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Tick Bite (tick + bite)
Selected AbstractsThrombogenic Vasculopathy and Interstitial to Diffuse Dermal Neutrophilic Inflammation as a Histologic Manifestation of Tick Bite ReactionJOURNAL OF CUTANEOUS PATHOLOGY, Issue 1 2005Urvi Pajvani BS Ticks are ectoparasites that cause dermatologic disease both directly through physical trauma to the skin, salivary secretions, or remnant body parts, and indirectly through transmission of disease. Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, tularemia, and babesiosis are known tick-transmitted diseases. The histopathology related to a primary tick bite, similar to other arthropod bites, classically consists of a perivascular infiltrate composed of lymphocytes, neutrophils, histiocytes, plasma cells, and eosinophils in varying amounts. We describe five patients with a novel histologic reaction to embedded tick parts., Each case demonstrates a thrombotic vasculopathy consisting of intraluminal eosinophilic deposits that stain strongly with Periodic acid Schiff stain. The adjacent tissue shows dermal necrosis with surrounding interstitial to diffuse dermal neutrophilic inflammation. We postulate that diffuse dermal nutrophilic infiltrates in association with thrombogenic vasculopathy is an unusual histologic picture of tick bite reactions that may be attributable to remnant tick parts. [source] Diagnostic effectiveness of dermoscopy for tick biteJOURNAL OF THE EUROPEAN ACADEMY OF DERMATOLOGY & VENEREOLOGY, Issue 2 2010N Oiso No abstract is available for this article. [source] Clinical Features and Epidemiology of Tick Typhus in TravelersJOURNAL OF TRAVEL MEDICINE, Issue 2 2001Tomas Jelinek Background: Epidemiologic features of tick typhus among German travelers has not been surveyed recently. Methods: Clinical features, travel and medical histories in 78 patients with tick typhus who presented to a German outpatient clinic for Infectious and Tropical Diseases were investigated, in order to identify common epidemiological factors and potential strategies of prevention. Diagnosis was confirmed by serological detection of IgG- and IgM-antibodies to Rickettsia conorii by indirect immunofluorescence. Results: The majority of patients (71.8%) had visited southern Africa prior to presentation. All patients presented with fever as the main symptom. An eschar was still present in 68 patients (87.2%) with regional lymphadenitis in 19.2%. However, only a minority of patients (17.9%) remembered a tick bite at the location of the eschar. Conclusion: Efforts to reduce the incidence of tick typhus in travelers should focus on preventive measures targeting behavioral changes. Avoiding tick bites during travel to endemic areas appears to be the single most important prophylactic action. Taking this into consideration, it should be possible to decrease the number of travelers returning with tick typhus significantly by adequate pretravel counseling. [source] Early dissemination of Borrelia burgdorferi without generalized symptoms in patients with erythema migrans,APMIS, Issue 9 2001JARMO OKSI The diagnosis of erythema migrans (EM) is not always easy, and reports of culture- or PCR-confirmed diagnosis as well as reports of EM with simultaneous disseminated disease are few. Characteristics and incidence of EM in addition to frequency of early dissemination of B. burgdorferi were studied in the archipelago of South-Western Finland prospectively using questionnaires, skin biopsies and blood samples. Clinical EM was recognized in 82 patients (incidence 148/100000 inhabitants/year). Of skin biopsy samples, 35.5% were positive by PCR (the majority B. garinii), and 21.5% by cultivation (all B. garinii). Of blood samples, 3.8% were positive by PCR, and 7.7% by cultivation. Of the patients, 30.9% were seropositive at the first visit, and 52.9% 3 weeks later. Of the patients with laboratory confirmed diagnosis, the EM lesion was ring-like in 31.8% and homogenous in 65.9%. Dissemination of B. burgdorferi, based on culture or PCR positivity of blood samples, was detected in 11.0% of the patients. The frequency of generalized symptoms was nearly the same in patients with as in those without dissemination (22.2% vs 27.4%). Only 21.4% of the patients with culture-positive EM recalled a previous tick bite at the site of the EM lesion. We conclude that EM lesions are more often homogenous than ring-like. B. burgdorferi may disseminate early without generalized symptoms. [source] Inflammatory choroidal neovascular membrane in presumed ocular Lyme borreliosisACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 3 2009Radgonde Amer Abstract. Introduction:, Lyme disease is a multisystemic disease with protean ocular manifestations. We describe the occurrence of inflammatory choroidal neovascular membrane (CNVM) in two patients suffering from presumed Lyme disease. Methods:, Descriptive review of the clinical records of two patients. Results:, Patient 1: 16-year-old healthy male presenting with a visual acuity of counting fingers [oculus dexter (OD)] and 6/6 [oculus sinister (OS)] 3 months after a tick bite. He had papillitis and an exudative subretinal macular lesion OD. Treatment was started with intravenous (IV) ceftriaxone; a week later, IV methylprednisolone was administered with a tapering dose of oral steroids thereafter. Three months later, VA had improved to 3/60 OD. Patient 2: 38-year-old healthy female presenting with reduced left-eye vision (6/24) 6 weeks after a tick bite. She also suffered from erythema migrans and arthralgias. She had left-eye papillitis, macular haemorrhages and vascular sheathing. Treatment was started with IV ceftriaxone. One month later, there was profound loss of vision with development of CNVM. Treatment was declined by the patient and eventually retinal fibrosis developed. Conclusion:, Inflammatory CNVM has not been described previously in the setting of ocular Lyme borreliosis. We herein describe the occurrence of inflammatory CNVM in two patients whose diagnosis with Lyme disease was clinically based , both were sero-negative. Visual outcome in the two patients was profoundly impaired because of the ensuing macular scar. [source] Fatal Mediterranean spotted fever in GreeceCLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION, Issue 6 2010A. Papa Clin Microbiol Infect 2010; 16: 589,592 Abstract Forty-five days after the first confirmed and fatal Crimean,Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF) case in Greece in 2008, a female patient with similar signs and symptoms (high fever, thrombocytopaenia) and resident of the same area, was admitted to the University General Hospital of Alexandroupolis. Before admission, she had visited a local hospital where a cephalosporin was prescribed. A rash manifested over subsequent days, which was misdiagnosed as an allergy to the drug. Upon admission to the University Hospital, she was given further antibiotics, including doxycycline; a few hours later, ribavirin was added because CCHF was suspected. After the patient's death, rickettsiosis caused by Rickettsia conorii conorii (Meditteranean spotted fever; MSF) was diagnosed. Extremely high values of interleukin (IL)-1ra, IL-6, interferon-,-inducible protein-10, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 and an absence of tumour necrosis factor-, were observed. MSF is a potentially severe and even fatal disease resembling viral haemorrhagic fevers that has to be included in the differential diagnosis of febrile syndromes combined with thrombocytopaenia, even when a tick bite is not reported, and an eschar is absent. Physicians have to be aware of MSF in patients with severe disease who are returning from the Mediterranean area. [source] Human granulocytic ehrlichiosis in EuropeCLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION, Issue 12 2002J. R. Blanco Ehrlichiosis comprises a group of emerging tick-borne infectious diseases caused by obligate intracellular Gram-negative bacteria that infect leukocytes. Infections caused by members of the genus Ehrlichia have been described in animals and humans, but to date there are no convincing reports of the presence of other types of human ehrlichiosis different from human granulocytic ehrlichiosis (HGE) in Europe. The European vector is the same as that of Lyme borreliosis, the hard tick Ixodes ricinus, and HGE has a similar epidemiology to that of Borrelia burgdorferi infection. Across Europe, I. ricinus is infected to a variable extent (0.4,66.7%) with the causative agent Ehrlichia (Anaplasma) phagocytophila genogroup, and since its first description in Slovenia in 1997, details of 15 patients have been published. Diagnosis requires careful consideration of all circumstances and symptoms (history of tick bite and the presence of a flu-like syndrome with variable degrees of anemia, thrombocytopenia, and leukopenia, and elevated liver enzymes). Some differences can be seen between US and European HGE patients. European HGE cases have a less severe course, and the presence of morulae is uncommon. In Europe, verification of HGE has been based on PCR and immunofluorescence antibody tests, because no isolation from humans has been reported. [source] Clinical Features and Epidemiology of Tick Typhus in TravelersJOURNAL OF TRAVEL MEDICINE, Issue 2 2001Tomas Jelinek Background: Epidemiologic features of tick typhus among German travelers has not been surveyed recently. Methods: Clinical features, travel and medical histories in 78 patients with tick typhus who presented to a German outpatient clinic for Infectious and Tropical Diseases were investigated, in order to identify common epidemiological factors and potential strategies of prevention. Diagnosis was confirmed by serological detection of IgG- and IgM-antibodies to Rickettsia conorii by indirect immunofluorescence. Results: The majority of patients (71.8%) had visited southern Africa prior to presentation. All patients presented with fever as the main symptom. An eschar was still present in 68 patients (87.2%) with regional lymphadenitis in 19.2%. However, only a minority of patients (17.9%) remembered a tick bite at the location of the eschar. Conclusion: Efforts to reduce the incidence of tick typhus in travelers should focus on preventive measures targeting behavioral changes. Avoiding tick bites during travel to endemic areas appears to be the single most important prophylactic action. Taking this into consideration, it should be possible to decrease the number of travelers returning with tick typhus significantly by adequate pretravel counseling. [source] Guidelines for the diagnosis of tick-borne bacterial diseases in EuropeCLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION, Issue 12 2004P. Brouqui Abstract Ticks are obligate haematophagous acarines that parasitise every class of vertebrate (including man) and have a worldwide distribution. An increasing awareness of tick-borne diseases among clinicians and scientific researchers has led to the recent description of a number of emerging tick-borne bacterial diseases. Since the identification of Borrelia burgdorferi as the agent of Lyme disease in 1982, 11 tick-borne human bacterial pathogens have been described in Europe. Aetiological diagnosis of tick-transmitted diseases is often difficult and relies on specialised laboratories using very specific tools. Interpretation of laboratory data is very important in order to establish the diagnosis. These guidelines aim to help clinicians and microbiologists in diagnosing infection transmitted by tick bites and to provide the scientific and medical community with a better understanding of these infectious diseases. [source] |