D. Strickman et al., PATHOLOGY OF RICKETTSIA-TSUTSUGAMUSHI INFECTION IN BANDICOTA-SAVILEI,A NATURAL HOST IN THAILAND, The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene, 51(4), 1994, pp. 416-423
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath","Tropical Medicine
Following rodent surveys in a rice-growing area of central Thailand wh
ere we found Bandicota savilei, B. indica, and Rattus rattus infected
with Rickettsia tsutsugamushi, we performed a study of pathogenesis of
R. tsutsugamushi in laboratory-reared B. savilei. Eight animals were
injected with saline and 19 animals were injected with 4.0 x 10(6) mou
se 50% lethal dose units of a strain of R. tsutsugamushi isolated from
a human in central Thailand. Animals were evaluated at intervals for
IgG and IgM antibodies to R. tsutsugamushi by an indirect immunoperoxi
dase assay, the presence of the pathogen in liver and spleen by murine
inoculation, and the pathology of representative tissues by gross and
microscopic examination. The infected animals began to show internal
evidence of mild illness 7-14 days after inoculation, and exhibited no
changes in behavior. Total white blood cell counts decreased on day s
even (including lymphocytes and polymorphonuclear leukocytes), followe
d by an almost equal increase on day 14. Gross pathology noted at necr
opsy was limited to slight liver and spleen enlargement accompanied by
low numbers of abscesses and fibrinous tags present in the abdominal
cavity. In addition to the gross morphologic changes, histopathologic
lesions noted were all mild, consisting of vasculitis of the lung, act
ivation of the mononuclear phagocyte system, abdominal mesothelial cel
l hyperplasia, and peritonitis. Rickettsiae were isolated from liver a
nd spleen on days 0, 7, and 14, but not thereafter. Specific antibody
response was first observed on day 14, peaked on day 21, and it decrea
sed to levels observed in uninfected animals between days 120 and 180.
The course of infection in B. savilei was less prolonged and more pat
hologic than that reported in wild southeast Asian Rattus species.