Boutonneuse fever

Disease/Syndrome
Boutonneuse fever
Category
Infection, Occupational
Acute/Chronic
Acute-Moderate (not life-threatening)
Synonyms
Mediterranean tick fever, Mediterranean spotted fever, Marseilles fever, Kenya tick typhus, India tick typhus, Israeli tick typhus; Rickettsia conorii infection;
Biomedical References
Comments
INITIAL SYMPTOMS:
Fever, eschar at site of tick bite, regional lymphadenopathy, and rash starting on the extremities--affects palms/soles; rash may be petechial; [ID, p. 59, p. 1490]

FINDINGS:
The eschar begins as a 2-5 mm ulcer and is usually present with the onset of fever. The maculopapular rash follows on days 4-5. The rickettsial infections are characterized by a vasculitis that can lead to organ failure (heart, renal, and respiratory), bleeding, and neurological complications. [CCDM, p. 514-20] The disease is similar to Rocky Mountain spotted fever, but is less severe. [ID, p. 1490] About 10% of patients develop deep venous thromboses late in the course of the illness. In fatal cases, the infection causes vascular injury to many organs including the kidneys, liver, lungs, GI tract, heart, and brain (meningoencephalitis). The percentage of findings in cases series are: tache noire (72%), myalgia (36%), petechial rash (10%), conjunctivitis (9%), stupor (10%), meningismus (11%), splenomegaly (6%), hepatomegaly (13%), jaundice (2%), cough (10%), dyspnea (21%), myocarditis (11%), increased ALT (39%), thrombocytopenia (35%), and azotemia (6%). [PPID, p. 2203; Table 188-1] CNS complications of Rocky Mountain spotted fever and other severe spotted fever infections include meningoencephalitis, seizures, and coma. Signs of pulmonary complications are cough, infiltrates, pleural effusions, and ARDS. [PPID, p. 3271] Direct inoculation of the eye with the blood of an infected tick can cause Parinaud's oculoglandular syndrome. [Guerrant, p. 1005] Lymphadenopathy is present in a minority of cases. Also present are rash (97%) and eschar (50%). [Harrison ID, p. 728] Regional lymphadenopathy is rare. [Cohen, p. 1808] A malignant form of the disease (purpuric rash, shock, and multiple organ dysfunction) may occur in susceptible patients (alcoholic, diabetic, AIDS, debilitated). [Cecil, p. 1958] Nonspecific laboratory findings for rickettsial species infections include elevated transaminases, thrombocytopenia, and leukopenia or leukocytosis. [ABX Guide: Rickettsia species] Fatality rates without treatment: Rocky Mountain (20-25%); Mediterranean spotted fever (1-2.5%); [Cohen, p. 1808]

For updated text and symptoms of infectious diseases, see iddx.com.
Latency/Incubation
7 days (mean); [PPID, p. 2203] 2-21 days; [CCDM, p. 518]
Diagnostic
Serology (Indirect immunofluorescence assay) becomes positive 2nd or 3rd week of illness; Older Weil-Felix test not recommended; PCR of blood; Biopsy immunostaining or PCR; Culture for confirmation; [CCDM]
ICD-9 Code
082.1
ICD-10 Code
A77.1
Effective Antimicrobics
Yes

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

Agents

Hazardous agents that cause the occupational disease: