Rickettsial diseases in children

In a tropical country like India, fevers are caused by different etiological agents. Rickettsial infections, which have a global distribution is one of the differential diagnosis in such cases and are reported from almost all parts of India. Rickettsial diseases widely vary in severity from self-limited mild illnesses to fulminating life-threatening infections. They are obligate intracellular gramnegative coccobacillary forms that multiply within eukaryotic cells which makes it difficult to culture them on artificial culture medium. With globalization there is rapid spread of disease across the continents and therefore, skills for diagnosis and management of the disease attains global importance. Rickettsial diseases can be clinically classified as Spotted Fever group, typhus group, distinctive clinical rickettsiae and emerging rickettsiae. The clinical course will have incubation period, stage non-specific clinical signs and symptoms followed by typical/classical features depending on the type of rickettsiae infecting a person. However the clinical manifestation varies from one geographical area to another area for same species. The rickettsial diseases once thought to have been eradicated from India are re-emerging in many parts of our country. Their presence has recently been documented in at least eleven states of our country. Greater clinical awareness, a higher index of suspicion, better use of available diagnostic tools would increase the frequency with which rickettsial diseases are diagnosed.

[1]  H. M. Golinevich,et al.  Rickettsial Diseases , 2016, Red Book Atlas of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, 3rd Ed.

[2]  A. Bhalla,et al.  Tropical fevers: Management guidelines , 2014, Indian journal of critical care medicine : peer-reviewed, official publication of Indian Society of Critical Care Medicine.

[3]  L. Blanton Rickettsial infections in the tropics and in the traveler , 2013, Current opinion in infectious diseases.

[4]  R. D. Kulkarni,et al.  Rickettsiosis: a cause of acute febrile illness and value of Weil-Felix test. , 2013, Indian journal of public health.

[5]  A. Rathi,et al.  Rickettsial diseases in Indian context , 2013 .

[6]  V. Mittal,et al.  Serological evidence of rickettsial infections in Delhi , 2012, The Indian journal of medical research.

[7]  N. Rathi,et al.  Rickettsial infections: Indian perspective , 2010, Indian pediatrics.

[8]  J. Werren,et al.  Evolution and diversity of Rickettsia bacteria , 2009, BMC Biology.

[9]  Batra Hv Spotted fevers & typhus fever in Tamil Nadu. , 2007 .

[10]  D. Raoult,et al.  Scrub Typhus in Himalayas , 2006, Emerging infectious diseases.

[11]  R. Kashyap,et al.  Relevance of Weil-Felix test in diagnosis of scrub typhus in India. , 2006, The Journal of the Association of Physicians of India.

[12]  M. Gupta,et al.  Investigation of an outbreak of scrub typhus in the himalayan region of India. , 2005, Japanese journal of infectious diseases.

[13]  P. Garner,et al.  Antibiotics for treating scrub typhus. , 2002, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[14]  Daniel Strickman,et al.  The past and present threat of rickettsial diseases to military medicine and international public health. , 2002, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

[15]  T. Cherian,et al.  Serological evidence for the continued presence of human rickettsioses in southern India. , 2001, Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology.

[16]  A. Lakos TIBOLA--egy új, kullancs által terjesztett betegség. , 1997 .

[17]  S. Jayakumar,et al.  Outbreak of scrub typhus in Pondicherry. , 2010, The Journal of the Association of Physicians of India.

[18]  Arun B. Shah Update on rickettsial infections. , 2009 .

[19]  S. Vijayakumar,et al.  Rickettsial spotted fever in Kerala. , 2004, The National medical journal of India.