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Updated: Dec 23 2021

[Blocked from Release] Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever

Images
https://upload.medbullets.com/topic/120065/images/rmsf_001.jpg
https://upload.medbullets.com/topic/120065/images/af_americandogtick.jpg
  • Snapshot
    • 12-year-old boyscout who returned from a summer camping trip in Oklahoma one week ago presents with fever, lethargy, headache, and abdominal pain. Petechial lesions are noted on the palms of his hands and feet.
  • Introduction
    • Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever is a disease caused by infection with Rickettsia rickettsii
    • Transmitted by the American dog tick (Dermacentor variabilis)
    • Name is misleading, as the disease is also endemic to the U.S East Coast
      • Oklahoma and North Carolina have the highest incidence.
    • Life cycle
      • organism is transmitted via tick bite
      • invades the endothelial lining of capillaries
      • causes a small vessel vasculitis, as evidenced by the petechial rash
    • Incubation time following a bite ranges from 2 to 12 days before patients have symptoms
  • Presentation
    • Symptoms
      • prodrome includes
        • headache
        • malaise
        • fever
      • rash appears 2-6 days later on the extremities (wrists/ankles)
        • spreads centrally to palms/soles and trunk
    • Physical exam
      • erythematous maculopapular rash appears
      • rash may lead to cutaneous necrosis
      • altered mental status and/or coma may be observed in late stages
  • Evaluation
    • Diagnosis is primarily clinical based on fever, rash, and history of tick exposure
    • Indirect immunoflourescence
      • of skin biopsy may identify pathogen
    • Serologies
      • may identify immune response to Rickettsia rickettsii
  • Differential
    • Meningococcemia, Lyme Disease, endocarditits, hemorrhagic fever (Ebola, Hanta), vasculitis
  • Treatment
    • Medical
      • doxycycline
        • indications
          • first-line therapy in the treatment of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (RMSF) for:
            • non-pregnant adults
            • children
      • chloramphenicol
        • indications
          • used in treatment of RMSF in pregnant women and those with severe adverse reactions to doxycycline (e.g., toxic epidermal necrolysis)
  • Complications
    • May lead to coma and death when identified too late
  • Prevention
    • Increased awareness of tick bite exposure
  • Prognosis
    • Good to excellent when identified and treated early
    • Poor to fatal when detected late
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