2. •Rocky Mountain spotted
fever was first discovered
in 1896 in the Snake River
Valley of Idaho.
•Howard Taylor Ricketts
first to identify the
infectious organism.
•Also died from typhus
3. R. rickettsii
R. africae
R. conorii
R. conorii
R.
slovaca
R. conorii Astrakhan
R. conorii Israël
R. australis
R. honei
Indian tick typhus Rickettsia
R. japonica
R. mongolotimonae
R. helvetica
R. mongolotimonae
R. sibirica
R. conorii
R. conorii Israël
« R. heilongjiangii »
R. helvetica
4. Characteristics of Rickettsia
• Gram (-), Aerobic,
Coccobacilli
• Obligate intracellular
parasite.
• Maintained in animal and
arthropod reservoirs
10. Rickettsia as a Pathogen
• Transmitted and dependant on parasitic
arthropod vectors: lice, fleas, and ticks.
R. prowazekii:
Epidemic typhus
human louse
R. typhi:
Murine typhus
flea
Rickettsia rickettsiae
RMSF
tick
11. Target Organs of Rickettsioses
Disseminated endothelial infection
of all organs with brain and lungs as
critically affected vital organs
12. Pathophysiology of Rickettsial Diseases
Increased vascular permeability
Edema (life threatening in brain and lungs)
Low blood volume
Hypotension
Decreased perfusion of organs
Organ dysfunction
(e.g., acute renal failure: prerenal azotemia)
13. Pathophysiology of Respiratory Failure
Intense infection of endothelium of pulmonary microcirculation
Interstitial pneumonia/edema
Non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema
Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Hypoxemia
14.
15. Types of Rickettsial Diseases
• R. rickettsii: Rocky mountain spotted fever
– Spread by tick bite; rodents are the reservoir
• R. prowazekii: epidemic typhus
– Humans primary host; vector is the louse
– Disease spread in crowded, unhygienic conditions
• R. typhi: murine/endemic typhus
– present in rodent population, vector is the flea.
16. Signs of Infection
• Fever, chills
• Severe headache
• 4th-6th day later = skin rash = lasts
throughout course of disease
• EXCEPTION: Q-fever = no rash
18. Important Clinical Diseases
• Spotted Fever Group
– Rickettsia rickettsii = Rocky Mountain spotted fever
• tick bite
• fever/severe headache
• skin rash = wrists and ankles to
trunk/palms of hands, soles of feet
19.
20. Rickettsia rickettsii
• R. rickettsii causes 95% of all modern typhus.
• If untreated mortality is ~20%.
• Most cases occur in children during the spring or
summer.
• It causes “tick typhus”, also known as Rocky Mountain
spotted fever.
• The wood tick or dog tick is the insect vector..
• CNS symptoms include headache, delirium and coma.
• Circulatory damage includes coagulation, edema and
collapse..
21. Important Clinical Diseases
• Typhus Group
–Rickettsia prowazekii = Epidemic
typhus
• body louse = bite/feces
• fever/severe headache
• skin rash = trunk to extremities
22. Rickettsia prowazekii
• causes louse typhus, ie. epidemic typhus, or Brill-Zinsser
disease (or these days “jail fever” ).
• This organism killed ~3 million people in WW1 .
• Transmission occurs human to human via lice vector, either
directly in blood, or more likely as the contaminated louse feces
is scratched into the bite wound.
• Symptoms can be acute and RMSF-like, or a milder sporadic /
latent condition years after the initial infection.
23. Rickettsia typhi
• R. typhi causes Murine typhus or endemic typhus.
• cases occur commonly and a few at a time in endemic
areas.
• reservoir is rodent (murine = rodent) and vector is the
flea.
• scratching contaminated flea feces into the bite wound is
the primary means of transmission.
• The rash is backwards here: trunk extremities.
• Murine typhus is milder, and will resolve untreated
within 3 weeks.
24. Boutonneuse fever
– R.conori, tick vector, I.P: 6-10 days
– Generalized myalgia occurs, and even myositis can be
demonstrated.
– A rash appears on days 3-5 of the illness. It spreads
from the extremities to the trunk, neck, face, palms,
and soles within 36 hours.
– The lesions progress from macular to maculopapular
and may persist for 2-3 weeks.
– Eschar at site of tick bite is pathognomonic.
– Other manifestations and complications are similar to
those seen in patients with RMSF.
28. Important Clinical Diseases
• Q-Fever Group
–Coxiella burnetii - Q fever
• inhale contaminated aerosol; resist
dessication = up to 3 years outside
host
• intermittent fever/pneumonia
• NO skin rash
29. Diagnosis of Rickettsial Diseases
• No rapid laboratory tests are available to
diagnose rickettsial diseases early in the
course of illness.
• Rise in serum antibody/often do not
develop in early stages
30. Diagnosis of Rickettsial Diseases
o Serologic assays that demonstrate antibodies to
rickettsial antigens (eg, indirect immunofluorescence,
complement fixation, indirect hemagglutination, latex
fixation, enzyme immunoassay, microagglutination)
o They are preferable to the nonspecific and insensitive
Weil-Felix test based on the cross-reactive antigens of
Proteus vulgaris strains(OX19)
o It usually takes 10-12 days for serologic data to
become positive..
31. Diagnosis of Rickettsial Diseases
o Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to detect rickettsiae in
blood or tissue provides promise for early diagnosis.
o PCR and fluorescent antibody testing of skin specimen
obtained by biopsy may help confirm the clinical
diagnosis in patients with rash .
o However, serology remains the mainstay of diagnosis
because these other tests are expensive and less
available to clinicians.
o Rickettsial isolation in culture is unnecessary,
laborious, and hazardous to laboratory personnel.
32. Disease Confirmatory test
RMSF IFA, DFA, IH
Mediterranean SF IFA, DFA, IH, PCR
Epidemic Typhus IFA, PCR
Murine Typhus IFA, DFA, PCR… LFT
IFA: Indirect fluorescent antibody assay
DFA: Direct fluorescent antibody
IH: Immunohistology
33. TREATMENT
• Rules :
– You will never make a definitive diagnosis before the
patient recovers with treatment or dies
– High index of suspicion with good understanding of
epidemiology is important for diagnosis
– Empiric therapy with doxycycline with a VERY rapid
improvement after only a few doses
– Save acute and convalescent sera for testing if possible.
34. TREATMENT
Doxycycline is a drug of choice for treating suspected Rocky
Mountain Spotted Fever in all patients
Dosage:
Children: 2mg/kg PO q12 on day 1
<45kg then
2-4mg/kg qd until afebrile for 2-3 days
Adults: 100mg PO q12 on day 1
then
100mg qd until afebrile for 2-3 days
35. Tetracycline – In Children
Permanent Teeth Staining
• There is a dose dependent relationship
between tetracycline and teeth color
• 5 courses of tetracycline are required to
produce a perceptable difference in tooth
color
• Doxycycline produces less tooth staining
40. Prevention - Deer Barriers
Limiting exposure to ticks is currently the
most effective method of prevention.
41. Case Presentation
A.A.A.J is 5-year-old girl from Rafah,
presented with 6 days complaint of
fever, and 4 days history of
generalized weakness, loss of
appetite and skin rash.
42. History of present illness
• 6 days back she was perfectly well when she started to
have high grade fever which was progressively
increasing to which she received paracetamol without
proper improvement.
• 2 days after she started to have skin rash more in lower
and upper limbs increasing with the spikes of fever
during that time she was refusing to eat so they sought
medical advice where she was given cephalexin and
paracetamol suppositories,
• after 3 days of treatment she came to E.R in our
hospital and admitted with the same complaint.
43. History
• There is past history of skin disease( Scabies) 6 months back and
improved after receiving a skin lotion.
• She was born as preterm 35 weeks with birth weight of 2000
grams and admitted to SCBU because of mild RDS.
• Parents are first degree cousins, there is a history of death of one
boy sibling at age of 15 months because of chest infection, the
other 4 living siblings (boys) are normal.
• They live in a 5-rooms house, they have animal pets behind the
rooms containing goats.
• She completed her vaccination schedule.
• Her developmental history is within normal.
44. Examination
• Vital signs: Temp.: 39°C, Pulse: 115/m., B.P: 105/55, R.R:
22/min.
• Weight: 17.5 kg, Height: 102 cm (25th %).
• She looks ill, febrile, oriented in time and place, no signs of
meningeal irritation.
• There is generalized rash including palms and soles.
• Throat is mildly congested.
• C.V.S: PPP, normal s1+s2, no murmur.
• Chest: fair A/E, no added sounds
• Abdomen: soft, no organomegaly.
• C.N.S: examination is normal.
48. Hospital Course
• On admission she was given:
Doxycycline tablets:
- first day: 50 mg BiD
- 2nd day onward: 50 mg daily
• Fever subsided on the 3rd day.
• Discharged after 5 days in good condition.