Title: Rocky Mountain spotted fever: From dog ticks to doxycycline
1Rocky Mountain spotted fever From dog ticks to
doxycycline
- David L. Swerdlow, MD
- Rickettsial Zoonoses Branch
- Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases
- National Center for Zoonotic, Vectorborne and
Enteric Diseases
2Tick-borne infectious diseases in the United
States
- Lyme disease
- Ehrlichioses
- Rocky Mountain spotted fever
- Babesioses
- Colorado tick fever
- Tularemia
- Tick-borne relapsing fever
3RMSF background
- The most severe rickettsial illness of humans,
caused by Rickettsia rickettsii - First specific notation of the disease in 1896
- Endemic to the Americas
- Until recently, 300-800 U.S. cases/year
4Rocky Mountain spotted fever why is it important?
- Widely distributed with significant morbidity and
mortality - Difficult to diagnose
- Rapid diagnosis and treatment prevents deaths
5General properties
- Small, coccobacillary bacteria
- Slow growing
- Intracellular
6Gimenez staining for R. rickettsii
7BACKGROUNDThe Primary Tick Vectors of RMSF
8RMSF Incidence by County, 1997-2002
9RMSF epidemiology and patient demographics
- Over 90 of cases occur during April-September
- Peridomestic acquisition may account for majority
of cases - Age-specific incidence highest in children,
disease more frequent in males - Case clusters occur in hyperendemic foci
10RMSF clinical manifestations
- Early high fever, severe headache, myalgia, and
gastrointestinal symptoms - Late rash, photophobia, confusion, ataxia,
seizures, cough, dyspnea, arrhythmias, jaundice,
severe abdominal pain - Thrombocytopenia, hyponatremia
- Long term sequelae CNS deficits, amputations
11RMSF the rash
- Generally not apparent until 2-5 days after onset
- of fever
- Begins as 1 to 5 mm macules, typically on ankles,
wrists, and forearms, spreads centripetally to
trunk - Petechial rash occurs on or after day 6
- Rash may be asymmetric, localized, or absent
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14Severe sequelae
15RMSF frequent initial diagnoses
1. Viral illness 2. Fever of undetermined
etiology 3. Bacterial sepsis 4. Upper or lower
respiratory tract infections, acute
appendicitis, cholecystitis
16Differential Diagnosis of Rocky Mountain Spotted
Fever
Disease Season History/ Onset Rash Other Features
Rocky Mountain Spotted fever Late spring/ summer Exposure to ticks, travel to endemic areas starts with fever and develops rash after 2 to 3 days Starts peripherally and spreads centrally most marked on extremities, usually involves the palms and soles. Often associated with thrombocytopenia and hyponatremia
Meningococcal infections Late winter/ early spring Often epidemics fever and rash usually appear within 24 hours Two patterns macular and petechial lesions, few in number and generalized in distribution. Gram-negative dipllococci in petechiae, buffy coat or in the CSF
Enteroviral Infections Summer-fall Febrile, illness in family or community, fever and rash often appear together Starts on face or trunk, may involve palms and soles. May be associated with aseptic meningitis
Measles Winter-spring Exposure to measles or killed measles vaccine, severe prodrome Starts on head and spreads to trunk and extremities Koplik spots during prodrome
17Confirmation of R. rickettsii
18Serologic diagnosis of RMSF
- 85 of patients lack diagnostic titers in the
first week of illness - As many as 50 of patients lack a diagnostic
titer 7-9 days after onset of illness - Need to test acute and convalescent samples (2-4
weeks apart) - Indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA)- four
fold rise in titers confirmatory - ELISA not quantitative so cant quantify
increases between acute and convalescent samples
19Deaths attributable to RMSF
- Case-fatality ratio as high as 20-30 in
untreated patients - CFR highest in older adults and males
- Disease kills otherwise healthy adults and
children - Clinical progression may be rapid (median time to
death 8 days)
20RMSF deaths in the United States, 1940-1997
140
100
50
10
1940
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
21RMSF treatment
- Tetracyclines the drugs of choice clinical
response within 24-72 h - Chloramphenicol an alternative therapy for some
patients with RMSF - Other broad-spectrum antimicrobials
characteristically ineffective
22Antimicrobial therapy of RMSF
Non-pregnant adult or child gt45 kg
Child lt45 kg
Pregnant adult or tetracycline allergic
Chloramphenicol 500 mg qid i.v.
Doxycycline 100 mg bid p.o. or i.v.
Doxycycline 4.4 mg/kg/day in 2 divided doses p.o.
or i.v.
Therapy should be continued at least 72 h after
defervescence AND until evidence of clinical
improvement
23RMSF prevention
- Disease awareness and recognition
- Use of protective clothing and repellents
- Avoid tick areas
- Antimicrobial prophylaxis following tick bite
not recommended - Careful inspection for ticks and prompt removal
(grace period)
24Prevention and Control
- Wear light-colored clothing
- Tuck your pants legs into
- your socks
- Use masking tape on your
- upper leg-sticky side up
- Apply repellant to
- discourage tick attachment
25Prevention and Control (cont.)
- Tick check and removal
- Transmission unlikely to occur in less than 6
hours - Use fine-tipped tweezers
26Surveillance and reporting
- RMSF is a nationally reportable disease
- Cases should be reported to state Health
Department - Reports then submitted to CDC
27RMSF Cases and Incidence
28Top Reporting States Cases
29Human Ehrlichiosis Cases
30Spread of Ehrlichiosis Cases, WI
2002
2005
31Spread of Ehrlichiosis Cases, MN
2005
2002
32Lyme Disease
33Explanations for Increases
34Summary
- RMSF is a potentially life-threatening disease,
endemic throughout much of the United States - Broad differential diagnoses, early disease
difficult to diagnose even for experienced
physicians - Confirmatory assays
- Serology
- Polymerase chain reaction
- Immunopathology
- Isolation
- Consider RMSF as a cause of unexplained fever in
spring and summer - Doxycycline the drug of choice, regardless of age
35RMSF in eastern Arizona
- Since 2002, 24 cases RMSF mostly children with 2
deaths in a small community - Incidence rate 300 times higher than expected
36Summary of investigationRh. sanguineus vector of
RMSF
- Dermacentor ticks not found
- High density of Rh. sanguineus ticks surrounding
patient homes and on dogs - Rh. sanguineus ticks found attached to patient
- Confirmed the presence of R. rickettsii in ticks
by PCR, sequencing/RFLP, culture - First reported evidence of RMSF associated with
Rhipicephalus sanguineus in the United States
37 Rhipicephalus sanguineus (Brown dog tick)
38Environmental Assessment
Typical peridomestic environment surrounding
case-patient homes, found to be heavily populated
by Rh. sanguineus ticks
39Collaborative Intervention
- Community and physician education
- Treatment of homes
- Treatment of dogs
- Animal control
40Get Rid of Ticks on Dogs
41Keep Ticks Off Children
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43Acknowledgments
- Christopher Paddock, MD
- John Openshaw
- Jennifer McQuiston, DVM