1. Scalp eschar and neck lymphadenopathy by Rickettsia slovaca after Dermacentor marginatus tick bite case report: multidisciplinary approach to a tick-borne disease.
- Author
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Barlozzari G, Romiti F, Zini M, Magliano A, De Liberato C, Corrias F, Capponi G, Galli L, Scarpulla M, and Montagnani C
- Subjects
- Animals, Child, Dermacentor classification, Doxycycline therapeutic use, Female, Humans, Lymphadenopathy drug therapy, Lymphadenopathy microbiology, Neck microbiology, Rickettsia genetics, Rickettsia immunology, Rickettsia Infections drug therapy, Rickettsia Infections microbiology, Scalp Dermatoses drug therapy, Scalp Dermatoses microbiology, Tick Bites microbiology, Tick Bites parasitology, Tick-Borne Diseases diagnosis, Tick-Borne Diseases drug therapy, Tick-Borne Diseases microbiology, Treatment Outcome, Dermacentor microbiology, Lymphadenopathy diagnosis, Rickettsia isolation & purification, Rickettsia Infections diagnosis, Scalp Dermatoses diagnosis, Tick Bites complications
- Abstract
Background: Scalp Eschar and Neck LymphAdenopathy after Tick bite is a zoonotic non-pathogen-specific disease most commonly due to Rickettsia slovaca and Rickettsia raoultii. Diagnosis is mostly based only on epidemiological and clinical findings, without serological or molecular corroboration. We presented a clinical case in which diagnosis was supported by entomological identification and by R. slovaca DNA amplifications from the tick vector., Case Presentation: A 6-year-old child presented with asthenia, scalp eschar and supraclavicular and lateral-cervical lymphadenopathy. Scalp Eschar and Neck LymphAdenopathy After Tick bite syndrome following a Dermacentor marginatus bite was diagnosed. Serological test on serum revealed an IgG titer of 1:1024 against spotted fever group rickettsiae, polymerase chain reaction assays on tick identified Rickettsia slovaca. Patient was successfully treated with doxycycline for 10 days., Conclusions: A multidisciplinary approach including epidemiological information, clinical evaluations, entomological identification and molecular investigations on tick, enabled proper diagnosis and therapy.
- Published
- 2021
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