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| ROCKY MOUNTAIN SPOTTED FEVER   (Alternate Names = Mexican Spotted Fever & São Paulo Spotted Fever) (Contact)      Please
  CLICK on
  Image & underlined links for details:            Two strains of the disease, a mild and a virulent type,
  exist through most regions where the disease is a problem.  Mortality varies from around 80 percent
  for the virulent strain and about 4-6 percent for the mild strain.  The disease was named, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever"
  because of its apparent origin.  The
  causative agent is Rickettsia rickettsii.  It is not contagious, but highly infectious
  and transmitted to humans by ticks. 
  Service (2008) noted that is both transovarial and transstadial. Early
  investigations revealed that the disease is mainly an infection of small
  mammals, and large mammals, excluding humans, are not susceptible.  Principal tick species involved include Dermacentor andersoni, and to
  a restricted area Dermacentor sanguineus,
  which are the vectors for humans in western North and Central America.  Dermacentor variabilis
  is the vector tick in eastern North America, while in South America Amblyomma
  cajennense is the principal vector.  Other vector species undoubtedly exist, such as Dermacentor
  occidentalis and the rabbit tick, Haemaphysalis
  leporis-palustris, which does not attack humans but can
  maintain the Rickettsia in the
  rodent population.  Laboratory
  transmission trials have succeeded with additional vector species as well.        Studies have shown that the incubation period in humans
  after the bite of infectious ticks varies from 2 to 12 days.  Service (2008) reports that as an
  infective tick has to feed on a host for at least two hours before sufficient
  Rickettsiae are injected for
  the host to become infected, early tick removal may prevent
  transmission.  Although Matheson
  (1950) reported on a vaccine that gave some protection for almost one year,
  there was no mention of it by Service (2008).    LIFE CYCLE -
  Rocky Mountain Spotted 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. Dumler, J. S. & D. H. Walker.  2005. 
  Rocky mountain spotted fever: changing ecology and persisting
  virulence.  New England J. of Medicine       353: 
  551-53. 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. Jellison, W. L. 
  1945.  The geographical distribution
  of Rocky Mountain spotted fever and Nuttall's cottontail in the western
  United States.      U. S. Pub. Hlth. Repts. 60:  958-961. Matheson, R. 1950.  Medical Entomology.  Comstock Publ. Co, Inc.  610 p. Service, M.  2008. 
  Medical Entomology For Students. 
  Cambridge Univ. Press.  289 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. 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. Wolbach, S. B.  1919.  Studies on Rocky Mountain spotted fever.  J. Med. Res. 41:  1-197.   |