptospira contain a variety of genes coding for proteins
involved in motility and in cell and tissue adhesion and invasion that
represent (potential) virulence factors. Many of these are surfaceexposed outer-membrane proteins (OMPs). It is likely that several
surface-exposed proteins mediate pathogen–host cell interactions, and
these proteins may represent candidate vaccine components. Although
animal-model studies have shown various degrees of vaccine efficacy
for various putative virulence-associated OMPs, it is not yet clear
whether such proteins elicit acceptable levels of sterilizing immunity.
Ongoing breakthroughs in genetic manipulation of Leptospira and
whole-genome sequencing will undoubtedly provide more insight into
the biology and virulence of this pathogen.
■ CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
Although leptospirosis is a potentially fatal disease with bleeding and
multiorgan failure as its clinical hallmarks, the majority of cases are
thought to be relatively mild, presenting as the sudden onset of a febrile
illness. The incubation period is usually 1–2 weeks but ranges from 2 to
30 days. Leptospirosis is classically described as biphasic. The acute leptospiremic phase is characterized by fever of 3–10 days’ duration, during
which time the organism can be cultured from blood and detected by
polymerase chain reaction (PCR). During the immune phase, resolution of symptoms may coincide with the appearance of antibodies, and
leptospires can be cultured from the urine. The distinction between the
first and second phases is not always clear: milder cases do not always
include the second phase, and severe disease may be monophasic and
fulminant. The idea that distinct clinical syndromes are associated with
specific serogroups has been refuted, although some serovars tend to
cause more severe disease than others.
Mild Leptospirosis Most patients are asymptomatic or only
mildly ill and do not seek medical attention. Serologic evidence of
past inapparent infection is frequently found in persons who have
been exposed but have not become ill. Mild symptomatic leptospirosis
usually presents as a flulike illness of sudden onset, with fever, chills,
headache, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, conjunctival suffusion
(redness without exudate), and myalgia. Muscle pain is intense and
especially affects the calves, back, and abdomen. The headache is
intense, localized to the frontal or retroorbital region (resembling that
occurring in dengue), and sometimes accompanied by photophobia.
Aseptic meningitis may be present and is more common among children than among adults. Although Leptospira can be cultured from
the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in the early phase, the majority of cases
follow a benign course with regard to the central nervous system;
symptoms disappear within a few days but may persist for weeks.
Physical examination may include any of the
following findings, none of which is pathognomonic for leptospirosis: fever, conjunctival suffusion, pharyngeal injection, muscle tenderness,
lymphadenopathy, rash, meningismus, hepatomegaly, and splenomegaly. If present, the rash is often
transient; may be macular, maculopapular, erythematous, or hemorrhagic (petechial or ecchymotic);
and may be misdiagnosed as due to scrub typhus
or viral infection. Lung auscultation may reveal
crackles. Mild jaundice may be present.
The natural course of mild leptospirosis usually
involves spontaneous resolution within 7–10 days,
but persistent symptoms have been documented.
In the absence of a clinical diagnosis and antimicrobial therapy, the mortality rate in mild leptospirosis is low.
Severe Leptospirosis Although the onset of
severe leptospirosis may be no different from that
of mild leptospirosis, severe disease is often rapidly
FIGURE 184-4 Severe pulmonary hemorrhage in leptospirosis. Left panel: Chest x-ray. Right panel:
Gross appearance of right lower lobes of lung at autopsy. This patient, a 15-year-old from the Peruvian
Amazonian city of Iquitos, died several days after presentation with acute illness, jaundice, and hemoptysis.
Blood culture yielded Leptospira interrogans serovar Copenhageni/Icterohaemorrhagiae. (Adapted with
permission from E Segura et al: Clin Infect Dis 40:343, 2005. © 2005 by the Infectious Diseases Society of
America.)
1420 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
progressive and is associated with a case–fatality rate ranging from 1%
to 50%. Higher mortality rates are associated with an age >40 years,
altered mental status, acute renal failure, respiratory insufficiency,
hypotension, and arrhythmias. The classic presentation, often referred
to as Weil’s syndrome, encompasses the triad of hemorrhage, jaundice,
and acute kidney injury.
Patients die of septic shock with multiorgan failure and/or severe
bleeding complications that most commonly involve the lungs (pulmonary hemorrhage), gastrointestinal tract (melena, hemoptysis),
urogenital tract (hematuria), and skin (petechiae, ecchymosis, and
bleeding from venipuncture sites). Pulmonary hemorrhage (with or
without jaundice) is now recognized as a widespread public health
problem, presenting with cough, chest pain, respiratory distress, and
hemoptysis that may not be apparent until patients are intubated.
Jaundice occurs in 5–10% of all patients with leptospirosis; it can be
profound and give an orange cast to the skin but usually is not associated with fulminant hepatic necrosis. Physical examination may reveal
an enlarged and tender liver.
Acute kidney injury is common in severe disease, presenting after
several days of illness, and can be either nonoliguric or oliguric. Typical electrolyte abnormalities include hypokalemia and hyponatremia.
Loss of magnesium in the urine is uniquely associated with leptospiral
nephropathy. Hypotension is associated with acute tubular necrosis,
oliguria, or anuria, requiring fluid resuscitation and sometimes vasopressor therapy. Hemodialysis can be lifesaving, with renal function
typically returning to normal in survivors.
In severe leptospirosis, an altered mental status may reflect leptospiral meningitis. The diagnosis of leptospirosis meningitis may be
challenging since patients may be anicteric, or lack other diagnostic
hallmarks of severe leptospirosis. Without proper antibiotic treatment,
a mortality rate of 13% has been reported; in contrast, among patients
treated with antibiotics, the mortality rate is 2%. Neurologic sequelae
are described until months after acute illness.
Other syndromes include (necrotizing) pancreatitis, cholecystitis,
skeletal muscle involvement, and rhabdomyolysis with moderately elevated serum creatine kinase levels. Cardiac involvement is commonly
reflected on the electrocardiogram as nonspecific ST- and T-wave
changes. Repolarization abnormalities and arrhythmias are considered
poor prognostic factors. Myocarditis has been described. Rare hematologic complications include hemolysis, thrombotic thrombocytopenic
purpura, and hemolytic-uremic syndrome.
Long-term symptoms following severe leptospirosis include fatigue,
myalgia, malaise, and headache and may persist for years. Autoimmuneassociated uveitis, a potentially chronic condition, is a recognized sequela
of leptospirosis.
■ DIAGNOSIS
The clinical diagnosis of leptospirosis should be based on an appropriate exposure history combined with any of the protean manifestations
of the disease. Returning travelers from endemic areas usually have
a history of recreational freshwater activities or other mucosal or
percutaneous contact with contaminated surface waters or soil. For
nontravelers, recreational or accidental water/soil contact and occupational hazards that involve direct or indirect animal contact should be
explored (see “Epidemiology,” above).
Although biochemical, hematologic, and urinalysis findings in
acute leptospirosis are nonspecific, certain patterns may suggest the
diagnosis. Laboratory results usually show signs of a bacterial infection, including leukocytosis with a left shift and elevated markers of
inflammation (C-reactive protein level, procalcitonin, and erythrocyte
sedimentation rate). Thrombocytopenia (platelet count ≤100 × 109
/L)
is common and is associated with bleeding and renal failure. In severe
disease, signs of coagulation activation may be present, varying from
borderline abnormalities to a serious derangement compatible with
DIC as defined by international criteria. The kidneys are invariably
involved in leptospirosis. Related findings range from urinary sediment changes (leukocytes, erythrocytes, and hyaline or granular casts)
and mild proteinuria in mild disease to renal failure and azotemia in
severe leptospirosis. Nonoliguric hypokalemic renal insufficiency (see
“Clinical Manifestations,” above) is characteristic of early leptospirosis.
Serum bilirubin levels may be high, whereas rises in aminotransferase
and alkaline phosphatase levels are usually moderate. Although clinical
symptoms of pancreatitis are not a common finding, amylase levels are
often elevated. When symptoms of meningitis develop, examination
of the CSF shows pleocytosis that can range from a few cells to >1000
cells/μL, with a predominance of lymphocytes. Predominant polymorphonuclear pleocytosis has been reported. This phenomenon may be
related to the timing of the lumbar puncture: polymorphonuclear cells
are thought to be found in early disease and are later replaced by lymphocytes. Although protein and glucose levels in the CSF are usually
normal, protein levels may be slightly elevated.
In severe leptospirosis, pulmonary radiographic abnormalities are
more common than would be expected on the basis of physical examination (Fig. 184-4). The most common radiographic finding is a patchy
bilateral alveolar pattern that corresponds to scattered alveolar hemorrhage. These abnormalities predominantly affect the lower lobes. Other
findings include pleura-based densities (representing areas of hemorrhage) and diffuse ground-glass attenuation typical of acute respiratory
distress syndrome (ARDS).
A definitive diagnosis of leptospirosis is based on isolation of the
organism from the patient, on a positive result in the PCR, or on seroconversion or a rise in antibody titer. In cases with strong clinical evidence of infection, a single antibody titer of 1:200–1:800 (depending on
whether the case occurs in a low- or high-endemic area) in the microscopic agglutination test (MAT) is required. Preferably, a fourfold or
greater rise in titer is detected between acute- and convalescent-phase
serum specimens. Antibodies generally do not reach detectable levels
until the second week of illness. The antibody response can be affected
by early treatment with antibiotics.
The MAT, which uses a battery of live leptospiral strains, and the
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), which uses a broadly
reacting antigen, are the standard serologic procedures. The MAT usually is available only in specialized laboratories and is used for determination of the antibody titer and for tentative identification of the
involved leptospiral serogroup—and, when epidemiologic background
information is available, the putative serovar. This point underscores
the importance of testing antigens representative of the serovars prevalent in the particular geographic area. However, cross-reactions occur
frequently, and thus definitive identification of the infecting serovar or
serogroup is not possible without isolation of the causative organism.
Because serologic testing lacks sensitivity in the early acute phase of the
disease (up to day 5), it cannot be used as the basis for a timely decision
about whether to start treatment.
In addition to the MAT and the ELISA, various rapid tests with
diagnostic value have been developed, and some of these are commercially available. These rapid tests mainly apply lateral flow, (latex)
agglutination, or ELISA methodology and are reasonably sensitive
and specific, although results reported in the literature vary, probably
as a consequence of differences in test interpretation, (re)exposure
risks, serovar distribution, and the use of biased serum panels. These
methods do not require culture or MAT facilities and are useful in
settings that lack a strong medical infrastructure. PCR methodologies,
notably real-time PCR, have become increasingly widely implemented.
Compared with serology, PCR offers a great advantage: the capacity to
confirm the diagnosis of leptospirosis with a high degree of accuracy
during the first 5 days of illness.
■ DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
The differential diagnosis of leptospirosis is broad, reflecting the
diverse clinical presentations of the disease. Although leptospirosis
transmission is more common in tropical and subtropical regions, the
absence of a travel history does not exclude the diagnosis. When fever,
headache, and myalgia predominate, influenza and other common
and less common (e.g., dengue and chikungunya) viral infections
should be considered. Malaria, typhoid fever, ehrlichiosis, viral hepatitis, and acute HIV infection may mimic the early stages of leptospirosis and are important to recognize. Rickettsial diseases, dengue,
and hantavirus infections (hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome
1421CHAPTER 185 Relapsing Fever and Borrelia miyamotoi Disease
or hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome) share epidemiologic and
clinical features with leptospirosis. Dual infections have been reported.
In this light, it is advisable to conduct serologic testing for rickettsiae,
dengue virus, and hantavirus when leptospirosis is suspected. When
bleeding is detected, dengue hemorrhagic fever and other viral hemorrhagic fevers, including hantavirus infection, yellow fever, Rift Valley
fever, filovirus infections, and Lassa fever, should be considered.
TREATMENT
Leptospirosis
Severe leptospirosis should be treated with IV penicillin
(Table 184-1) as soon as the diagnosis is considered. Leptospira
are highly susceptible to a broad range of antibiotics, including the
β-lactam antibiotics, cephalosporins, aminoglycosides, and macrolides, but are not susceptible to vancomycin, rifampicin, metronidazole, and chloramphenicol. Early intervention may prevent the
development of major organ-system failure or lessen its severity.
Although studies supporting antibiotic therapy have produced
conflicting results, clinical trials are difficult to perform in settings
where patients frequently present for medical care with late stages
of disease. Antibiotics are less likely to benefit patients in whom
organ damage has already occurred. Two open-label randomized
studies comparing penicillin with parenteral cefotaxime, parenteral
ceftriaxone, and doxycycline showed no significant differences
among the antibiotics with regard to complications and mortality
risk. Thus ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, or doxycycline is a satisfactory
alternative to penicillin for the treatment of severe leptospirosis.
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing is not routine practice in individual cases of leptospirosis; to date, however, antibiotic resistance
has not been reported in isolates from patients or the environment.
In mild cases, oral treatment with doxycycline, azithromycin,
ampicillin, or amoxicillin is recommended. In regions where rickettsial diseases are coendemic, doxycycline or azithromycin is the
drug of choice. In rare instances, a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction
develops within hours after the initiation of antimicrobial therapy.
Aggressive supportive care for leptospirosis is essential and can
be life-saving. Patients with nonoliguric renal dysfunction require
aggressive fluid and electrolyte resuscitation to prevent dehydration
and precipitation of oliguric renal failure. Peritoneal dialysis or
hemodialysis should be provided to patients with oliguric renal
failure. Rapid initiation of hemodialysis has been shown to reduce
mortality risk and typically is necessary only for short periods.
Patients with pulmonary hemorrhage may have reduced pulmonary
compliance (as seen in ARDS) and may benefit from mechanical
TABLE 184-1 Treatment and Chemoprophylaxis of Leptospirosis in
Adultsa
INDICATION REGIMEN
Treatment
Mild leptospirosis Doxycyclineb
(100 mg PO bid) or
Amoxicillin (500 mg PO tid) or
Ampicillin (500 mg PO tid)
Moderate/severe
leptospirosis
Penicillin (1.5 million units IV or IM q6h) or
Ceftriaxone (2 g/d IV) or
Cefotaxime (1 g IV q6h) or
Doxycyclineb
(loading dose of 200 mg IV, then
100 mg IV q12h)
Chemoprophylaxis
Doxycyclineb
(200 mg PO once a week) or
Azithromycin (250 mg PO once or twice a week)
a
All regimens are given for 7 days. b
Doxycycline should not be given to pregnant
women or children. c
The efficacy of doxycycline prophylaxis in endemic or epidemic
settings remains unclear. Experiments in animal models and a cost-effectiveness
model indicate that azithromycin has a number of characteristics that may make it
efficacious in treatment and prophylaxis.
ventilation with low tidal volumes to avoid high ventilation pressures. Evidence is contradictory for the use of glucocorticoids and
desmopressin as adjunct therapy for pulmonary involvement associated with severe leptospirosis.
■ PROGNOSIS
Most patients with leptospirosis recover. However, post-leptospirosis
symptoms, mainly of a depression-like nature, may occur and persist
for years after the acute disease. Mortality rates are highest among
patients who are elderly and those who have severe disease (pulmonary hemorrhage, Weil’s syndrome). Leptospirosis during pregnancy
is associated with high fetal mortality rates. Long-term follow-up of
patients with renal failure and hepatic dysfunction has documented
good recovery of renal and hepatic function.
■ PREVENTION
Individuals who may be exposed to Leptospira through their occupations or their involvement in recreational freshwater activities should
be informed about the risks. Measures for controlling leptospirosis
include avoidance of exposure to urine and tissues from infected
animals through proper eyewear, footwear, and other protective equipment. Targeted rodent control strategies could be considered.
Vaccines for agricultural and companion animals are generally available, and their use should be encouraged. The veterinary vaccine used
in a given area should contain the serovars known to be present in that
area. Unfortunately, some vaccinated animals still excrete leptospires in
their urine. Vaccination of humans against a specific serovar prevalent in
an area has been undertaken in some European and Asian countries and
has proved effective. Although a large-scale trial of vaccine in humans
has been reported from Cuba, no conclusions can be drawn about
efficacy and adverse reactions because of insufficient details on study
design. The efficacy of chemoprophylaxis with doxycycline (200 mg
once a week) or azithromycin (in pregnant women and children) is being
disputed, but focused pre- and postexposure administration is indicated
in instances of well-defined short-term exposure (Table 184-1).
■ FURTHER READING
Adler A: Leptospira and Leptospirosis, 1st ed. Berlin Heidelberg,
Springer-Verlag, 2015.
de Vries SG et al: Leptospirosis among returned travelers: A GeoSentinel
Site Survey and Multicenter Analysis−1997−2016. Am J Trop Med
Hyg 99:127, 2018.
Haake DA, Levett PN: Leptospirosis in humans. Curr Top Microbiol
Immunol 387:65, 2015.
van Samkar A et al: Suspected leptospiral meningitis in adults: Report
of four cases and review of the literature. Neth J Med 73:464, 2015.
Vincent AT et al: Revisiting the taxonomy and evolution of pathogenicity of the genus Leptospira through the prism of genomics. PLoS
Negl Trop Dis 13:e0007270, 2019.
Relapsing fever is caused by infection with any of several species
of Borrelia spirochetes. Physicians in ancient Greece distinguished
relapsing fever from other febrile disorders by its characteristic clinical
presentation: two or more fever episodes separated by varying periods
of well-being. In the nineteenth century, relapsing fever was one of
the first diseases to be associated with a specific microbe by virtue
of its characteristic laboratory finding: the presence of large numbers of
spirochetes of the genus Borrelia in the blood.
185 Relapsing Fever and
Borrelia miyamotoi Disease
Alan G. Barbour
1422 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
transmission is currently limited to Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Somalia,
the disease has had a global distribution in the past, and that potential
remains. Epidemics of LBRF, often in association with typhus, can
occur under circumstances of famine, refugee migration, war, and
pervasive homelessness. Transmission of LBRF can occur in camps of
migrants at a distance from their home countries.
All other known species of relapsing fever agents are tick-borne—in
most cases, by soft ticks of the genus Ornithodoros (Fig. 185-1). Tickborne relapsing fever (TBRF) is found on most continents but is absent
in tropical or arctic environments. For most species, the reservoirs of
infection are small to medium-sized mammals, usually rodents but
sometimes pigs and other domestic animals living around human
habitats. However, one species, Borrelia duttonii in sub-Saharan Africa,
is largely maintained by tick transmission between human hosts. In
North America, TBRF occurs as single cases or small case clusters
through transient exposure of persons to infested buildings or caves
where mammals have nests or sleep in less populated areas. The two
main Borrelia species involved in North America are Borrelia hermsii in
the mountainous west and Borrelia turicatae in arid southwestern and
south-central regions. The soft tick vectors typically feed for no more
than 30 min, usually while the victim is sleeping. Transovarial transmission from one generation of ticks to the next means that infection
risk may persist in an area long after incriminated mammalian reservoirs have been removed.
Borrelia miyamotoi belongs to the same clade as relapsing fever
species but instead is transmitted to humans from other mammals by
hard ticks (e.g., Ixodes scapularis in the eastern United States) that also
transmit Lyme disease, babesiosis, anaplasmosis, and a viral encephalitis. B. miyamotoi is acquired through outdoor activities and through
contact with ticks in forested and shrubby areas during recreation,
work, or activities around the home, similarly to Lyme disease (Chap. 186).
Among residents of most areas where B. miyamotoi and Borreliella
(also called Borrelia) burgdorferi coexist, the prevalence of antibodies
to the former is about one-third of that to the latter. In contrast to B.
burgdorferi, the transmission of B. miyamotoi to the host begins soon
after the tick begins to feed.
■ PATHOGENESIS AND IMMUNITY
TBRF spirochetes enter the body in the tick’s saliva with the onset of
feeding. From an inoculum of a few cells, the spirochetes proliferate
TABLE 185-1 Relapsing Fever Borrelia Species, by Geographic Region, Vector, and Primary Reservoir
SPECIES REGION(S) ARTHROPOD VECTOR(S) PRIMARY RESERVOIR
B. crocidurae Africa Ornithodoros erraticus, Ornithodoros sonrai (soft
ticks)
Mammals
B. duttonii Africa O. moubata Humans
B. hermsii North America O. hermsi Mammals
B. hispanica Europe, North Africa O. erraticus Mammals
B. johnsonii North America Carios kellyi (soft ticks) Bats
B. kalaharica Africa O. savignyi Mammals
B. mazzottii Mexico, Central America O. talaje Mammals
B. miyamotoi Eurasia, North America Ixodes species (hard ticks) Mammals
B. persica Eurasia O. tholozani Mammals
B. recurrentis Africa, globala Pediculus humanus corporis (human body louse) Humans
B. turicatae North America O. turicata Mammals
B. venezuelensis Central and South America O. rudis Mammals
a
Although transmission is currently limited to Ethiopia and adjacent countries, B. recurrentis infection has had a global distribution in the past, and that potential remains.
FIGURE 185-1 Ornithodoros turicata soft ticks of different ages.
The host responds with systemic inflammation that results in an
illness ranging from a flulike syndrome to sepsis. Other manifestations
are the consequences of central nervous system (CNS) involvement
and disordered hemostasis. Antigenic variation of the spirochetes’
surface proteins accounts for the infection’s relapsing course. Acquired
immunity follows the serial development of antibodies to each of
the several variants appearing during an infection. Treatment with
antibiotics results in rapid cure but at the risk of a moderate to severe
Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction.
Louse-borne relapsing fever (LBRF) caused large epidemics well
into the twentieth century and currently occurs in northeastern Africa
and among migrants from that area. At present, however, most cases of
relapsing fever are tick-borne in origin. Sporadic cases and small outbreaks are focally distributed on most continents, with Africa and Central Asia most affected. In North America, the majority of reports of
relapsing fever have been from the western United States and Canada.
Another member of the genus, Borrelia miyamotoi, causes an acute
febrile illness with nonspecific constitutional symptoms and occasionally meningoencephalitis in the same geographic distribution as Lyme
disease (Chap. 186) in Eurasia and North America.
■ ETIOLOGIC AGENT
Coiled, thin microscopic filaments that swim in one direction and
then coil up before heading in another were first observed in the
blood of patients with relapsing fever in the 1880s. These microbes
were categorized as spirochetes and assigned to the genus Borrelia.
The breakthrough cultivation medium was rich in ingredients, ranging
from simple (e.g., N-acetylglucosamine) to more complex (e.g., serum).
The limited biosynthetic capacity of Borrelia cells is accounted for by a
genome content one-quarter that of Escherichia coli.
Like other spirochetes, the helix-shaped Borrelia cells have two
membranes, the outer of which is more loosely secured than in
other double-membrane bacteria, such as E. coli. As a consequence,
fixed organisms with damaged membranes can assume a variety of
morphologies in smears and histologic preparations. The flagella of
spirochetes run between the two membranes and are not on the cell
surface. Although technically gram-negative, the 10- to 20-μm-long
Borrelia cells, with a diameter of 0.2–0.3 μm, are too narrow to be seen
by microscopy of Gram-stained slides.
■ EPIDEMIOLOGY
The several species of Borrelia that cause relapsing fever have restricted
geographic distributions (Table 185-1). The exception is Borrelia recurrentis, which is also the only species transmitted by an insect. LBRF is
acquired from a body louse (Pediculus humanus corporis), or possibly
a head louse (Pediculus capitis), with humans serving as the reservoir.
Acquisition occurs not from the bite itself but from either rubbing the
insect’s feces into the bite site with the fingers in response to irritation
or inoculation into the conjunctivae or a wound. Although LBRF
1423CHAPTER 185 Relapsing Fever and Borrelia miyamotoi Disease
in the blood, doubling every 6 h to numbers of 106
–107
/mL or more.
Borrelia species are extracellular pathogens; their presence inside cells
connotes dead bacteria after phagocytosis. Binding of the spirochetes
to erythrocytes leads to aggregation of red blood cells, their sequestration in the spleen and liver, and hepatosplenomegaly and anemia. A
bleeding disorder is probably the consequence of thrombocytopenia,
impaired hepatic production of clotting factors, and/or blockage of
small vessels by aggregates of spirochetes, erythrocytes, and platelets.
Some species are neurotropic and enter the brain, where they are comparatively sheltered from host immunity. Relapsing fever spirochetes
can cross the maternal-fetal barrier and cause placental damage and
inflammation, leading to intrauterine growth retardation and congenital infection.
Although Borrelia species do not have potent exotoxins or a
lipopolysaccharide endotoxin, they have abundant lipoproteins that
activate Toll-like receptors on host cells, which leads to a proinflammatory process similar to that in endotoxemia, with elevations of tumor
necrosis factor α, interleukin 6, and interleukin 8 concentrations.
IgM antibodies specific for the serotype-defining surface lipoprotein
appear after a few days of infection and soon reach a concentration that
causes lysis of bacteria in the blood through either direct bactericidal
action or opsonization. The release of lipoproteins and other bacterial
products from dying bacteria provokes a “crisis,” during which there can
be an increase in temperature, hypotension, and other signs of shock. A
similar phenomenon occurring in some patients soon after the initiation
of antibiotic treatment is characterized by an abrupt worsening of the
patient’s condition, which is called a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction (JHR).
■ CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
Relapsing fever presents with the sudden onset of fever. Febrile periods
are punctuated by intervening afebrile periods of a few days; this pattern occurs at least twice. The patient’s temperature is ≥39°C and may
be as high as 43°C. The first fever episode often ends in a crisis lasting
~15–30 min and consisting of rigors, a further elevation in temperature, and increases in pulse and blood pressure. The crisis phase is
followed by profuse diaphoresis, falling temperature, and hypotension,
which usually persist for several hours. In LBRF, the first episode of
fever is unremitting for 3–6 days; it is usually followed by a single
milder episode. In TBRF, multiple febrile periods last 1–3 days each.
In both forms, the interval between fevers ranges from 4 to 14 days,
sometimes with symptoms of malaise and fatigue.
The symptoms that accompany the fevers are usually nonspecific.
Headache, neck stiffness, arthralgia, myalgia, and vomiting may
accompany the first and subsequent febrile episodes. An enlarging
spleen and liver cause abdominal pain. A nonproductive cough is
common during LBRF and—in combination with fever and myalgias—
may suggest influenza. Acute respiratory distress syndrome may occur
during TBRF.
On physical examination, the patient may be delirious or apathetic.
There may be body lice in the patient’s clothes or signs of insect bites.
In regions with B. miyamotoi infection, a hard tick may be embedded
in the skin. Epistaxis, petechiae, and ecchymoses are common during
LBRF but not in TBRF. Splenomegaly or spleen tenderness is common
in both forms of relapsing fever. The majority of patients with LBRF
and ~10% of patients with TBRF have discernible hepatomegaly.
Localizing neurologic findings are more common in TBRF than in
LBRF. In North America, B. turicatae infection has neurologic manifestations more often than B. hermsii infection. Meningoencephalitis
can result in residual hemiplegia or aphasia. Myelitis and radiculopathy
may develop. Unilateral or bilateral Bell’s palsy and deafness from seventh or eighth cranial nerve involvement are the most common forms
of cranial neuritis and typically present in the second or third febrile
episode, not the first. Visual impairment from unilateral or bilateral iridocyclitis or panophthalmitis may be permanent. In LBRF, neurologic
manifestations such as altered mental state or stiff neck are thought to
be secondary to systemic inflammation rather than to direct invasion
of the nervous system.
Myocarditis appears to be common in both forms of relapsing
fever and accounts for some deaths. Most commonly, myocarditis is
evidenced by gallops on cardiac auscultation, a prolonged QTc
interval,
and cardiomegaly and pulmonary edema on chest radiography.
General laboratory studies are not specific. Mild to moderate normocytic anemia is common, but frank hemolysis and hemoglobinuria
do not develop. Leukocyte counts are usually in the normal range
or only slightly elevated, and leukopenia can occur during the crisis.
Platelet counts can fall below 50,000/μL. C-reactive protein and procalcitonin levels are elevated. Laboratory evidence of hepatitis can be
found, with elevated serum concentrations of unconjugated bilirubin
and aminotransferases; the prothrombin and partial thromboplastin
times may be moderately prolonged.
Analysis of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is indicated in cases of suspected relapsing fever with signs of meningitis or meningoencephalitis.
The presence of mononuclear pleocytosis and mildly to moderately
elevated protein levels justifies intravenous antibiotic therapy in TBRF.
The manifestations and course of B. miyamotoi disease are not as
distinctive as those of relapsing fever. The most common presentation
is fever without respiratory symptoms starting 1–2 weeks after a tick
bite. Patients have been hospitalized with a presumptive diagnosis of
undifferentiated sepsis. Meningoencephalitis with spirochetes in the
CSF was documented in immunodeficient adults but may also occur
in immunocompetent individuals. If the patient has coexisting early
Lyme disease, there may be erythema migrans, the localized skin rash.
■ DIAGNOSIS
Relapsing fever should be considered in a patient with the characteristic
fever pattern and a history of recent exposure—i.e., within 1–2 weeks
before illness onset—to body lice or soft-bodied ticks in geographic
areas with documented current or past transmission. Because of the
longevity of the ticks and the transovarial transmission of the pathogen
in the ticks, a case of relapsing fever may be diagnosed many years after
the last case reported in that locale. The lice may be on the clothes of a
migrant. While the risks for B. miyamotoi disease are similar to those
for Lyme disease, prompt removal of an embedded tick after the exposure may not reduce the risk of infection of this pathogen.
With the exception of B. miyamotoi infection, the bedrock for laboratory diagnosis of LBRF and TBRF remains direct detection of the
spirochetes by microscopy of the blood. Manual differential counts
of white blood cells by Wright stain usually reveal spirochetes in
thin blood smears if their concentration is ≥105
/mL and several oilimmersion fields are examined (Fig. 185-2). But the preferred stains
are Giemsa-Wright or Giemsa alone. The density of B. miyamotoi in the
blood is not high enough for use of a blood smear alone for diagnosis.
For LBRF and TBRF, the preferred time to obtain a blood specimen is
between the fever’s onset and its peak. Lower concentrations of spirochetes may be revealed by a thick blood smear that is treated with 0.5%
acetic acid before staining. An alternative is a wet mount of anticoagulated blood mixed with saline and examined by phase-contrast or
dark-field microscopy for motile spirochetes.
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and similar DNA amplification
procedures are increasingly used for examination of blood or CSF in
cases of suspected relapsing fever. PCR may reveal circulating spirochetes between febrile episodes. PCR is the preferred procedure for
direct detection of B. miyamotoi in blood or CSF.
Culture of blood or CSF in Barbour-Stoenner-Kelly broth medium
or equivalent is an option for isolation of Borrelia species. However,
few laboratories offer this service. An alternative for tick-borne Borrelia species, but not B. recurrentis, is inoculation of blood or CSF
into severe combined immunodeficient mice and examination of the
animal’s blood after a few days.
Options for serologic confirmation of infection are limited, and
results may be misleading. Whole cell-based assays, such as enzymelinked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and immunoblot, and the
C6-peptide ELISA for Lyme disease may be positive in relapsing fever
or B. miyamotoi disease through antigenic cross-reactivities among
these spirochetes. A commercially available assay based on GlpQ, a
protein antigen of all relapsing fever Borrelia species (including B.
miyamotoi) but not of any Lyme disease species, has better specificity,
but commonly is negative at a time when a blood smear or PCR assay
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