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| SCRUB TYPHUS (Contact)     Please CLICK on
  Image & underlined links for details:   
   LIFE CYCLE (See Diagram)          Trombiculid mites have a complex life cycle and different
  terms have been applied to the developmental stages, but the terminology used
  by Service (2008) is applied as follows: 
  Adults of this group are not parasitic but rather inhabit the soil
  where they feed on other arthropods. 
  During warm weather a female mite may lay up to five eggs daily on
  organic material located on the soil surface, in field grasses, etc.  "Deutorum" larvae with six legs
  emerge but initially do not leave the egg shell (the
  "Deutovum").  Activity
  begins about a week later when the mites swarm all over the soil and
  grasses.  They try to attach to
  mammals and birds as well as to people with which they come into
  contact.  They gather around soft and
  moist areas of a host.          The larvae then penetrate into the skin, injecting saliva
  that destroys cells.  They feed on
  lymphal fluid instead of blood.  The continued
  release of saliva then results a nasty skin reaction.  Some species spend a whole month on a
  host, but the vectors of Scrub Typhus remain on a host for only
  about a week.  When fully fed the
  larvae exit the host and drop to the ground where they bury into the soil or
  under leaf litter, etc.  There they change
  into a "Protonymph," which moults within week and gives rise to a
  "Deutonymph" with eight legs. 
  The deutonymphs like the adults feed for a couple of weeks on
  arthropods in the soil.  Feeding stops
  and the nymphs change into a "tritonymph" that moults after about
  two weeks giving rise to the adult stage. 
  The total life cycle generally takes up to two months, but sometimes
  8-10 months are required.          Because nymphs and adults feed on other arthropods they
  require habitats where there are sufficient arthropods present to sustain
  them.  Service (2008) noted that ideal
  habitats are often produced when vegetation is cleared for agriculture or
  wood products.          A larva will remain on only one host during its lifetime,
  so transmission does not occur between people by them.  Rather the nymphs and adult mites are
  vectors.  Transovarial transmission among
  mites insures virus persistence in their population (See Service 2008 for details
  about transmission).   CONTROL          Repellents have been recommended for control, as it is
  difficult to effectively attack the mites. 
  Once principal habitats among the vegetation are discovered these can be
  sprayed with insecticides or even destroyed by burning.       = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
  = =  Key References:     <medvet.ref.htm>    <Hexapoda>   Azad, A. F.  1986.  Mites
  of public health importance and their control.  WHO/VBC/86.931. Geneva, Switzerland Frances, S. P., D. Watcharapichat, D. Phulsuksombati
  & P. Tanskul.  2000.  Transmission of Orientia tsutsugamushi, the aetiological       agent for scrub typhus, to co-feeding
  mites.  Parasitology 120:  601-607. Hengbin, G., C. Min, T.
  Kaihua & T. Jiaqi.  2006.  The foci of scrub typhus and strategies of
  prevention in the spring in :ingtan Island, Fujian       Province.   Ann. New York Acad. Sci. 1078:  188-196. Kawamura, A., H. Tanaka & A. Tamura
  (eds.).  1996.  Tsutsugamushi Disease: an Overview.  Tokyo Univ. Press. Matheson, R. 1950.  Medical Entomology.  Comstock Publ. Co, Inc.  610 p. Ogawa, M., T. Hagiwara, T. Kishimoto et al.  2002.  Scrub typhus in Japan: epidemiology and clinical features of
  cases reported in 1998.        Amer. J. Trop. Med. & Hyg. 67:  162-65. Roberts, S. H. &
  J. H. Zimmerman.  1980.  Chigger mites:  efficacy of control with two pyrethroids.  J. Econ. Ent. 73:  811-812. Sasa, M.  1961. 
  Biology of chiggers.  Ann. Rev.
  Ent. 6:  221-244. Service, M.  2008. 
  Medical Entomology For Students. 
  Cambridge Univ. Press.  289 p Strickman, D. 
  2001.  Scrub typhus.  IN: 
  The Encyclopedia of Arthropod-Transmitted Infections of Man and
  Domesticated Animals.  CABI,       Wallingford,  pp. 456-62  Takahashi, M., M. Misumi, H. Urakami et
  al.  2004.  Mite vectors (Acari: Trombiculidae) of
  scrub typhus in the new endemic area in northern       Kyoto, 
  Japan.  J. Med. Ent. 41:  107-114. Takahashi, M., M. Murata, H. Misumi, E. Hori,  A. Kawamura. & H. Tanaka.  1994. 
  Failed vertical transmission of Rickettsia
  tsutsugamushi        
  (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae) acquired from rickettsemic mice by
  Leptotrombidium pallidum (Acari: Trombiculidae).  J. Med. Ent.        31:  212-16. Traub, R. & C.
  L. Wissemann.  1968.  Ecological considerations in scrub typhus.
  1> Emerging concepts.  Bull. WHO
  39:  209-218. Traub, R. & C. L.
  Wissemann.  1974.  The ecology of chigger-borne
  ricksettsiosis (scrub-typhus).  J.
  Med. Ent. 11:  237-303. Walter, D. E. & H.
  C. Proctor.  1999.  Mites: Ecology, Evolution &
  Behavior.  Univ. of New South Wales
  Press, Sydney.   |