tularemia

disease
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Also known as: deerfly fever
Also called:
rabbit fever or deerfly fever

tularemia, acute infectious disease caused by the gram-negative bacterium Francisella tularensis and presenting with varying signs and symptoms that range from mild to severe. Tularemia was described in 1911 among ground squirrels in Tulare county, California (from which the name is derived), and was first reported in humans in the United States in 1914. Today approximately 200 to 300 cases are reported each year in the United States, and the disease has been encountered in all parts of the country except Hawaii, although it is most common in the south-central and western states.

Tularemia is a disease primarily of animals; human infections are rare. It occurs naturally in many types of wildlife but especially in hares, rabbits, and rodents. In the United States the cottontail (Sylvilagus) is an important source of human infection, but other mammals, birds, and insects also spread the disease. Human cases in Sweden, Norway, and Russia have been transmitted by hares, field mice, and muskrats. F. tularensis has been found in some natural water sources, causing incidences of the disease in humans and animals. Tularemia can also be spread to humans by the bite of an infected animal, by contact with blood or fine dust from the animal’s body during skinning or similar operations, by the ingestion of infected animal products that have not been properly cooked, or by the bite of an insect, most commonly a deerfly, Chrysops discalis. Various ticks of the genera Dermacentor, Haemaphysalis, Rhipicephalus, Amblyomma, and Ixodes may be largely responsible for maintenance of animal infection. In addition, the infection is transmitted from the adult tick to the egg, and both larvae and nymphs are infectious and form an insect reservoir of infection. No case of human-to-human contamination has been reported.

The most common form of tularemia in humans is the ulceroglandular form, in which there is a painful sore at the site of the infection and a swelling of the lymph node that drains the area; the sore is often on the finger and the swelling, or bubo, in the armpit. The bubo can break down and discharge pus, but it sometimes remains hard and tender for weeks. Along with these local signs, the infected person has a fever that may persist for two or three weeks, with headache, body pains, and general weakness.

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Other forms of the disease include glandular tularemia, which produces symptoms similar to the ulceroglandular form but without skin ulcers; oculoglandular tularemia, which affects the eyes, sometimes causing the formation of an ulcer on the inside surface of the eyelid; oropharyngeal tularemia, which affects the mouth and is associated with abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhea; pneumonic tularemia, which resembles pneumonia and is caused by inhalation of dust contaminated by F. tularensis; and typhoidal tularemia, which is rare and associated with vomiting, diarrhea, pneumonia, and enlargement of the spleen and liver. The fatality rate of tularemia is very low, though it may be as high as 5 to 7 percent in the typhoidal and pneumonic forms.

Antibiotics, such as ciprofloxacin, doxycycline, gentamicin, and streptomycin, are effective against F. tularensis. Treatment may last 10 to 21 days, and most patients recover. Infection can be prevented by wearing long-sleeved shirts and long pants when outdoors in seasons when ticks and deerflies are prevalent, by using insect repellent, by wearing gloves when handling animals, and by thoroughly cooking meat prior to consumption. A live attenuated vaccine has been generally successful in conferring immunity on susceptible hosts, although its use is usually limited to persons at high risk.

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