rickettsia

microorganism group
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Also known as: rickettsiae
Plural:
rickettsiae
Key People:
Howard T. Ricketts
E.W. Goodpasture

rickettsia, (family Rickettsiaceae), family of bacteria, made up of two genera, Rickettsia and Orientia. The term rickettsia is sometimes also used to refer to organisms of the order Rickettsiales. The rickettsiae are rod-shaped or variably spherical, nonfilterable bacteria, and most species are gram-negative. They are natural parasites of certain arthropods (notably lice, fleas, mites, and ticks) and can cause serious diseases—usually characterized by acute self-limiting fevers—in humans and other animals.

The rickettsiae range in size from roughly 0.3 to 0.5 micrometre (μm) by 0.8 to 2.0 μm (1 μm = 10−6 metre). Virtually all rickettsiae can reproduce only within animal cells. Rickettsiae are usually transmitted to humans by a bite from an arthropod carrier. Because certain species can withstand considerable drying, transmission of rickettsia can also occur when arthropod feces are inhaled or enter the skin through abrasion. Most rickettsiae normally infect animals other than humans, who become involved as dead-end hosts only accidentally. Epidemic typhus and trench fever are exceptions, since humans are the only host of proven importance. The other rickettsial infections occur primarily in animals, which serve as reservoirs from which bloodsucking arthropods acquire the rickettsial bacteria and in turn transmit them to other animals and, occasionally, humans.

The largest rickettsial genus, Rickettsia, is generally subdivided into the typhus group, the spotted fever group, and the scrub typhus group. This genus alone is responsible for a number of highly virulent diseases, including Rocky Mountain spotted fever, epidemic typhus, Brill-Zinsser disease (a type of epidemic typhus), scrub typhus, and others, as shown in the Table.

The routine monitoring of blood pressure levels is an important part of assessing an individual's health. Blood pressure provides information about the amount of blood in circulation and about heart function and thus is an important indicator of disease.
More From Britannica
human disease: Rickettsial diseases
Some disease-causing rickettsiae
rickettsia arthropod vector vertebrate host human disease
Genus Rickettsia typhus group R. prowazekii body louse humans epidemic typhus, Brill-Zinsser disease
R. typhi (or mooseri) rat flea rats murine typhus
spotted fever group R. rickettsii tick rodents Rocky Mountain spotted fever
R. conorii tick dogs boutonneuse fever
scrub typhus group R. tsutsugamushi chigger mite rodents scrub typhus
Genus Coxiella C. burnetii usually airborne or contact livestock, small mammals Q fever
Genus Rochalimaea R. quintana body louse humans trench fever

Protective measures against rickettsial disease agents include the control of arthropod carriers when necessary and immunization. Animals that recover from a rickettsial disease exhibit long-lasting immunity. Artificial immunity, as a preventive, is variably effective, typhus and the spotted fevers being among the easiest to immunize against. The most effective treatment of most rickettsial diseases includes the timely and prolonged administration of large amounts of broad-spectrum antibiotics, particularly doxycyclin or chloramphenicol.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Kara Rogers.