Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jul 2006)

Rodent-associated Bartonella Febrile Illness, Southwestern United States

  • Jonathan Iralu,
  • Ying Bai,
  • Larry Crook,
  • Bruce Tempest,
  • Gary Simpson,
  • Taylor McKenzie,
  • Frederick Koster

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1207.040397
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
pp. 1081 – 1086

Abstract

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Serum specimens from 114 patients hospitalized with a febrile illness were tested with an indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA) using Bartonella antigens prepared from 6 species of sigmodontine rodents and 3 known human Bartonella pathogens: B. henselae, B. quintana, and B. elizabethae. Acute- and convalescent-phase serum samples from 5 of these patients showed seroconversion with an IFA titer >512 to rodent-associated Bartonella antigens. The highest titer was against antigen derived from the white-throated woodrat (Neotoma albigula), although this rodent is not necessarily implicated as the source of infection. Three of the 5 who seroconverted showed no cross-reaction to the 3 Bartonella human pathogens. Common clinical characteristics were fever, chills, myalgias, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and transaminasemia. Although antibodies to Bartonella are cross-reactive, high-titer seroconversions to rodent-associated Bartonella antigens in adults with common clinical characteristics should stimulate the search for additional Bartonella human pathogens.

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