Spirochetes
- Gram-negative bacteria with spiral-shaped cells, which move via twisting motion (due to axial filaments in the flagella)
- Include Treponema spp., Borrelia spp., and Leptospira spp.
| | | | Table 4-8 Select Spirochete Infections | | Disease | | Organism/Vector | | Clinical Findings | | Treatment | | Lyme disease | | B. burgdorferi
Vector: tick Eastern USA, Great Lakes:Ixodes dammini (also known as I. scapularis)
Western US: Ixodes pacificus
Europe: Ixodes ricinus (reservoir: white-footed mouse)
Tick feeds on infected host (white footed mice, white tailed deer) → transmission to humans via infected tick saliva | | Early localized disease: flu-like symptoms + erythema migrans: expanding erythematous patch at site of tick bite with central clearing, occurs ~1–2 weeks after tick bite, average diameter 5 cm, disappears typically within 4 weeks without treatment
Early disseminated disease: oval-shaped widespread patches (satellite erythema migrans lesions) due to spirochetemia, neural involvement (facial nerve common), migratory joint pain, carditis
Chronic disease: persistent neurologic and rheumatologic symptoms, acrodermatitis chronic atrophicans: loss of subcutaneous fat with thin, atrophic skin | | Diagnosis: PCR, tissue culture, serologic evidence
Treatment: Adults, children (>8 years old): Doxycycline × 14–21 days, Pregnant women, children (<8 years old): Amoxicillin × 14–21 days | | Borrelial lymphocytoma (Lymphocytoma cutis) | | B. afzelli B. garinii (neither present in North America – only Europe) | | Firm bluish-red tumor or plaque appears most commonly on ear lobes of children or nipple/areolae in adults, less commonly involves genitalia, trunk, or extremities | | Doxycycline | | Relapsing fever (Louse-borne) | | B. recurrentis
Vector: body louse Pediculus humanus var. coporis | | Paroxysmal fevers, myalgias, no specific cutaneous findings | | Doxycycline | | Relapsing fever (Tick-borne) | | B. parkeri, B. hermsii
Vector: soft ticks Ornithodoros | | Same as louse-borne relapsing fever
Risk of Jarisch–Herxheimer reaction | | Doxycycline | | Leptospirosis (For Bragg fever) (Pretibial fever) (Weil disease) | | Leptospira interrogans
Direct skin contact with water contaminated by urine of infected animal | | Fever, headache, painful pretibial plaques, conjunctivitis, jaundice, ± diffuse exanthem | | Pencillin (macrolides and doxycycline also effective) | | | | | | | | |
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| | | | Table 4–9 Non-Veneral Treponemal Infections | | Disease | | Organism/Transmission | | Clinical Findings | | Yaws (Frambesia) | | Treponema pallidum (subspecies pertenue)
Transmission: direct contact with infections lesions | | – Primary: one to few erythematous papules at inoculation site (“mother yaw”) usually on lower leg of child → enlarges, ulcerates and disappears with resultant scar – Secondary: smaller “daughter yaws” lesions spread symmetrically over body – Tertiary: skin and skeletal changes (no CNS or cardiovascular problems): gummata, keratoderma, midfacial destruction, bony inflammation and damage, nodular lesions | | | | | | | Of note, mucosal yaws appear similar to condyloma lata | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Pinta (Carate) | | Treponema carateum
Transmission: direct contact with infections lesions (± possible insect vectors) | | –Primary: smooth papule at inoculation site
–Secondary: small psoriasiform yellowish-brown papules and plaques (pintids)
–Tertiary: depigmented vitiligo-like lesions over face, wrists, trochanteric areas | | Endemic syphilis (Bejel) | | Treponema pallidum (subspecies endemicum )
Transmission: direct skin contact | | –Primary: skin lesions rare
–Secondary: mucosal lesions including mucous patches, condylomata lata, and lymphadenopathy, ± osteitis, periostitis, bony damage, gummata (CNS and cardiovascular problems very rare) | Treatment for veneral and non-veneral treponematoses: 2.4 million units of benzathine PCN
| | | | | | | If PCN-allergic, can use doxycycline in same dosage as for venereal syphilis | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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