Foley Janet, Álvarez-Hernández Gerardo, Backus Laura H, Kjemtrup Anne, Lopéz-Pérez Andrés M, Paddock Christopher D, Rubino Francesca, Zazueta Oscar E
1School of Veterinary Medicine, Department of Medicine and Epidemiology, University of California-Davis, Davis, CA.
2Department of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Sonora, Hermosillo, Mexico.
J Am Vet Med Assoc. 2024 Feb 27;262(5):698-704. doi: 10.2460/javma.23.07.0377. Print 2024 May 1.
Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) is an international and quintessential One Health problem. This paper synthesizes recent knowledge in One Health, binational RMSF concerns, and veterinary and human medical perspectives to this fatal, reemerging problem. RMSF, a life-threatening tick-borne disease caused by the bacterium Rickettsia rickettsii, emerged during the first decade of the 21st century in impoverished communities in the southwestern US and northern Mexico. Lack of an index of suspicion, delay in diagnosis, and delayed initiation of antibiotic treatment contribute to fatality. Campaigns targeting dog neutering, restraint to residents' properties, and on-dog and on-premises treatment with acaricides temporarily reduce prevalence but are often untenable economically. Contemporary Mexican RMSF is hyperendemic in small communities and cities, whereas epidemics occur in the western US primarily in small tribal communities. In in both locations, the epidemics are fueled by free-roaming dogs and massive brown dog tick populations. In the US, RMSF has a case fatality rate of 5% to 7%; among thousands of annual cases in Mexico, case fatality often exceeds 30%.1,2 Numerous case patients in US border states have recent travel histories to northern Mexico. Veterinarians and physicians should alert the public to RMSF risk, methods of prevention, and the importance of urgent treatment with doxycycline if symptomatic. One Health professionals contribute ideas to manage ticks and rickettsial disease and provide broad education for the public and medical professionals. Novel management approaches include vaccine development and deployment, acaricide resistance monitoring, and modeling to guide targeted dog population management and other interventions.
落基山斑疹热(RMSF)是一个具有国际性且典型的“同一健康”问题。本文综合了“同一健康”领域的最新知识、双边RMSF问题以及兽医和人类医学视角,来探讨这个致命且再度出现的问题。RMSF是一种由立氏立克次体细菌引起的危及生命的蜱传疾病,于21世纪的第一个十年出现在美国西南部和墨西哥北部的贫困社区。缺乏疑似指标、诊断延迟以及抗生素治疗开始延迟都会导致死亡。针对犬只绝育、限制犬只进入居民房产以及对犬只和场所使用杀螨剂进行处理的活动,能暂时降低发病率,但在经济上往往难以维持。当代墨西哥的RMSF在小社区和城市中高度流行,而美国西部的疫情主要发生在小型部落社区。在这两个地区,疫情都是由自由放养的犬只和大量棕色犬蜱种群引发的。在美国,RMSF的病死率为5%至7%;在墨西哥每年数千例病例中,病死率往往超过30%。1,2美国边境州的许多病例患者近期有前往墨西哥北部的旅行史。兽医和医生应提醒公众注意RMSF的风险、预防方法以及出现症状时紧急使用强力霉素治疗的重要性。“同一健康”专业人员为蜱虫和立克次体病的管理提供思路,并为公众和医学专业人员提供广泛教育。新的管理方法包括疫苗研发与部署、杀螨剂抗性监测以及建模,以指导有针对性的犬只种群管理和其他干预措施。