Cat-scratch disease

Disease/Syndrome
Cat-scratch disease
Category
Infection, Occupational
Acute/Chronic
Acute-Moderate (not life-threatening)
Synonyms
Cat-scratch fever; Benign lymphoreticulosis; Bartonella henselae infection
Biomedical References
Comments
INITIAL SYMPTOMS:
Papule at site of cat bite/scratch usually within 2 weeks of inoculation and development of regional lymphadenitis; [CCDM]

FINDINGS:
This subacute infection is usually self-limited. A red papule can be found at the site of a cat bite, lick, or scratch in 50%-90% of cases. Lymphadenitis develops. Some patients have prolonged high fever and lesions of the bone, liver, and spleen. Neurological complications occur in some patients. Fleas are known to transmit the pathogen from cats to cats, but not from cats to humans. [CCDM, p. 95-6] Several cases transmitted by ticks have been described. [Cecil, p. 1908] In addition to regional lymphadenopathy, some patients have fever. Atypical presentations include conjunctivitis in 6% of patients and neurological complications (meningoencephalitis, myelitis, and neuritis) in 2% of patients. Granulomas of the spleen and liver have been reported. [Merck Manual, p. 1244-5] Other presenting symptoms compiled from several case series are fatigue (20-45%), splenomegaly (8-12%), and headache (13%). Erythema nodosum and parotitis are possible complications. [ID, p. 1213, 1502] 85-90% of cases are typical: papule, blister, or nodule at inoculation site with painful regional lymphadenopathy (usually axillary or epitrochlear) >1-3 weeks after cat contact (scratched, bitten, or licked). 50% of patients have low-grade fever, malaise, and anorexia. Findings in atypical cases include eye involvement, neurological manifestations, and osteomyelitis. The disease (typical or atypical) resolves spontaneously without treatment after weeks or months in immunocompetent patients. [Harrison, p. 632]

SYNDROMES:
There are 3 main syndromes of cat-scratch disease: typical CSD (88%), Parinaud's oculoglandular syndrome (6%), and atypical CSD (6%). Patients with typical CSD have regional lymphadenopathy, and 1/3 of these patients have involvement at more than one site. Patients with typical CSD also have fever for several days (30% to 60%), fatigue (25%), and headache or sore throat (10%). The primary lesion is a papule, pustule, or blister that may resemble an insect bite. Lymph nodes suppurate in about one sixth of patients. About 10-15% of patients present with a systemic illness consisting of headache, weight loss, and hepatosplenomegaly. Atypical syndromes include hepatitis/splenitis, pneumonitis, osteitis, and neurologic syndromes (encephalopathy and neuroretinitis). Encephalopathy usually follows in cases with lymphadenopathy, and symptoms may include persistent headache, combativeness, restlessness, seizures, nuchal rigidity, cranial nerve palsies, ataxia, and coma. Fever may be present or absent. Encephalopathy is usually self-limited over several weeks to a year. Bartonella henselae is an important cause of neuroretinitis that usually resolves in 2-3 months. Other complications are arthritis, atypical pneumonia, hilar adenopathy, and thrombocytopenia. [PPID, p. 1229, 2654-7]

For updated text and symptoms of infectious diseases, see iddx.com.
Latency/Incubation
3 days to 2 weeks from scratch to primary lesion; 5 days to 1.5 months from scratch to lymphadenopathy; [CCDM]
Diagnostic
Detect antibodies (IFA or EIA) 1-2 wks after symptom onset; Immunodetection and PCR of tissue from lymph node biopsy; [CCDM] Difficult to culture; Warthin-Starry tissue stain; IFA> 1:256 (acute); > 1:800 (chronic); PCR: limited availability; [ABX Guide]
ICD-9 Code
078.3
ICD-10 Code
A28.1
Effective Antimicrobics
Yes

Symptoms/Findings, Job Tasks, and Agents Linked to This Disease

Job Tasks

High risk job tasks associated with this disease:

Agents

Hazardous agents that cause the occupational disease: