1429CHAPTER 186 Lyme Borreliosis
positive response detectable in acute-phase samples (usually only a
positive IgM response), whereas ~70–80% have a positive response
during convalescence (2–4 weeks later). After 4–8 weeks of infection
(by which time most patients with active Lyme disease have disseminated infection), the sensitivity and specificity of the IgG response to
the spirochete are both very high—in the range of 99%—as determined
by the two-test approach of ELISA and Western blot. At this point and
thereafter, a single test (that for IgG) is usually sufficient. In persons
with illness of >2 months’ duration, a positive IgM test result alone is
likely to be false-positive and therefore should not be used to support
the diagnosis.
According to current criteria adopted by the CDC, an IgM Western
blot is considered positive if two of the following three bands are present: 23, 39, and 41 kDa. However, the combination of two such bands
may still represent a false-positive result. Misuse or misinterpretation
of IgM blots has been a factor in the incorrect diagnosis of Lyme disease in patients with other illnesses. An IgG blot is considered positive
if 5 of the following 10 bands are present: 18, 23, 28, 30, 39, 41, 45,
58, 66, and 93 kDa. In European cases, no single set of criteria for the
interpretation of immunoblots results in high levels of sensitivity and
specificity in all countries.
A new methodology called the modified two-test approach, which is
now approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, is a two-test
approach using two EIAs, thereby dispensing with the Western blot.
One such method employs a whole–B. burgdorferi sonicate ELISA
followed by a VlsE C6 peptide IgG ELISA. This approach, which gives
simply a positive or a negative result, increases sensitivity during the
first several weeks of infection without compromising specificity. For
more complex cases or in those with late infection, it is still valuable
to determine antibody specificities to multiple spirochetal proteins, as
is done with Western blots. More recently, line immunoblots or other
multiplexed antibody platforms have been developed as substitutes for
Western blots. These assays allow more objective interpretation, and
some platforms can provide quantitative data about antibody responses
to many spirochetal proteins. After successful antibiotic treatment,
antibody titers decline slowly, but responses (including that to the VlsE
C6 peptide) may persist for years. Moreover, not only the IgG but also
the IgM response may persist for years after therapy. Therefore, even a
positive IgM response cannot be interpreted as confirmation of recent
infection or reinfection unless the clinical picture is appropriate.
■ DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
Classic EM is a slowly expanding erythema, often with partial central
clearing. If the lesion expands little, it may represent the red papule of
an uninfected tick bite. If the lesion expands rapidly, it may represent
cellulitis (e.g., streptococcal cellulitis) or an allergic reaction, perhaps
to tick saliva. Patients with secondary annular lesions may be thought
to have erythema multiforme, but neither the development of blistering
mucosal lesions nor the involvement of the palms or soles is a feature of
B. burgdorferi infection. In the eastern United States, an EM-like skin
lesion, sometimes with mild systemic symptoms, may be associated
with Amblyomma americanum tick bites. However, the cause of this
southern tick-associated rash illness (STARI) has not yet been identified. This tick may also transmit Ehrlichia chaffeensis, a rickettsial agent
(Chap. 187).
As stated above, I. scapularis ticks in the United States may transmit
not only B. burgdorferi but also B. microti, the red blood cell parasite
causing babesiosis (Chap. 225); A. phagocytophilum, the agent of
human granulocytotropic anaplasmosis (Chap. 187); B. miyamotoi, a
relapsing fever spirochete (Chap. 185); B. mayonii and Ehrlichia species Wisconsin, newly recognized species that occur in the upper midwestern United States; or (rarely) Powassan encephalitis virus (the deer
tick virus, which is closely related to European tick-borne encephalitis
virus), which may cause fatal infection (Chap. 209). Although babesiosis and anaplasmosis are most often asymptomatic, infection with any
of these agents may cause nonspecific systemic symptoms, particularly
in the young or the elderly, and co-infected patients may have more
severe or persistent symptoms than patients infected with a single
agent. Standard blood counts may yield clues regarding the presence
of co-infection with Anaplasma or Babesia. Anaplasmosis may cause
leukopenia or thrombocytopenia, and babesiosis may cause thrombocytopenia or (in severe cases) hemolytic anemia. IgM serologic
responses may confuse the diagnosis. For example, A. phagocytophilum
may elicit a positive IgM response to B. burgdorferi. The frequency of
co-infection in different studies has been variable. In one prospective
study, 4% of patients with EM had evidence of co-infection.
Facial palsy caused by B. burgdorferi, which occurs in the early disseminated phase of the infection (often in July, August, or September),
is usually recognized by its association with EM. However, in rare
cases, facial palsy without EM may be the presenting manifestation
of Lyme disease. In such cases, both the IgM and the IgG responses
to the spirochete are usually positive. The most common infectious
agents that cause facial palsy are herpes simplex virus type 1 (Bell’s
palsy; Chap. 192) and varicella-zoster virus (Ramsay Hunt syndrome;
Chap. 193).
Later in the infection, oligoarticular Lyme arthritis most resembles
peripheral spondyloarthropathy in an adult or the pauciarticular form
of juvenile idiopathic arthritis in a child. Patients with Lyme arthritis
usually have the strongest IgG antibody responses seen in Lyme borreliosis, with reactivity to many spirochetal proteins.
The most common problem in diagnosis is to mistake Lyme
disease for chronic fatigue syndrome (Chap. 450) or fibromyalgia
(Chap. 373). This difficulty is compounded by the fact that a small
percentage of patients do in fact develop these chronic pain or fatigue
syndromes in association with or soon after Lyme disease. Moreover, a
counterculture has emerged that ascribes pain and fatigue syndromes
to chronic Lyme disease when there is little or no evidence of B. burgdorferi infection. In such cases, the term chronic Lyme disease, which is
equated with chronic B. burgdorferi infection, is a misnomer, and the
use of prolonged, dangerous, and expensive antibiotic treatment is not
warranted.
TREATMENT
Lyme Borreliosis
ANTIBIOTIC TREATMENT
As outlined in the algorithm in Fig. 186-2, the various manifestations of Lyme disease can usually be treated successfully with
orally administered antibiotics; the exceptions are severe objective
neurologic abnormalities and third-degree atrioventricular heart
block, which are generally treated with IV antibiotics, and arthritis that does not respond to oral therapy. For early Lyme disease,
doxycycline is effective and can be administered to men and nonpregnant women. An advantage of this regimen is that it is also
effective against A. phagocytophilum, B. miyamotoi, and B. mayonii,
which are transmitted by the same tick that transmits the Lyme
disease agent. Amoxicillin, cefuroxime axetil, and erythromycin
or its congeners are second-, third-, and fourth-choice alternatives, respectively, for the treatment of Lyme disease. In children,
amoxicillin is effective (not >2 g/d); in cases of penicillin allergy,
cefuroxime axetil or erythromycin may be used. In contrast to second- or third-generation cephalosporin antibiotics, first-generation
cephalosporins, such as cephalexin, are not effective. For patients
with infection localized to the skin, a 14-day course of therapy is
generally sufficient; in contrast, for patients with early disseminated
infection, a 21-day course is recommended. Approximately 15% of
patients experience a Jarisch-Herxheimer-like reaction during the
first 24 h of therapy. In multicenter studies, >90% of patients whose
early Lyme disease was treated with these regimens had satisfactory
outcomes. Although some patients reported symptoms after treatment, objective evidence of persistent infection or relapse was rare,
and re-treatment was usually unnecessary.
Oral administration of doxycycline or amoxicillin for 30
days is recommended for the initial treatment of Lyme arthritis
in patients who do not have concomitant neurologic involvement. Among patients with arthritis who do not respond to oral
1430 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
antibiotics, re-treatment with IV ceftriaxone for 28 days is appropriate. In patients with arthritis in whom joint inflammation persists
for months or even several years after both oral and IV antibiotics, treatment with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents, therapy
with disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, or synovectomy may
be successful.
In the United States, parenteral antibiotic therapy is usually
used for severe objective neurologic abnormalities. Patients with
such abnormalities are most commonly treated with IV ceftriaxone
for 14–28 days, but IV cefotaxime or IV penicillin G for the same
duration also may be effective. In Europe, similar results have been
obtained with oral doxycycline and IV antibiotics in the treatment
of acute neuroborreliosis. Although systematic trials have not been
conducted in the United States, oral doxycycline is now used by
some clinicians in this country for the treatment of patients with
less severe neurologic abnormalities, such as facial palsy alone or
uncomplicated Lyme meningitis. In patients with high-degree atrioventricular block or a PR interval of >0.3 s, IV therapy for at least
part of the course and cardiac monitoring are recommended, but
the insertion of a permanent pacemaker is not necessary.
It is unclear how and whether asymptomatic infection should
be treated, but patients with such infection are often given a course
of oral antibiotics. Because maternal–fetal transmission of B. burgdorferi seems to occur rarely (if at all), standard therapy for the
manifestations of the illness is recommended for pregnant women.
Long-term persistence of B. burgdorferi has not been documented
in any large series of patients after treatment with currently recommended regimens. Although an occasional patient requires a
second course of antibiotics, there is no indication for multiple,
repeated antibiotic courses in the treatment of Lyme disease.
CHRONIC LYME DISEASE
After appropriately treated Lyme disease, a small percentage of
patients continue to have subjective symptoms, primarily musculoskeletal pain, neurocognitive difficulties, or fatigue. This chronic
Lyme disease or post-Lyme syndrome is sometimes a disabling
condition that is similar to chronic fatigue syndrome or fibromyalgia. Five double-blind, placebo-controlled trials conducted in
the United States and Europe have failed to show benefit of further
antibiotic therapy in these patients. For example, in a large study,
one group of patients with post-Lyme syndrome received IV ceftriaxone for 30 days followed by oral doxycycline for 60 days, while
another group received IV and oral placebo preparations for the
same durations. No significant differences were found between
groups in the numbers of patients reporting that their symptoms
had improved, become worse, or stayed the same. Such patients are
best treated for the relief of symptoms rather than with prolonged
courses of antibiotics.
PROPHYLAXIS AFTER A TICK BITE
The risk of infection with B. burgdorferi after a recognized tick
bite is so low that antibiotic prophylaxis is not routinely indicated.
However, if an attached, engorged I. scapularis nymph is found
or if follow-up is anticipated to be difficult, a single 200-mg dose
of doxycycline, which usually prevents Lyme disease when given
within 72 h after the tick bite, may be administered.
■ PROGNOSIS
The response to treatment is best early in the disease. Later treatment
of Lyme borreliosis is still effective, but the period of convalescence
may be longer. Eventually, most patients recover with minimal or no
residual deficits.
■ REINFECTION
Reinfection may occur after EM when patients are treated with antimicrobial agents. In such cases, the immune response is not adequate to
provide protection from subsequent infection. However, patients who
develop an expanded immune response to the spirochete over a period
of months (e.g., those with Lyme arthritis) have protective immunity
for a period of years and rarely, if ever, acquire the infection again.
■ PREVENTION
Protective measures for the prevention of Lyme disease may include
the avoidance of tick-infested areas, the use of repellents and acaricides, tick checks, and modification of landscapes in or near residential
areas. Although a vaccine for Lyme disease used to be available, the
manufacturer has discontinued its production. Another company is
planning testing of a similar vaccine in both the United States and
Europe. However, no vaccine is currently available commercially for
the prevention of this infection.
■ FURTHER READING
Arvikar SL, Steere AC: Diagnosis and treatment of Lyme arthritis.
Infect Dis Clin North Am 29:269, 2015.
Aucott JN: Posttreatment Lyme disease syndrome. Infect Dis Clin
North Am 29:309, 2015.
Branda JA, Steere AC: Laboratory diagnosis of Lyme borreliosis.
Clin Micro Rev 34:e00018, 2021.
Branda JA et al: Two-tiered antibody testing for Lyme disease with
use of 2 enzyme immunoassays, a whole-cell sonicate enzyme
immunoassay followed by a VlsE C6 peptide enzyme immunoassay.
Clin Infect Dis 53:541, 2011.
Klempner MS et al: Two controlled trials of antibiotic treatment in
patients with persistent symptoms and a history of Lyme disease. N
Engl J Med 345:85, 2001.
Lantos PM et al: Clinical practice guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA), American Academy of Neurology,
and the American College of Rheumatology (ACR): 2020 guidelines
for the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of Lyme disease. Clin
Infect Dis 72:1, 2021.
Localized skin infection: 14 days
Early disseminated infection:
21 days
Acrodermatitis: 30 days
Arthritis: 30−60 days**
Neurologic involvement:
14–28 days
Cardiac involvement:
28 days; complete course
with oral therapy when
patient is no longer in
high-degree AV block
Skin
Erythema
migrans
Acrodermatitis
Joint
Arthritis*
Heart
AV block
Nervous system
Facial
palsy
alone
Meningitis
Radiculoneuritis
Encephalopathy
Polyneuropathy
Oral therapy
First choice
Age ≥9 years, not pregnant:
doxycycline, 100 mg bid
Age <9 years: amoxicillin,
50 mg/kg per day
Second choice for adults:
amoxicillin, 500 mg tid
Third choice for all ages:
cefuroxime axetil, 500 mg bid
Fourth choice for all ages:
erythromycin, 250 mg qid
Intravenous therapy
First choice:
ceftriaxone, 2 g qd
Second choice:
cefotaxime, 2 g q8h
Third choice:
Na penicillin G, 5 million
U q6h
Guidelines for duration of therapy
1˚,
2˚ 3˚
FIGURE 186-2 Algorithm for the treatment of the various early or late manifestations
of Lyme borreliosis. AV, atrioventricular. *For arthritis, oral therapy should be tried
first; if arthritis is unresponsive, IV therapy should be administered. **For Lyme
arthritis, IV ceftriaxone (2 g given once a day for 14–28 days) also is effective and is
necessary for patients who do not respond to oral therapy. However, compared with
oral treatment, this regimen is less convenient to administer, has more side effects,
and is more expensive.
1431CHAPTER 187 Rickettsial Diseases
Li X et al: Burden and viability of Borrelia burgdorferi in skin or joints
of patients with erythema migrans or Lyme arthritis. Arthritis Rheum
63:2238, 2011.
Lochhead RB et al: Robust interferon signature and suppressed tissue
repair gene expression in synovial tissue from patients with postinfectious, Borrelia burgdorferi-induced Lyme arthritis. Cell Microbiol
21:e12954, 2019.
Oschmann P et al: Stages and syndromes of neuroborreliosis. J Neurol
245:262, 1998.
Steere AC: Lyme disease. N Engl J Med 345:115, 2001.
Steere AC: Posttreatment Lyme disease syndromes: Distinct pathogenesis caused by maladaptive host responses. J Clin Invest 130:2148,
2020.
Steere AC et al: Prospective study of serologic tests for Lyme disease.
Clin Infect Dis 47:188, 2008.
Steere AC et al: Lyme borreliosis. Nat Rev Dis Primers 2:16090, 2016.
Section 10 Diseases Caused by Rickettsiae,
Mycoplasmas, and Chlamydiae
187
Rickettsiae are a heterogeneous group of small, obligately intracellular, gram-negative coccobacilli and short bacilli, most of which are
transmitted by a tick, mite, flea, or louse vector. Except in the case of
louse-borne typhus, humans are incidental hosts. Among rickettsiae,
Coxiella burnetii, Rickettsia prowazekii, and Rickettsia typhi have the
well-documented ability to survive for an extended period outside the
reservoir or vector and to be extremely infectious: inhalation of a single
Coxiella microorganism can cause pneumonia. High-level infectivity
and severe illness after inhalation make R. prowazekii, R. rickettsii,
R. typhi, R. conorii, and C. burnetii bioterrorism threats (Chap. S3).
Clinical infections with rickettsiae can be classified according to (1)
the taxonomy and diverse microbial characteristics of the agents, which
belong to seven genera (Rickettsia, Orientia, Ehrlichia, Anaplasma, Neorickettsia, “Candidatus Neoehrlichia,” and Coxiella); (2) epidemiology; or
(3) clinical manifestations. The clinical manifestations of all the acute
presentations are similar during the first 5 days: fever, headache, and
myalgias with or without nausea, vomiting, and cough. As the course
progresses, clinical manifestations—including a macular, maculopapular, or vesicular rash; eschar; pneumonitis; and meningoencephalitis—
vary from one disease to another. Given the many etiologic agents with
varied mechanisms of transmission, geographic distributions, and associated disease manifestations, the consideration of rickettsial diseases as
a single entity poses complex challenges (Table 187-1).
Establishing the etiologic diagnosis of rickettsioses is very difficult during the acute stage of illness, and definitive diagnosis usually
requires the examination of serum samples during the acute and convalescent phases of illness. Heightened clinical suspicion is based on
epidemiologic data, history of exposure to vectors or reservoir animals,
travel to endemic locations, clinical manifestations (sometimes including rash or eschar), and characteristic laboratory findings (including
thrombocytopenia, normal or low white blood cell [WBC] counts,
elevated hepatic enzyme levels, and hyponatremia). Such suspicion
should prompt empirical treatment. Doxycycline is the empirical drug
of choice for most of these infections. Only one agent, C. burnetii,
has been documented to cause chronic illness. One other species,
Rickettsial Diseases
David H. Walker, J. Stephen
Dumler, Lucas S. Blanton,
Chantal P. Bleeker-Rovers
R. prowazekii, causes recrudescent illness (Brill-Zinsser disease) when
latent infection is reactivated years after resolution of the acute illness.
Rickettsial infections dominated by fever may resolve without further clinical evolution. However, after nonspecific early manifestations,
the illnesses can also evolve along one or more of several principal
clinical lines: (1) development of a macular or maculopapular rash;
(2) development of an eschar at the site of tick or mite feeding, which
can occur during the incubation period; (3) development of a vesicular
rash (often in rickettsialpox, R. parkeri infection and African tick-bite
fever); (4) development of pneumonitis with chest radiographic opacities and/or rales (Q fever and severe cases of Rocky Mountain spotted
fever [RMSF], Mediterranean spotted fever [MSF], louse-borne typhus,
human monocytotropic ehrlichiosis [HME], human granulocytotropic
anaplasmosis [HGA], scrub typhus, and murine typhus); (5) development of meningoencephalitis (louse-borne typhus and severe cases of
RMSF, scrub typhus, HME, murine typhus, MSF, and [rarely] Q fever);
and (6) progressive hypotension and multiorgan failure as seen with
sepsis or toxic shock syndromes (RMSF, MSF, louse-borne typhus,
murine typhus, scrub typhus, HME, HGA, and neoehrlichiosis).
Epidemiologic clues to the transmission of a particular pathogen
include (1) environmental exposure to ticks, fleas, or mites during the
season of activity of the vector species for the disease in the appropriate
geographic region (spotted fever and typhus rickettsioses, scrub typhus,
ehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis); (2) travel to or residence in an endemic geographic region during the incubation period (Table 187-1); (3) exposure
to parturient ruminants, cats, and dogs (Q fever); (4) exposure to flying
squirrels (R. prowazekii infection); and (5) history of previous louseborne typhus (recrudescent typhus).
Clinical laboratory findings such as thrombocytopenia (particularly
in spotted fever and typhus rickettsioses, ehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis,
and scrub typhus), normal or low WBC counts, mild to moderate
serum elevations of hepatic aminotransferases, and hyponatremia suggest some common pathophysiologic mechanisms.
Application of these clinical, epidemiologic, and laboratory principles requires consideration of a rickettsial diagnosis and knowledge of
the individual diseases.
TICK-, MITE-, LOUSE-, AND FLEA-BORNE
RICKETTSIOSES
These diseases, caused by organisms of the genera Rickettsia and Orientia in the family Rickettsiaceae, result from endothelial cell infection
and increased vascular permeability. Pathogenic rickettsial species are
very closely related, have small genomes (as a result of reductive evolution, which eliminated many genes for biosynthesis of intracellularly
available molecules), and are traditionally separated into typhus and
spotted fever groups on the basis of lipopolysaccharide antigens. Some
diseases and their agents (e.g., R. africae, R. parkeri, and R. sibirica)
are too similar to require separate descriptions. Indeed, the similarities
among MSF (R. conorii [all strains] and R. massiliae), North Asian tick
typhus (R. sibirica), Japanese spotted fever (R. japonica), and Flinders
Island spotted fever (R. honei) far outweigh their minor variations.
The Rickettsiaceae that cause life-threatening infections are, in order
of decreasing case–fatality rate, R. rickettsii (RMSF); R. prowazekii
(louse-borne typhus); Orientia tsutsugamushi (scrub typhus); R. conorii
(MSF); R. typhi (murine typhus); and, in rare cases, other spotted
fever–group (SFG) organisms. Some agents (e.g., R. parkeri, R. africae,
Rickettsia 364D, R. akari, R. slovaca, R. honei, R. felis, R. massiliae,
R. helvetica, R. heilongjiangensis, R. aeschlimannii, and R. monacensis)
have never been documented to cause a fatal illness. The most prevalent SFG rickettsia in the United States, R. amblyommatis, has been
circumstantially associated with asymptomatic seroconversion in most
persons and with self-limited illness in others.
■ ROCKY MOUNTAIN SPOTTED FEVER
Epidemiology RMSF occurs in 47 states (with the highest prevalence in the south-central and southeastern states) as well as in
Canada, Mexico, and Central and South America. The infection is
transmitted by Dermacentor variabilis, the American dog tick, in the
1432 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
TABLE 187-1 Features of Selected Rickettsial Infections
DISEASE ORGANISM TRANSMISSION
GEOGRAPHIC
RANGE
INCUBATION
PERIOD, DAYS
DURATION,
DAYS RASH, % ESCHAR, % LYMPHADENOPATHYa
Rocky Mountain
spotted fever
Rickettsia
rickettsii
Tick bite: Dermacentor
andersoni, D. variabilis
United States 2–14 10–20 90 <1 +
Amblyomma cajennense
sensu lato, A. aureolatum
Central/South
America
Rhipicephalus
sanguineus
Mexico, Brazil,
United States
Mediterranean
spotted fever
R. conorii Tick bite: R. sanguineus,
R. pumilio
Southern
Europe, Africa,
Middle East,
central Asia
5–7 7–14 97 50 +
African tick-bite
fever
R. africae Tick bite: A. hebraeum,
A. variegatum
Sub-Saharan
Africa,
West Indies
4–10 4–19 50 90 +++
Maculatum
disease
R. parkeri Tick bite: A. maculatum,
A. triste, A. tigrinum,
A. ovale
United States,
South America
2–10 6–16 88 94 ++
Pacific Coast tick
fever
Rickettsia 364D Tick bite: D. occidentalis United States 3–9 5–14 14 100 +++
Rickettsialpox R. akari Mite bite: Liponyssoides
sanguineus
United States,
Ukraine, Turkey,
Mexico, Croatia
10–17 3–11 100 90 +++
Tick-borne
lymphadenopathy
R. slovaca Tick bite: D. marginatus,
D. reticularis
Europe 7–9 17–180 5 100 ++++
Flea-borne
spotted fever
R. felis Flea (mechanism
undetermined):
Ctenocephalides felis
Worldwide 8–16 8–16 80 15 —
Epidemic typhus R. prowazekii Louse feces: Pediculus
humanus humanus,
fleas and lice of
flying squirrels, or
recrudescence
Worldwide 7–14 10–18 80 None —
Murine typhus R. typhi Flea feces: Xenopsylla
cheopis, C. felis, others
Worldwide 8–16 9–18 80 None —
Human
monocytotropic
ehrlichiosis
Ehrlichia
chaffeensis
Tick bite: A. americanum,
D. variabilis
United States 1–21 3–21 26 None ++
Ewingii
ehrlichiosis
E. ewingii Tick bite: A. americanum United States 1–21 4–21 0 None
Unnamed
ehrlichiosis
E. muris ssp.
eauclairensis
Tick bite: Ixodes
scapularis
United States Unknown 3–14 12 None
Human
granulocytotropic
anaplasmosis
Anaplasma
phagocytophilum
Tick bite: I. scapularis,
I. ricinus, I. pacificus,
I. persulcatus,
Haemaphysalis concinna
United States,
Europe, Asia
4–8 3–14 Rare None —
Unnamed disease A. capra I. persulcatus Northeastern
China, France
Unknown 11–21 17 9 +
Neoehrlichiosis “Candidatus
Neoehrlichia
mikurensis”
Tick bite: I. ricinus,
I. persulcatus,
Haemaphysalis concinna
Europe, China ≥8 11–75 10 None
Scrub typhus Orientia
tsutsugamushi
Mite bite:
Leptotrombidium
deliense, others
Asia, Australia,
Pacific and
Indian Ocean
islands
9–18 6–21 50 35 +++
Q fever Coxiella burnetii Inhalation of aerosols
of infected parturition
material (goats, sheep,
cattle, cats, others),
ingestion of infected milk
or milk products
Worldwide
except New
Zealand,
Antarctica
3–30 5–57 <1 None —
a
++++, severe; +++, marked; ++, moderate; +, present in a small proportion of cases; —, not a noted feature.
eastern two-thirds of the United States and California; by D. andersoni, the Rocky Mountain wood tick, in the western United States; by
Rhipicephalus sanguineus, the brown dog tick, in Mexico, Arizona, and
probably Brazil; and by Amblyomma sculptum, A. mixtum, A. patinoi,
A. cajennense, A. tonelliae, and A. aureolatum in Central and/or South
America. Maintained partially by transovarian transmission from one
generation of ticks to the next, R. rickettsii can be acquired by uninfected ticks through the ingestion of a blood meal from rickettsemic
small mammals or by co-feeding adjacent to an infected tick.
Humans become infected during tick season (in the Northern
Hemisphere, from April to September), although some cases occur in
winter. The mortality rate was 20–25% in the preantibiotic era and has
1433CHAPTER 187 Rickettsial Diseases
FIGURE 187-1 A. Petechial lesions of Rocky Mountain spotted fever on the lower
legs and soles of a young, previously healthy patient. B. Close-up of lesions from the
same patient. (Photos courtesy of Dr. Lindsey Baden; with permission.)
A
B
been reported at ~3–5% in the postantibiotic era, principally because
of delayed diagnosis and treatment. Recent reporting of a relatively low
mortality rate (0.4%) for spotted fever rickettsiosis is likely an artifact
related to the abundance of less pathogenic SFG rickettsial species and
to a relatively low proportion of diagnostically confirmed cases. Indeed,
the reported case–fatality rates in confirmed cases in the United States
and in parts of Arizona, where R. rickettsii is the sole infecting SFG
species, are 9% and 10%, respectively. The case–fatality rate is highest among children (<10 years of age) and in the later decades of life
(>70 years). For unknown reasons, the case–fatality rate of RMSF in
Mexico and Brazil approaches 50%.
Pathogenesis R. rickettsii organisms are inoculated into the dermis
along with secretions of the tick’s salivary glands after ≥6 h of feeding.
The rickettsiae spread lymphohematogenously throughout the body
and infect numerous foci of contiguous endothelial cells. The dose-dependent incubation period is ~1 week (range, 2–14 days). Occlusive
thrombosis and ischemic necrosis are not the fundamental pathologic
bases for tissue and organ injury. Instead, increased vascular permeability, with resulting edema, hypovolemia, and ischemia, is responsible.
Consumption of platelets results in thrombocytopenia in 32–52% of
patients, but disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) with hypofibrinogenemia is rare. Activation of platelets, generation of thrombin,
and activation of the fibrinolytic system all appear to be homeostatic
physiologic responses to endothelial injury by nonocclusive hemostatic
plugs.
Clinical Manifestations Early in the illness, when medical attention usually is first sought, RMSF is difficult to distinguish from many
self-limiting viral illnesses. Fever, headache, malaise, myalgia, nausea,
vomiting, and anorexia are the most common symptoms during the
first 3 days. The patient becomes progressively more ill as vascular
infection and injury advance. In one large series, only one-third of
patients were diagnosed with presumptive RMSF early in the clinical
course and treated appropriately as outpatients. In the tertiary-care setting, RMSF is all too often recognized only when late severe manifestations, developing at the end of the first week or during the second week
of illness in patients without appropriate treatment, prompt return to a
physician or hospital and admission to an intensive care unit.
The progressive nature of the infection is clearly manifested in the
skin. Rash is evident in only 14% of patients on the first day of illness
and in only 49% during the first 3 days. Macules (1–5 mm) appear first
on the wrists and ankles and then on the remainder of the extremities
and the trunk. Later, more severe vascular damage results in frank
hemorrhage at the center of the maculopapule, producing a petechia
that does not disappear upon compression (Fig. 187-1). This sequence
of events is sometimes delayed or aborted by effective treatment. However, the rash is a variable manifestation, appearing on day 6 or later
in 20% of cases and not appearing at all in 9–16% of cases. Petechiae
occur in 41–59% of cases, appearing on or after day 6 in 74% of cases
that manifest a rash. Involvement of the palms and soles, often considered diagnostically important, usually develops relatively late in
the course (after day 5 in 43% of cases) and does not develop at all in
18–64% of cases.
Hypovolemia leads to prerenal azotemia and (in 17% of cases)
hypotension. Infection of the pulmonary microcirculation leads to
noncardiogenic pulmonary edema; 12% of patients have acute respiratory distress syndrome, and 8% require mechanical ventilation. Cardiac involvement manifests as dysrhythmia in 7–16% of cases.
Besides respiratory failure, central nervous system (CNS) involvement is the other important determinant of the outcome of RMSF.
Encephalitis, presenting as confusion or lethargy, is apparent in
26–28% of cases. Progressively severe encephalitis manifests as stupor
or delirium in 21–26% of cases, ataxia in 18%, coma in 10%, and seizures in 8%. Numerous focal neurologic deficits have been reported.
Meningoencephalitis results in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pleocytosis
in 34–38% of cases; usually there are 10–100 cells/μL and a mononuclear predominance, but occasionally there are >100 cells/μL and
a polymorphonuclear predominance. The CSF protein concentration
is increased in 30–35% of cases, but the CSF glucose concentration is
usually normal.
Acute kidney injury, often reversible with rehydration, is caused by
acute tubular necrosis in severe cases with shock. Hepatic injury with
increased serum aminotransferase concentrations (38% of cases) is due
to multifocal death of individual hepatocytes without hepatic failure.
Jaundice is recognized in 9% of cases and an elevated serum bilirubin
concentration in 18–30%.
Life-threatening bleeding is rare. Anemia develops in 30% of cases
and is severe enough to require transfusions in 11%. Blood is detected
in the stool or vomitus of 10% of patients, and death has followed massive upper-gastrointestinal hemorrhage.
Other characteristic clinical laboratory findings include increased
plasma levels of proteins of the acute-phase response (C-reactive
protein, fibrinogen, ferritin, and others), hypoalbuminemia, and
hyponatremia (in 56% of cases) due to the appropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone in response to the hypovolemic state. Myositis
occurs occasionally, with marked elevations in serum creatine kinase
levels and multifocal rhabdomyonecrosis. Ocular involvement includes
conjunctivitis in 30% of cases and retinal vein engorgement, flame
hemorrhages, arterial occlusion, and papilledema with normal CSF
pressure in some instances.
Severe RMSF can present as sepsis or septic shock. In untreated fatal
cases, death occurs 8–15 days after onset. A rare presentation, fulminant RMSF, is fatal within 5 days after onset. This fulminant presentation is seen most often in male black patients with glucose-6-phosphate
dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency and may be related to an undefined
effect of hemolysis on the rickettsial infection. Although survivors
1434 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
of RMSF usually return to their previous state of health, permanent
sequelae, including neurologic deficits and gangrene necessitating
amputation of extremities, may follow severe illness.
Diagnosis The diagnosis of RMSF during the acute stage is more
difficult than is generally appreciated. The most important epidemiologic factor is a history of exposure to a potentially tick-infested environment within the 14 days preceding disease onset during a season
of possible tick activity. However, only 60% of patients actually recall
being bitten by a tick during the incubation period.
The differential diagnosis for early clinical manifestations of RMSF
(fever, headache, and myalgia without a rash) includes influenza,
enteroviral infection, infectious mononucleosis, viral hepatitis, leptospirosis, typhoid fever, gram-negative or gram-positive bacterial
sepsis, HME, HGA, murine typhus, sylvatic flying-squirrel typhus,
and rickettsialpox. Enterocolitis may be suggested by nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain; prominence of abdominal tenderness has
resulted in exploratory laparotomy. CNS involvement can masquerade
as bacterial or viral meningoencephalitis. Cough, pulmonary signs, and
chest radiographic opacities can lead to a diagnostic consideration of
bronchitis or pneumonia.
At presentation during the first 3 days of illness, only 3% of patients
exhibit the classic triad of fever, rash, and history of tick exposure.
When a rash appears, a diagnosis of RMSF should be considered.
However, many illnesses considered in the differential diagnosis also
can be associated with a rash, including rubeola, rubella, meningococcemia, disseminated gonococcal infection, secondary syphilis, toxic
shock syndrome, drug hypersensitivity, immune thrombocytopenic
purpura, thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, Kawasaki syndrome,
and immune complex vasculitis. Conversely, any person in an endemic
area with a provisional diagnosis of one of the above illnesses could
have RMSF. Thus, if a viral infection is suspected during RMSF season
in an endemic area, it should always be kept in mind that RMSF can
mimic viral infection early in the course; if the illness worsens over the
next couple of days after initial presentation, the patient should return
for reevaluation.
The most common serologic test for confirmation of the diagnosis
is the indirect immunofluorescence assay. Not until 7–10 days after
onset is a reactive titer of ≥64 first detectable. The sensitivity and specificity of the indirect immunofluorescence IgG assay are 89–100% and
99–100%, respectively. Detection of IgM is no more sensitive in early
illness and is subject to nonspecific cross-reactivity. It is important to
understand that serologic tests for RMSF are usually negative at the
time of presentation for medical care and that treatment should not be
delayed while a positive serologic result is awaited.
The only diagnostic test that has proven useful during the acute
illness is immunohistologic examination of a cutaneous biopsy sample from a rash lesion for R. rickettsii. Examination of a 3-mm punch
biopsy from such a lesion is 70% sensitive and 100% specific, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on a rash biopsy would likely yield even
higher sensitivity. PCR amplification for detection of R. rickettsii DNA
in peripheral blood is not adequately sensitive. Although rickettsiae
are present in large quantities in heavily infected foci of endothelial
cells, there are relatively low quantities in the circulation. Cultivation
of rickettsiae in cell culture is feasible but is seldom undertaken because
of technical difficulty and biohazard concerns. The recent dramatic
increase in the reported incidence of RMSF correlates with the use of
single-titer SFG cross-reactive enzyme immunoassay serology. Few
cases are specifically determined to be caused by R. rickettsii. Currently,
many febrile persons who do not have RMSF present with crossreactive antibodies, possibly because of previous exposure to the highly
prevalent SFG rickettsia R. amblyommatis.
TREATMENT
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
The drug of choice for the treatment of both children and adults
with RMSF is doxycycline. Because of the severity of RMSF, immediate empirical administration of doxycycline should be strongly
considered for any patient with a consistent clinical presentation in
the appropriate epidemiologic setting. Doxycycline is administered
orally (or, with coma or vomiting, intravenously) at 100 mg twice
daily. For children with suspected RMSF, up to five courses of doxycycline may be administered with minimal risk of dental staining.
In patients with allergy to doxycycline, desensitization should be
considered. Once considered an alternative during pregnancy, chloramphenicol is not readily available in the United States. Although
available in much of the world, it is less effective than doxycycline.
Fortunately, there is little evidence to support the occurrence of
tetracycline-associated adverse events in mothers (hepatotoxicity)
and fetuses (staining of deciduous teeth and teratogenicity) who
receive doxycycline. The antirickettsial drug should be administered until the patient is afebrile and improving clinically—usually
3–5 days after defervescence. β-Lactam antibiotics, erythromycin,
and aminoglycosides have no role in the treatment of RMSF, and
sulfa-containing drugs are associated with more adverse outcomes
than no treatment at all. There is little clinical experience with
fluoroquinolones, clarithromycin, and azithromycin, which are not
recommended. The most seriously ill patients are managed in
intensive care units, with careful administration of fluids to achieve
optimal tissue perfusion without precipitating noncardiogenic pulmonary edema. In some severely ill patients, hypoxemia requires
intubation and mechanical ventilation; oliguric or anuric acute
renal failure requires renal replacement therapy; seizures necessitate
the use of antiseizure medication; anemia or severe hemorrhage
necessitates transfusions of packed red blood cells; or bleeding with
severe thrombocytopenia requires platelet transfusions.
Prevention Avoidance of tick bites is the only available preventive
approach. Use of protective clothing and tick repellents, inspection of
the body once or twice a day, and removal of ticks before they inoculate
rickettsiae reduce the risk of infection. Prophylactic doxycycline treatment of tick bites has no proven role in preventing RMSF.
■ MEDITERRANEAN SPOTTED FEVER
(BOUTONNEUSE FEVER), AFRICAN TICK-BITE
FEVER, AND OTHER TICK-BORNE SPOTTED FEVERS
Epidemiology and Clinical Manifestations R. conorii is prevalent in southern Europe, Africa, and southwestern and south-central
Asia. The disease is characterized by high fever, rash, and—in most
geographic locales—an inoculation eschar (tâche noire) that appears
before the onset of fever at the site of the tick bite. A severe form of the
disease (mortality rate, 50%) occurs in patients with diabetes, alcoholism, or heart failure.
African tick-bite fever, caused by R. africae, occurs in rural areas of
sub-Saharan Africa and in the Caribbean islands and is transmitted by
Amblyomma hebraeum and A. variegatum ticks. The average incubation period is 4–10 days. The mild illness consists of headache, fever,
eschar, and regional lymphadenopathy. Amblyomma ticks, a high portion of which are infected with R. africae, often feed in groups, with the
consequent development of multiple eschars. Rash may be vesicular,
sparse, or absent altogether. Because of tourism in sub-Saharan Africa,
African tick-bite fever is the rickettsiosis most frequently imported
into Europe and North America. Maculatum disease, a similar disease caused by the closely related species R. parkeri, is transmitted by
A. maculatum and found in a low percentage of A. americanum ticks
in the United States. It is also transmitted by A. triste in South America
and Arizona as well as A. tigrinum and A. ovale in South America.
R. japonica causes Japanese spotted fever, which also occurs in Korea
and China. Similar diseases in northern Asia are caused by R. sibirica
and R. heilongjiangensis. Queensland tick typhus due to R. australis is
transmitted by Ixodes holocyclus ticks. Flinders Island spotted fever,
found on the island for which it is named as well as in Tasmania,
mainland Australia, and Asia, is caused by R. honei. In Europe, patients
infected with R. slovaca after a wintertime Dermacentor tick bite usually manifest an afebrile illness with an eschar (usually on the scalp)
and painful regional lymphadenopathy.
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