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First documentation of Rickettsia conorii infection (strain Indian tick typhus) in a traveler. (Letters).


To the Editor: Spotted fever group rickettsiae are gram-negative intracellular bacilli associated with arthropods, mainly ticks, as vectors. To date, 12 tick-borne rickettsioses Rickettsioses

Often severe infectious diseases caused by several diverse and specialized bacteria, the rickettsiae and rickettsia-like organisms. The best-known rickettsial diseases infect humans and are usually transmitted by parasitic arthropod vectors.
 are recognized worldwide, seven since 1991 (1). Indian tick typhus (ITT) is a tick-borne rickettsiosis prevalent in India (1). Although the disease has been recognized clinically, cases have been documented only rarely, and then mainly with nonspecific serologic tools, such as the Weil Felix test. We report the first serologically documented case of infection caused by Rickettsia conorii (strain ITT) in a French traveler returning from India.

In September 1999, a 25-year-old woman living in France was hospitalized with a 4-day history of fever, headache, vertigo, malaise, and disturbance of vision, followed 3 days later by arthromyalgia and a rash. On the day of admission, she had returned from a 1-month stay in India. She reported a number of bites by unidentified arthropods during her trip. Her temperature was 40 [degrees] C with relative bradycardia (72/minute). Physical signs included pharyngitis pharyngitis

Inflammation and infection (usually bacterial or viral) of the pharynx. Symptoms include pain (sore throat, worse on swallowing), redness, swollen lymph nodes, and fever.
, transient epistaxis epistaxis /ep·i·stax·is/ (-stak´sis) nosebleed; hemorrhage from the nose, usually due to rupture of small vessels overlying the anterior part of the cartilaginous nasal septum.

ep·i·stax·is
n.
, bilateral conjunctivitis conjunctivitis (kənjəngtəvī`təs), inflammation or infection of the mucosal membrane that covers the eyeball and lines the eyelid, usually acute, caused by a virus or, less often, by a bacillus, an allergic reaction, or an , and a maculopapular rash including petechiae Petechiae
Tiny purple or red spots on the skin associated with endocarditis, resulting from hemorrhages under the skin's surface.

Mentioned in: Endocarditis, Hantavirus Infections, Hemorrhagic Fevers, Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura

, mostly on the trunk and lower limbs but also on her palms and the soles of her feet. There was no inoculation eschar eschar /es·char/ (es´kahr)
1. a slough produced by a thermal burn, by a corrosive application, or by gangrene.

2. tache noire.


es·char
n.
.

Clinical laboratory findings included increased alanine aminotransferase (56 UI/L), lactate dehydrogenase (1,008 UI/L), C-reactive protein (130 mg/L), and erythrocyte sedimentation rate Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate Definition

The erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), or sedimentation rate (sed rate), is a measure of the settling of red blood cells in a tube of blood during one hour.
 (74 mm/hour). The kaolin cephalin ceph·a·lin or keph·a·lin
n.
Any of a group of phospholipids having hemostatic properties and found especially in the nervous tissue of the brain and spinal cord.
 time was 43 seconds (control 34 seconds). Hemoglobin was 10.5 g/dL, and the mean corpuscular volume mean corpuscular volume
n. Abbr. MCV
The average volume of red blood cells in erythrocyte indices, calculated from the hematocrit and the red blood cell count.
 was 99.7 fL. Repeated blood smears, blood cultures, and a stool bacterial culture disclosed no pathogens. Serologic tests, including assays for rickettsioses, were negative.

The patient received 5 days of empirical doxycycline treatment (200 mg/day), intravenously for the first 2 days because of vomiting. She became afebrile afebrile /afe·brile/ (a-feb´ril) without fever.

a·feb·rile
adj.
Apyretic.



afebrile

without fever.

afebrile adjective Feverless
 2 days after therapy was begun. Subsequently, all her symptoms resolved. Ten days later, the immunofluorescence assay for antibodies reactive with spotted fever group rickettsiae showed increased levels of immunoglobulin (Ig) M (1:256) and IgG (1:1024) against R. conorii Seven and IgM (1:512) and IgG (1:2048) against R. conorii ITT. Serologic findings were completed by Western blot performed with acute-phase serum, which showed a band of approximately 135 kDa against R. conorii ITT, but not R. conorii Seven. Cross-absorption studies were performed with convalescent-phase sera. Sera were absorbed with R. conorii Seven and R. conorii ITT antigens and then tested by immunofluorescence assay for remaining antibodies reactive to both antigens. When absorption was performed with R. conorii ITT antigens, serologic testing was negative for antibodies to both R. conorii Seven and R. conorii ITT antigens. However, when absorption was done with R. conorii Seven antigens, subsequent serologic testing was negative for antibodies to R. conorii Seven, but antibodies to R. conorii ITT remained (1:100). Thus, Western blotting and cross-absorption strongly supported that the infection was due to R. conorii ITT.

Although ITT was clinically described at the beginning of the century, the etiologic agent has never been isolated from patients in India, nor has a case been diagnosed by strain-specific serologic testing. A spotted fever group rickettsia rickettsia (rĭkĕt`sēə), any of a group of very small microorganisms, many disease-causing, that live in vertebrates and are transmitted by bloodsucking parasitic arthropods such as fleas, lice (see louse), and ticks.  was isolated in 1950 from a brown dog tick brown dog tick

see rhipicephalussanguineus.
, Rhipicephalus sanguineus, collected in India (2) and assumed to be the agent causing ITT. It was designated as Rickettsia conorii, the agent of Mediterranean spotted fever, which occurs all around the Mediterranean and is transmitted by the same tick species. However, the disease as it appears in India differs from the common description of Mediterranean spotted fever. The rash is frequently purpuric pur·pu·ric
adj.
Relating to or affected with purpura.


purpuric adjective Referring to purpura, see there
, and an inoculation eschar at the bite site is rarely found, as in this case. The disease as known in India is mild to moderately severe, although our case may be considered severe (1,3,4).

Strain differences within the species R. conorii may account for differences in clinical presentation. Although different isolates of R. conorii can be distinguished antigenically (5-7), molecular taxonomic methods demonstrated recently that these rickettsiae are closely related and cluster together (8-10). Thus, the species is considered by many as R. conorii, including four serovars: R. conorii with three type strains, Seven being the one most commonly identified in our laboratory in isolates from France, Portugal, North Africa (D. Raoult, unpub, data), Kenya, and Morocco (apparently a unique isolate); R. conorii Indian tick typhus; R. conorii Astrakhan Astrakhan, city, Russia
Astrakhan (ăs`trəkăn, Rus. ä`strəkhənyə), city (1990 pop. 521,000), capital of Astrakhan region, SE European Russia.
, and R. conorii Israel.

Immunofluorescence is the reference diagnostic method for associated rickettsioses, but cross-reactivity among related isolates confounds interpretation of serologic tests. Cross-absorption tests, especially in conjunction with Western blot immunoassays, can be used to determine the rickettsia species involved, as reported in this case. The higher sensitivity of Western blots compared with immunofluorescence has been demonstrated previously in our laboratory; it is frequently positive in acute-phase sera when antibodies cannot be detected by immunofluorescence (11). In this case, we used R. conorii Seven as the type strain of R. conorii because it is most closely related to R. conorii ITT phylogenetically phy·lo·ge·net·ic  
adj.
1. Of or relating to phylogeny or phylogenetics.

2. Relating to or based on evolutionary development or history: a phylogenetic classification of species.
 (10). Although these techniques are time-consuming and available only in specialized reference laboratories, they provide data of importance that allow a better understanding of the epidemiology of rickettsioses.

Philippe Parola, * ([dagger]) Florence Fenollar, ([dagger]) Sekene Badiaga, * Philippe Brouqui, * ([dagger]) and Didier Raoult ([dagger])

* Service des Maladies Infectieuses et Tropicales, CHU Nord, Marseille, France; and ([dagger]) Unite des Rickettsies, Faculte de Medecine, CNRS UMR 6020, Marseille, France

References

(1.) Raoult D, Roux V. Rickettsioses as paradigms of new or emerging infectious diseases. Clin Microbiol Rev 1997;10:694-719.

(2.) Philip CB, Hughes LE, Rao KNA, Kalra SL. Studies on "Indian tick typhus" and its relation to other human, typhus-like rickettsioses. Arquivos do V Congresso International de Microbiologia, Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, city, Brazil
Rio de Janeiro (rē`ō də zhänā`rō, Port. rē` thĭ zhənĕē`r
, 17-24 de Augosto 1950. 1958;1:571.

(3.) Panda GS. Rickettsioses in India. In: Kazar J, Toman R, editors. Rickettsiae and rickettsial diseases. Bratislava: Slovak Academy of Sciences The Slovak Academy of Sciences SAV (in Slovak Slovenská akadémia vied) is the main scientific and research institution in Slovakia fostering basic and strategic basic research. It was founded in 1942, closed after WWII, and then refounded in 1953. ; 1996. p. 106-9.

(4.) Jayaseelan E, Rajendran SC, Shariff S, Fishbein D, Keystone JS. Cutaneous eruptions in Indian tick typhus. Int J Dermatol 1991;30:790-4.

(5.) Philip RN, Casper EA, Burgdorfer W, Gerloff RK, Hughes LE, Bell EJ. Serologic typing of rickettsiae of the spotted fever group by microimmunofluorescence. J Immunol 1978; 121:1961-8.

(6.) Goldwasser RA, Steiman Y, Klingberg W, Swartz TA, Klingberg MA. The isolation of strains of rickettsiae of the spotted fever group in Israel and their differentiation from other members of the group by immunofiuorescence methods. Scand J Infect Dis 1974;6:53-62.

(7.) Beati L, Finidori JP, Gilot B, Raoult D. Comparison of serologic typing, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis protein analysis, and genetic restriction fragment length polymorphism restriction fragment length polymorphism
n. Abbr. RFLP
Intraspecies variations in the length of DNA fragments generated by the action of restriction enzymes and caused by mutations that alter the sites at which these enzymes act, changing
 analysis for identification of rickettsiae: characterization of two new rickettsial rickettsial /rick·ett·si·al/ (ri-ket´se-al) pertaining to or caused by rickettsiae.

rick·ett·si·al
adj.
Relating to, or caused by a member of the genus Rickettsia.
 strains. J Clin Microbiol 1992;30:1922-30.

(8.) Roux V, Rydkina E, Eremeeva M, Raoult D. Citrate synthase gene comparison, a new tool for phylogenetic analysis, and its application for the rickettsiae. Int J Syst Bacteriol 1997;47:252-61.

(9.) Fournier PE, Roux V, Raoult D. Phylogenetic analysis of spotted fever group rickettsiae by study of the outer surface protein rOmpA. Int J Syst Bacteriol 1998;48:839-49.

(10.) Roux V, Raoult D. Phylogenetic analysis of members of the genus Rickettsia using the gene encoding the outer-membrane protein rOmpB. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 2000;50:1449-55.

(11.) Lascola B, Raoult D. Laboratory diagnosis of rickettsioses: current approaches to diagnosis of old and new rickettsial diseases. J Clin Microbiol 1997;35:2715-27.
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Author:Raoult, Didier
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 1, 2001
Words:1225
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