Rickettsial Diseases
Rickettsial Diseases
Rickettsial Diseases
Zoonoses
(Rickettsial
diseases)
Introduction
Man
• The disease is not directly transmitted from person to person
Incubation period
• Distribution
• Murine typhus (MT) is a zoonoses.
• It is worldwide in distribution especially in areas of
high rat infestation.
• It appears to be more prevalent in South-East Asia
and Western Pacific countries than previously
recognised. In USA, cases tend to be scattered.
• Successful isolation of the causative agent from
rats, fleas and bandicoots was made at many places
in India.
• Focal infections are often associated with docks and
shipping places where rats abound.
Agent factors
• (a) Agent : Rickettsia typhi (R.mooseri).
• (b) Reservoir of infection : Rats are the reservoir (Rattus rattus and
R.norwegicus).
• Infection in rats is inapparent, long lasting and non-fatal.
Mode of transmission
• The infection spreads from rat to rat (X.cheopis) and possibly by the
rat louse.
• The actual mode of transmission is not by the bite of the rat flea, but
by,
• (i) the inoculation into skin of faeces of infected fleas, and
• (ii) possibly by inhalation of dried infective faeces.
• There is no direct man to man transmission.
• Once infected the flea remains so for life.
• The flea cannot transmit the rickettsiae transovarially.
• The transmission cycle may be shown as follows :
Man
Incubation period
• 1 – 2 weeks , commonly 12 days
Clinical features
• The clinical features resemble that of louse – borne typhus, but milder and
rarely fatal.
• The Weil – Felix reaction with Proteus OX-19 becomes positive in the 2nd
week.
Control measures
• (a) Treatment :Tetracycline is the only drug of choice. Since rickettsial
growth is enhanced in the presence of sulphonamides, these drugs should
not be given.
• (b) Control of fleas : Residual insecticides (e.g BHC, malathion) are
effective against rat fleas.
• Rodent control measures should be implemented in the affected areas.
• No murine typhus vaccine is currently available.
Indian Tick Typhus – Epidemiological
determinants
• Agent factors
• (a) Agent – The causative agent is Rickettsia conorii, a member of the spotted fever
group of rickettsiae, the best known member of which is R.rickettsia the causative
agent of Rocky Mountain spotted fever.
• (b) Reservoir of infection : The tick is the reservoir of infection.
• It is infective at all stages of it’s life cycle and remains infective for life (commonly 18
months)
• Various tick genera (e.g Rhipicephalus, Ixodes, Boophilus, Haemaphysalis) have been
incriminated as vectors.
• Infection in nature is maintained by transovarian and trans-stadial passage.
• The rickettsiae can be transmitted to dogs, various rodents and other animals, which
assist in maintaining the disease cycle.
Mode of transmission
• Man is only an accidental host
• He acquires infection by the bite of an infected tick
• Contamination of skin with crushed tissues or faeces of an infected tick may
also cause infection.
• The cycle of transmission is as follows :
Tick Tick Tick Tick
Dog Man
Tick Man
Incubation period
• Usually 3 to 7 days
Clinical features
• The patient usually gives history of a recent tick bite and a careful
examination will reveal a lesion or a eschar at the site of the bite.
• After an interval of 3 to 7 days, there is an acute onset of fever, which may
persist for 2 to 3 weeks, malaise and headache.
• A maculopapular rash appears on the third day.
• Unlike the rash in other rickettsial diseases, the rash appears first on the
extremities (ankles and wrist), moves centripetally and involves the rest of
the body.
• The clinical syndrome may be confused with atypical measles.
Control measures
• (a) Treatment : Broad spectrum antibiotics have proved to be effective.
• (b) Personal prophylaxis : Known tick infested areas should be avoided.
• Daily inspection of the body for ticks is particularly important for those
who are exposed to the risk of infection.
• Disinfection of dogs will minimise the tick population.
• Health education of the people in the mode of transmission by ticks, and
the means of personal protection is equally important.
Q fever
• Distribution
• Q fever is a highly infectious zoonotic disease with world-wide distribution.
• It occurs mainly in persons associated with sheep, goats, cattle or other
domestic animals
Agent factors
• (a) Agent : The causative agent is Coxiella burnetti
• It is fond in ticks which act as vectors as well as reservoir.
• (b) Animal hosts : Cattle, sheep, goats, ticks and some wild animals are natural
reservoirs.
• Infected animals shed the disease agent in the faeces and urine and heavily
contaminate the soil.
• The placenta of infected cows and sheep contain the infectious agent which
may create infectious aerosols during parturition.
• Camel, horses, dogs and many other domestic animals have been shown to be
capable of acting as maintenance hosts.
Mode of transmission
• Q fever differs from other rickettsial infections in that there is no arthropod
involved in it transmission to man.
• Transmission results from
• (i) inhalation of infected dust from soil previously contaminated by urine or
faeces of diseased animals. The organism can also be transmitted through
aerosols.
• (ii) the organism can also gain entry into the body through abrasions,
conjunctivae or ingestion of contaminated foods such as meat, milk and
milk products.
• In most countries, the respiratory route is regarded as most important.
Incubation period
• Usually 2 to 3 weeks
Clinical features
• The disease has an acute onset with fever, chills, general malaise and
headache.
• The clinical picture is one of influenza or non-bacterial pneumonia rather
than a typhus fever.
• There is no rash or local lesion.
• The infection can cause pneumonia, hepatitis, encephalitis and rarely
endocarditis.
• Inapparent infections also occur.
Control measures
• The organisms multiply in the cells lining the intestinal tract of the louse
and begin to appear in 3 to 5 days in the louse faeces.
• Man acquires the disease not by the bite of the louse, but
• (i) by scratching and inoculating himself with the infected louse faeces.
• (ii) by crushing an infected louse on this person.
• (iii) possibly by inhalation of infected louse faeces or dust.
• The infected louse after 10 – 14 days of existence dies of the infection.
• In humans, the organism can persist for many years as latent infection
without any symptoms, and the disease may appear later as Brill-Zinsser
disease, and can be transmitted to other humans by the louse.
• The control measures comprise anti-louse measures and improvements in
personal hygiene and living conditions.
• Under the International Health Regulations, louse borne typhus is subject
to international surveillance.
• 2.Rickettsial Pox
• Man gets the infection through the bite of certain infected mites, which
are found on mice (Mus musculus).
• Transovarial transmission occurs in the mite.
• The mouse acts as true reservoir as well as vector.
• Rickettsial pox may be confused with atypical cases of chickenpox.
• 3.Trench fever
• This disease is limited to Central Europe.
• The vector is louse and the disease is transmitted by louse faeces.
• Man is the only known reservoir.