Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever


Risk

  • Incidence in USA: In most states, most commonly in the southeastern and south central states, there are ∼250-2200 cases per y.

  • Exposure to tick-infested terrain or dogs.

  • Severe infection; very young (<4 y), males and those with G6PD deficiency are at risk for death.

  • Mortality is 23% when untreated, 0.3–4.0% even with early treatment (within first 5 d).

  • Mortality increases with delay in Dx, older age (>60 y), male sex, very young age (<4 y), in blacks, chronic alcohol abuse, and those with G6PD deficiency.

Perioperative Risks

  • Increased mortality secondary to CV instability and noncardiogenic pulm edema

  • Increased risk of organ injury due to compounded insults

  • Increased bleeding tendency

Worry About

  • Severe intravascular volume depletion leading to shock

  • Lyte disturbances

  • Cardiac arrhythmias

  • Microvascular hemorrhage

  • Consumptive coagulopathy

  • Intraop respiratory and renal failure

Overview

  • Uncommon but severe; pathophysiology primarily due to endothelial cell prostaglandins, resulting in increased vascular permeability, edema, hypovolemia, and ischemia.

  • Initial symptoms appear in 1–3 d: Nonspecific, mimicking a viral syndrome with fever, headache, malaise, myalgias, arthralgias, and nausea; specific symptoms appear in 2–14 d, most in 5–7 d, mostly in the spring and summer months; pts generally have a known or possible tick bite.

  • Rash appears in most pts in 3–5 d, after onset of fever, initially maculopapular and progressing to petechiae; usually starts on the ankles and wrists, then palms and soles; finally spreads to the body and face; rash absent in 10–12%

  • Disease progression (more likely with delay in treatment) results in multiorgan involvement: Noncardiac pulm edema, encephalitis, myocarditis, hepatitis, bleeding (secondary to thrombocytopenia and direct vessel damage), and acute renal failure.

Etiology

  • Rickettsia rickettsii is transmitted via the saliva of ticks after 6–10 h of attachment and feeding or by exposure to infected tick hemolymph during the removal of ticks.

  • Incubation period ∼7 d (2–14 d).

  • Obligatory intracellular bacterium that replicates in vascular endothelial cells, causing direct cell injury with loss of vascular integrity.

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