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Šablona:About Šablona:Infobox medical condition (new) Nemoc kočičího škrábnutí je běžné a obvykle nezhoubné infekční onemocnění vyvolané bakterií Bartonella henselae.[1][2] Nejčastěji se vyskytuje u dětí po kousnutí či škrábnutí kočkou.It is most commonly found in children following a scratch or bite from a cat.[1] Infekce se rozvine po 3 - 14 dnech od zranění. Infekce se rozvíjí v místě zranění v rámci 3-14 dní. The infection develops at the point of injury within about 3-14 days.[3]

Symptomy a příznaky[editovat | editovat zdroj]

Nemoc kočičího škrábnutí se obvykle projevuje jako TENDER,oteklé lymfatické uzliny okolo místa kousnutí nebo škrábnutí. Cat-scratch disease commonly presents as tender, swollen lymph nodes near the site of the inoculating bite or scratch or on the neck, and is usually limited to one side.

Stav je znám jako místní lymfadenopatie a nastává 1-3 týdny po kousnutí. Lymfadenopatie při této nemoci se obvykle projevuje na rukou, krku, čelistech, ale může se projevit i na tříslech ři okolo uší. This condition is referred to as regional lymphadenopathy and occurs 1–3 weeks after inoculation.[4] Lymphadenopathy in CSD most commonly occurs in the arms, neck, or jaw, but may also occur near the groin or around the ear.[1]

Puchýřek nebo erytematózní papula se může vytvořit na místě původu infekce.A vesicle or an erythematous papule may form at the site of initial infection.[1] U většiny postižených se vyvinou systémové symptomy jako MALAIse snížená chuť k jídlu a BOLESTI.Most patients also develop systemic symptoms such as malaise, decreased appetite, and aches.[1]

Další ASSOSIATED stížnosti zahrnují zimnice, bolesti hlavy, svalů, kloubů, zad či břicha. Symptomy se mohou projevit po 7 až 14 dnech nebo až po dvou měsících.

Other associated complaints include headache, chills, muscular pains, joint pains, arthritis, backache, and abdominal pain. It may take 7 to 14 days, or as long as two months, for symptoms to appear.

Ve většině případů nemoc sama odezní. Lymphadenopatie může trvat až několik měsíců po odeznění přiznaků nemociMost cases are benign and self-limiting, but lymphadenopathy may persist for several months after other symptoms disappear.[1] The disease usually resolves spontaneously, with or without treatment, in one month.

Ve vzácných případech může tato nemoc vést k rozvinutí závažných neurologických či srdečních SEQUELAE jako meningoencephalitidě, encephalopatii, záchvat!! nebo endocarditidě.In rare situations, CSD can lead to the development of serious neurologic or cardiac sequelae such as meningoencephalitis, encephalopathy, seizures, or endocarditis.[1] Endocarditis associated with Bartonella infection has a particularly high mortality.[4]

Parinaudova okuloglandulární syndrom je nejběžnější oční manifestace nemoci A JE granulomatózní konjuktivitida s CONCURENT otokem lymfatické uzliny v oblasti ucha. OPTIC NEURITIS nebo neuroetinitis je atypická prezentace.

Parinaud's oculoglandular syndrome is the most common ocular manifestation of CSD,[1] and is a granulomatous conjunctivitis with concurrent swelling of the lymph node near the ear.[5] Optic neuritis or neuroretinitis is one of the atypical presentations.[6]

Imunokompromitovaní pacienti jsou náchylní s k dalším CONDITIONS spojené s B. henselae a B. quintana, jako bacillary angiomatosis or bacillary peliosis Bacillary amgiomatosis je primárně vaskulární kožní léze, která může dosáhnout ke kosti nebo se projevit v dalších oblastech těla. V obvyklém případě má pacient HIV nebo jinou příčinu závažné imunitní nedostatečnosti. Bacillary peliosiss je způsobena B. henselae která nejčastěji AFFECTS pacienty s HIV a dalšími CONDITIONS způsobujícími imunistní nedostatečnost. Nejčastěji jsou napadeny játra a slinivka, s nálezy cystických dutin vyplněných krví. V roce 2015, v Toledu, Ohio přišla pacientka o zrak a oko poté co jej olízla kočka.

Immunocompromised patients are susceptible to other conditions associated with B. henselae and B. quintana, such as bacillary angiomatosis or bacillary peliosis.[1] Bacillary angiomatosis is primarily a vascular skin lesion that may extend to bone or be present in other areas of the body. In the typical scenario, the patient has HIV or another cause of severe immune dysfunction. Bacillary peliosis is caused by B. henselae that most often affects patients with HIV and other conditions causing severe immune compromise. The liver and spleen are primarily affected, with findings of blood-filled cystic spaces on pathology.[7] In 2015 a Toledo, Ohio woman lost eyesight in an eye after a cat licked it.[8]

Příčina[editovat | editovat zdroj]

Bartonella henselae je is a fastidious,[4] intracellular, Gram-negativní bakterie.

Přenos Transmission[editovat | editovat zdroj]

Kočka byla rozpoznána jako přírodní rezervvoár onemocnění v roke 1950 Robertem Debré. Koťata častěji nesou bakterii ve své krvi a proto spíše přenášejí onemocnění než dospělá kočka.

The cat was recognized as the natural reservoir of the disease in 1950 by Robert Debré.[4] Kittens are more likely to carry the bacteria in their blood, and therefore may be more likely to transmit the disease than adult cats.

However, fleas serve as a vector for transmission of B. henselae among cats,[4] and viable B. henselae are excreted in the feces of Ctenocephalides felis, the cat flea.[9] Cats could be infected with B. henselae through intradermal inoculation using flea feces containing B. henselae.[10] As a consequence, a likely means of transmission of B. henselae from cats to humans may be inoculation with flea feces containing B. henselae through a contaminated cat scratch wound or by cat saliva transmitted in a bite.[4] Ticks can also act as vectors and occasionally transmit the bacteria to humans.[1] Combined clinical and PCR-based research has shown that other organisms can transmit Bartonella, including spiders.[11][12] Cryptic Bartonella infection may be a much larger problem than previously thought, constituting an unrecognized occupational health hazard of veterinarians.[13]

Diagnosis[editovat | editovat zdroj]

The Warthin–Starry stain can be helpful to show the presence of B. henselae, but is often difficult to interpret. B. henselae is difficult to culture and can take 2–6 weeks to incubate.[4] The best diagnostic method currently available is polymerase chain reaction, which has a sensitivity of 43-76% and a specificity (in one study) of 100%.[4]

Histology[editovat | editovat zdroj]

High-magnification micrograph of CSD showing a granuloma (pale cells - right of center on image) and a microabscess with neutrophils (left of image), H&E stain

Cat-scratch disease is characterized by granulomatous inflammation on histological examination of the lymph nodes. Under the microscope, the skin lesion demonstrates a circumscribed focus of necrosis, surround by histiocytes, often accompanied by multinucleated giant cells, lymphocytes, and eosinophils. The regional lymph nodes demonstrate follicular hyperplasia with central stellate necrosis with neutrophils, surrounded by palisading histiocytes (suppurative granulomas) and sinuses packed with monocytoid B cells, usually without perifollicular and intrafollicular epithelioid cells. This pattern, although typical, is only present in a minority of cases.[14]

Treatment[editovat | editovat zdroj]

Most healthy people clear the infection without treatment, but in 5 to 14 percent of individuals, the organisms disseminate and infect the liver, spleen, eye, or central nervous system.[15] Although some experts recommend not treating typical CSD in immunocompetent patients with mild to moderate illness, treatment of all patients with antimicrobial agents (Grade 2B) is suggested due to the probability of disseminated disease. The preferred antibiotic for treatment is azithromycin since this agent is the only one studied in a randomized controlled study.[16]

Azithromycin is preferentially used in pregnancy to avoid the teratogenic side effects of doxycycline.[17] However, doxycycline is preferred to treat B. henselae infections with optic neuritis due to its ability to adequately penetrate the tissues of the eye and central nervous system.[4]

Prevention[editovat | editovat zdroj]

Cat-scratch disease can be primarily prevented by taking flea control measures and washing hands after handling a cat or cat feces; since cats are mostly exposed to fleas when they are outside, keeping cats inside can prevent infestation.[18]

Epidemiology[editovat | editovat zdroj]

Cat-scratch disease has a worldwide distribution, however it is a nonreportable disease in humans and therefore public health data on this disease is inadequate.[19] Geographical location, present season and variables associated with cats (such as exposure and degree of flea infestation) all play a factor in the prevalence of Cat-scratch disease within a population.[20] In warmer climates, the incidence of Cat-scratch disease is more prevalent during the fall and winter months.[20] The higher rate of Cat-scratch disease during those months may be attributed to the breeding season for adult cats, which allows for the birth of kittens[20]. B henselae, the bacterium responsible for causing Cat-scratch disease, is more prevalent in younger cats [less than one year old] than it is in adult cats.[19]

To determine recent incidence of Cat-scratch disease in the United States, the Truven Health MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters database was analyzed in a case control study from 2005-2013.[21] The database consisted of healthcare insurance claims for employees, their spouses, and their dependents. All participants were under 65 years of age, from all 50 states. The length of the study period was 9 years and was based off 280,522,578 person-years; factors such as year, length of insurance coverage, region, age, and sex were used to calculate the person-years incidence rate to eliminate confounding variables among the entire study population.[21] 13,273 subjects were diagnosed with Cat-scratch disease, both in and outpatient cases were analyzed. The study revealed an incidence rate of 4.5/100,000 outpatient cases of Cat-scratch disease. For inpatient cases, the incidence rate was much lower at 0.19/100,000 population.[21] Incidence of Cat-scratch disease was highest in 2005 among outpatient cases and then slowly declined. The Southern states saw the most significant decrease of incidence overtime. Mountain regions have the lowest incidence of this disease because fleas are not a common vector found in these areas.[21]

Distribution of Cat-scratch disease among children aged 5–9 were of the highest incidence in the analyzed database, followed by woman aged 60–64. Incidence among female patients was higher than that among male patients in all age groups.[21] According to data on social trends, women are more likely to own a cat over men;[22] which supports higher incidence rates of this disease in women. Risk of contracting Cat-scratch disease increases as the number of cats residing in the home increases.[19] The number of pet cats in the United States is estimated to be at 57 million.[20] Due to the large population of cats residing in the United States, the ability of this disease to continue to infect humans is vast. Laboratory diagnosis of Cat-scratch disease has improved in recent years, which may support an increase in incidence of Cat-scratch disease in future populations.[20]

History[editovat | editovat zdroj]

Symptoms similar to CSD were first described by Henri Parinaud in 1889, and the clinical syndrome was first described in 1950 by Robert Debré.[2][4] In 1983, the Warthin-Starry silver stain was used to discover a Gram-negative bacillus which was named Afipia felis in 1991 after it was successfully cultured and isolated. The causative organism of CSD was originally believed to be Afipia felis, but this was disproved by immunological studies in the 1990s demonstrating that cat-scratch fever patients developed antibodies to two other organisms, B. henselae (originally known as Rochalimea henselae before the genera Bartonella and Rochalimea were combined) and B. clarridgeiae, which is a rod-shaped Gram-negative bacterium.[4]

References[editovat | editovat zdroj]

  1. a b c d e f g h i j Klotz SA, Ianas V, Elliott SP. Cat-scratch Disease. American Family Physician. 2011, s. 152–5. Dostupné online. PMID 21243990. 
  2. a b Asano S. Granulomatous lymphadenitis. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hematopathology. 2012, s. 1–16. DOI 10.3960/jslrt.52.1. PMID 22706525. 
  3. Cat scratch disease | Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Center (GARD) – an NCATS Program [online]. [cit. 2018-04-17]. Dostupné online. (anglicky) 
  4. a b c d e f g h i j k Florin TA, Zaoutis TE, Zaoutis LB. Beyond cat scratch disease: widening spectrum of Bartonella henselae infection. Pediatrics. 2008, s. e1413–25. DOI 10.1542/peds.2007-1897. PMID 18443019. 
  5. Šablona:EMedicine
  6. Gajula V, Kamepalli R, Kalavakunta JK. A star in the eye: cat scratch neuroretinitis. Clinical Case Reports. 2014, s. 17. DOI 10.1002/ccr3.43. PMID 25356231. 
  7. Perkocha LA, Geaghan SM, Yen TS, Nishimura SL, Chan SP, Garcia-Kennedy R, Honda G, Stoloff AC, Klein HZ, Goldman RL. Clinical and pathological features of bacillary peliosis hepatis in association with human immunodeficiency virus infection. The New England Journal of Medicine. 1990, s. 1581–6. DOI 10.1056/NEJM199012063232302. PMID 2233946. 
  8. TUEY, Holly; KINSEY, Andrew. Woman loses eyesight after her cat licks her. www.wtol.com. WTOL, May 28, 2015. Dostupné online. 
  9. Higgins JA, Radulovic S, Jaworski DC, Azad AF. Acquisition of the cat scratch disease agent Bartonella henselae by cat fleas (Siphonaptera:Pulicidae). Journal of Medical Entomology. 1996, s. 490–5. Dostupné online. DOI 10.1093/jmedent/33.3.490. PMID 8667399. 
  10. Foil L, Andress E, Freeland RL, Roy AF, Rutledge R, Triche PC, O'Reilly KL. Experimental infection of domestic cats with Bartonella henselae by inoculation of Ctenocephalides felis (Siphonaptera: Pulicidae) feces. Journal of Medical Entomology. 1998, s. 625–8. DOI 10.1093/jmedent/35.5.625. PMID 9775583. 
  11. COPELAND, Claudia S. Cat Scratch Fever? Really?: Cats, Fleas and the Many Faces of Bartonellosis. Healthcare Journal of Baton Rouge. 2015, s. 28–34. Dostupné v archivu pořízeném z originálu dne 2015-11-22. 
  12. Mascarelli PE, Maggi RG, Hopkins S, Mozayeni BR, Trull CL, Bradley JM, Hegarty BC, Breitschwerdt EB. Bartonella henselae infection in a family experiencing neurological and neurocognitive abnormalities after woodlouse hunter spider bites. Parasites & Vectors. 2013, s. 98. DOI 10.1186/1756-3305-6-98. PMID 23587343. 
  13. Lantos PM, Maggi RG, Ferguson B, Varkey J, Park LP, Breitschwerdt EB, Woods CW. Detection of Bartonella species in the blood of veterinarians and veterinary technicians: a newly recognized occupational hazard?. Vector Borne and Zoonotic Diseases. 2014, s. 563–70. DOI 10.1089/vbz.2013.1512. PMID 25072986. 
  14. Rosado FG, Stratton CW, Mosse CA. Clinicopathologic correlation of epidemiologic and histopathologic features of pediatric bacterial lymphadenitis. Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine. 2011, s. 1490–3. DOI 10.5858/arpa.2010-0581-OA. PMID 22032579. 
  15. CARITHERS, H. A. Cat-scratch disease. An overview based on a study of 1,200 patients. American Journal of Diseases of Children. 1985-11-01, s. 1124–1133. Dostupné online. ISSN 0002-922X. DOI 10.1001/archpedi.1985.02140130062031. PMID 4061408. 
  16. ROLAIN, J. M.; BROUQUI, P.; KOEHLER, J. E.; MAGUINA, C.; DOLAN, M. J.; RAOULT, D. Recommendations for Treatment of Human Infections Caused by Bartonella Species. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. 2004-06-01, s. 1921–1933. ISSN 0066-4804. DOI 10.1128/AAC.48.6.1921-1933.2004. PMID 15155180. 
  17. Šablona:EMedicine
  18. NELSON, Christina A.; SAHA, Shubhayu; MEAD, Paul S. Cat-Scratch Disease in the United States, 2005–2013. Emerging Infectious Diseases. S. 1741–1746. Dostupné online. DOI 10.3201/eid2210.160115. PMID 27648778. 
  19. a b c CHOMEL, Bruno B.; BOULOUIS, Henri J.; BREITSCHWERDT, Edward B. JAVMA. Cat scratch disease and other zoonotic Bartonella infections. Vet Med Today: Zoonosis Update. April 15, 2004, s. 1270–1279. Dostupné online. 
  20. a b c d e WINDSOR, Jeffrey J. Cat-scratch Disease: Epidemiology, Etiology, and Treatment. British Journal of Biomedical Science. 2001, s. 101–110. Dostupné online. 
  21. a b c d e Nelson, C. A., Saha, S., & Mead, P. S. (2016). Cat-Scratch Disease in the United States, 2005-2013. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 22(10), 1741-1746. doi:10.3201/eid2210.160115
  22. Profile of Pet Owners [online]. November 4, 2010 [cit. 2017-11-29]. Dostupné online. 

External links[editovat | editovat zdroj]

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