美国的蜱传共感染。

James H Diaz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

与蚊子不同,蜱虫传播的病原体范围最广,包括细菌、病毒和寄生虫。蜱虫利用了气候变化、人类生活方式以及大量不再有效控制的野生动物宿主给它们带来的许多竞争优势。因此,如今蜱虫传播的合并感染正在增加,已知和新发现的病原体使鉴别诊断和抗微生物治疗复杂化。没有免疫学和分子诊断技术的支持,通常只有在联邦和一些州实验室才能获得,蜱传合并感染的初步鉴别诊断是复杂的,抗菌治疗可能无法涵盖合并感染。因此,本综述的目的是识别美国新出现的蜱传病原体,描述蜱传合并感染的演变流行病学,设计决策树分析方法用于蜱传合并感染的临床诊断和管理,并建议控制和个人预防蜱传疾病的有效策略。临床医生应在有多种感染源的临床和免疫学证据的回国旅行者和度假者中怀疑蜱传合并感染,特别是在出现不寻常的症状或严重程度、持续时间延长或对单一抗生素治疗无反应的情况下,通常使用强力霉素。基于蜱及其人畜共患病宿主病原体流行率的决策树模型可以帮助临床医生诊断蜱传共感染并指导初始抗菌治疗。
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Tickborne Coinfections in the United States.

Unlike mosquitoes, ticks transmit the broadest range of pathogens, including bacteria, viruses, and parasites. Ticks have capitalized on many competitive advantages offered to them by changes in climate and human lifestyle and a greater abundance of wild animal reservoir hosts no longer effectively controlled. As a result, tick-transmitted coinfections are increasing today with both recognized and newly discovered pathogens that complicate differential diagnosis and antimicrobial treatment. Without the support of immunological and molecular diagnostic techniques, usually only available at federal and some state laboratories, the initial differential diagnosis of tickborne coinfections is complicated and antimicrobial therapy may not cover coinfections. Therefore, the objectives of this review were to identify the newly emerging tickborne pathogens in the United States, to describe the evolving epidemiology of tick-transmitted coinfections, to design a decision tree analysis approach to the clinical diagnosis and management of tickborne coinfections, and to recommend effective strategies for the control and personal prevention of tickborne diseases. Clinicians should suspect tickborne coinfections in returning travelers and vacationers with clinical and immunological evidence of multiple infecting agents, especially in cases of unusual presentation or severity, prolonged duration, or nonresponse to single antibiotic therapy, typically with doxycycline. Decision tree models based on pathogen prevalence rates in ticks and their zoonotic reservoirs may assist clinicians in diagnosing tickborne coinfections and guiding initial antimicrobial therapy.

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Where are we going? Refractory anemia. Urinary diversion. Schneiderian papilloma. Recurrent respiratory papillomatosis.
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