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| AUSTRALIAN "Q" FEVER DISEASE (Contact)   Please
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  underlined links for details:   
          The principal
  reservoir host in Australia is the bandicoot rat, Isodon torosus. 
  The tick Haemaphysalis humeroso
  was the main vector.  Although this
  tick species only bites humans infrequently it is thought that it maintains
  the reservoir and that Ixodes holocyclus
  (a frequent biter of humans) is a primary vector.  Other potential tick vectors are Haemaphysalis bispinosa and Rhipicephalus
  sanguineus.          The
  rickettsiae develop in the epithelium lining of the intestines of the tick so
  that the lumen and fecal wastes are highly charged.  The feces are highly infectious even when dry, especially to
  broken or injured skin.  Transmission
  is only through fecal wastes of infected ticks entering the wounds or by way
  of the respiratory tract.          In North
  America Coxiella burnetii has
  been isolated from the ticks Dermacentor
  andersoni, D.
  occidentalis and Amblyomma
  americanum, and Otobius
  megnini.           Matheson
  (1950) reported that during World War II outbreaks of "Q" fever
  occurred among soldiers in Italy and the Balkans.  Studies indicated the existence of several closely related
  strains of the Rickettsia.          Control
  involves precautionary behavior, especially avoiding inhalation around
  infected animals and carcasses.    LIFE CYCLE:  Australian "Q" Fever   = = = = = = = = = = = =
  = = = = = = = =  Key References:     <medvet.ref.htm>    <Hexapoda>   Camicas, J. L., J. . Hervy, F. Adam & P. C.
  Morel.  1998.  The ticks of the world (Acarida,
  Ixodida):  Nomenclature, Described
  Stages, Hosts,      Distribution.  Paris: Editions de l'ORSTOM. Cox, H. R.  1940. 
  Rickettsia diaporica
  & American "Q" fever. 
  Amer. J. Trop. Med. 20: 
  463-469. Davis, Gordon E. 
  1943.  American Q fever;
  experimental transmission by the argasid ticks Ornithodoros moubata and O.
  hermsi.        U. S. Pub. Hlth. Repts 58:  984-987. Derrick, E. H.  1939.  "Q" fever entity. 
  Med. J. Australia 2:  281-299. Derrick, E. H.  1939.  Rickettsia burneti:  the cause of "Q" fever.  Med. J. Australia 2:  14. Derrick, E. H.  1944. 
  The epidemiology of "Q" fever.  J. Hyg. 43:  357-361. Gammons, M. & G.
  Salam.  2002.  Tick removal.  Amer. Fam. Physician 66: 
  643-45. Gothe, R., K. Kunze
  & H. Hoogstraal.  1979.  The mechanisms of pathogenicity in the
  tick paralyses.  J. Med. Ent. 16:  357-69. Hoogstraal, H.  1966. 
  Ticks in relation to human diseases caused by viruses.  Ann. Rev. Ent. 11:  261-308. Hoogstraal, H.  1967. 
  Ticks in relation to human diseases caused by Rickettsia species.  Ann. Rev. Ent. 12:  377-420. Matheson, R. 1950.  Medical Entomology.  Comstock Publ. Co, Inc.  610 p. Needham, G. R. & P.
  D. Teel.  1991.  Off-host physiological ecology of ixodid
  ticks.  Ann. Rev. Ent. 36:  313-52. Parola, P. & D. Raoult.  2001. 
  Tick-borne typhuses.  IN:  The Encyclopedia of arthropod-transmitted
  Infections of Man and Domesticated       Animals. ed. M. W. Service,
  Wallingford: CABI:  pp. 516-24. Service, M.  2008. 
  Medical Entomology For Students. 
  Cambridge Univ. Press.  289 p. Sonenshine, D. E., R. S. Lane & W.
  L. Nicholson. 2002.  Ticks
  (Ixodida).  IN:  Medical & Veterinary Entomology, ed. G. Mullen & L.
  Durden,       Ambsterdam Acad. Press.  pp 517-58. Sonenshine, D. E. &
  T. N. Mather (eds.)  1994.  Ecological Dynamics of Tick-Borne
  Zoonoses.  Oxford Univ. Press, New
  York. Steer, A., J. Coburn & L. Glickstein.  2005. 
  Lyme borreliosis.  IN:  Tick-Borne Diseases of Humans, ed. J. L.
  Goodman, D. T. Dennis & D. E.      
  Sonenshine.  Washington, DC:
  ASM Press.     |