File:  <rickettsiae.htm>                                                               <Medical
Index>       <General Index>        Site Description       Glossary     <Navigate
to Home>    
 
 
| RICKETTSIAE (Contact)     Please CLICK on
  underlined links for details:              The
  cosmopolitan rat mite, Liponyssus bacoti transmits
  a virus disease to humans and animals. 
  This mite has a very short life cycle that takes only about 12 days
  (Dove & Shelmire 1931).           Service
  (2008) reported that transovarial and transstadial transmission can occur in
  tick vectors.  Other important kinds
  of typhus are discussed separately according to the localities where they
  occur.   = = = = = = = = = = = =
  = = = = = = = =  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.   CDC. 
  2005.  Tularemia transmitted by
  insect bites.  Wyoming 2001-2003 MMWK
  Weekly 54(7):  170-3.   Dove, W., E. & B. Shelmire.  1931. 
  Tropical rat mite, Liponyssus
  bacoti Hirst, vector of endemic typhus.  J. Amer. Med. Assoc. 97: 
  1506-10   Dumler, J. S. & D. H. Walker.  2005. 
  Rocky mountain spotted fever: changing ecology and persisting virulence.  New England J. of Medicine       353:  551-53.   Ewing, H. E. 
  1923.  Our only common North
  American chigger, its distribution and nomenclature.  J. Agr. Res. 26:  401-03.   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.   Huebner, R. J., W. L. Jellison &
  C. Pomerantz.  1946.  Rickettsial pox.  IV.  Isolation of a Rickettsia apparently identical with the
  causative agent       of
  rickettsial pox.  U. S. Pub. Hlth.
  Repts. 61: 1677-1682.        Lane, R. S., J. Piesman & W. Burgdorfer.  1991. 
  Lyme borreliosis: relation of its causative agent to its vectors and
  hosts in North America       and
  Europe. Ann. Rev. Ent. 36:  587-609.   Legner, E. F.  1995.  Biological control of Diptera of medical and veterinary
  importance.  J. Vector Ecology 20(1):
  59_120.   Legner, E. F.  2000. 
  Biological control of aquatic Diptera.  p. 847_870. 
  Contributions to a Manual of Palaearctic Diptera,            Vol.
  1, Science  Herald, Budapest.  978 p.   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.   |