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Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California Anne Kjemtrup, DVM, MPVM, PhD California Department of Public Health Vector-Borne Disease Section

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Page 1: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California

Anne Kjemtrup DVM MPVM PhD

California Department of Public Health

Vector-Borne Disease Section

It takes a teamhellip

Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance

To estimate prevalence and distribution of pathogenic tick-borne disease agents

To follow up on unusual human exposure

To communicate risk to people

Tick species seasonality abundance

To document new or novel species closely related to known human pathogens

To collaborate with other institutions doing tick research

Goals of VBDS Tick Program

Overview of todayrsquos presentation

General characteristics of the agent and vector at global national state level

Clinical aspects in humans

Disease reporting and California human data

Other Borrelia sp and animal considerations

In the field following up on a TBRF case

Prevention

Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)

Caused by infection with Borrelia species

During infection the Borrelia change their surface antigens (antigenic variation) lending to repeated spirochetemias and stimulation of the immune system by each new antigen and a febrile response by the patient

Transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected Ornithodoros tick (Argasidae)

Typically the Borrelia species take their specific names from the soft ticks (Ornithodoros species) that transmit them

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Ornithodoroscharacteristics

Live in protected environment usually nest - 10 ndash 20 years

Life cycles egg single larva several nymph stages then adult male or female

All stages are obligate blood feeders

Feed within 15 to 90 minutes

The larvae and younger nymphs usually molt to the next stage after one blood meal the larger nymphs may feed twice before molting

As adults feed repeatedly and can live for many years in protected environments

The females lay clutches of eggs after each blood meal

TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations

In the United States TBRF occurs most commonly in 14 western states Arizona California Colorado Idaho Kansas Montana Nevada New Mexico Oklahoma Oregon Texas Utah Washington and Wyoming

Borrelia found in California Ticks

~ 1 caseyear

~100 casesyear

~1 caseyear

~ 2 casesyear

~5 casesyear

~8 casesyear

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii

Agent Borrelia hermsii Visible on stained red

blood smear

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Vector Soft (Argasid) ticks Ornithodoros spp

Reservoir Peridomestic rodents

Chipmunks squirrels rats mice The tick itself

Sciurids (squirrels chipmunks) 31

Tamias (chipmunks) 36

Otospermophilus (ground squirrels) 21

Neotoma (Woodrats)143

Seropositive rodents detected 1200 m ndash 2400 m (4000 ndash 7000 ft) elevation

Seropositivity increased with elevation

Serologic assessment Rodents

Fritz et al 2013 Vector Borne Zoonotic Disease

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 2: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

It takes a teamhellip

Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance

To estimate prevalence and distribution of pathogenic tick-borne disease agents

To follow up on unusual human exposure

To communicate risk to people

Tick species seasonality abundance

To document new or novel species closely related to known human pathogens

To collaborate with other institutions doing tick research

Goals of VBDS Tick Program

Overview of todayrsquos presentation

General characteristics of the agent and vector at global national state level

Clinical aspects in humans

Disease reporting and California human data

Other Borrelia sp and animal considerations

In the field following up on a TBRF case

Prevention

Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)

Caused by infection with Borrelia species

During infection the Borrelia change their surface antigens (antigenic variation) lending to repeated spirochetemias and stimulation of the immune system by each new antigen and a febrile response by the patient

Transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected Ornithodoros tick (Argasidae)

Typically the Borrelia species take their specific names from the soft ticks (Ornithodoros species) that transmit them

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Ornithodoroscharacteristics

Live in protected environment usually nest - 10 ndash 20 years

Life cycles egg single larva several nymph stages then adult male or female

All stages are obligate blood feeders

Feed within 15 to 90 minutes

The larvae and younger nymphs usually molt to the next stage after one blood meal the larger nymphs may feed twice before molting

As adults feed repeatedly and can live for many years in protected environments

The females lay clutches of eggs after each blood meal

TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations

In the United States TBRF occurs most commonly in 14 western states Arizona California Colorado Idaho Kansas Montana Nevada New Mexico Oklahoma Oregon Texas Utah Washington and Wyoming

Borrelia found in California Ticks

~ 1 caseyear

~100 casesyear

~1 caseyear

~ 2 casesyear

~5 casesyear

~8 casesyear

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii

Agent Borrelia hermsii Visible on stained red

blood smear

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Vector Soft (Argasid) ticks Ornithodoros spp

Reservoir Peridomestic rodents

Chipmunks squirrels rats mice The tick itself

Sciurids (squirrels chipmunks) 31

Tamias (chipmunks) 36

Otospermophilus (ground squirrels) 21

Neotoma (Woodrats)143

Seropositive rodents detected 1200 m ndash 2400 m (4000 ndash 7000 ft) elevation

Seropositivity increased with elevation

Serologic assessment Rodents

Fritz et al 2013 Vector Borne Zoonotic Disease

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 3: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance

To estimate prevalence and distribution of pathogenic tick-borne disease agents

To follow up on unusual human exposure

To communicate risk to people

Tick species seasonality abundance

To document new or novel species closely related to known human pathogens

To collaborate with other institutions doing tick research

Goals of VBDS Tick Program

Overview of todayrsquos presentation

General characteristics of the agent and vector at global national state level

Clinical aspects in humans

Disease reporting and California human data

Other Borrelia sp and animal considerations

In the field following up on a TBRF case

Prevention

Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)

Caused by infection with Borrelia species

During infection the Borrelia change their surface antigens (antigenic variation) lending to repeated spirochetemias and stimulation of the immune system by each new antigen and a febrile response by the patient

Transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected Ornithodoros tick (Argasidae)

Typically the Borrelia species take their specific names from the soft ticks (Ornithodoros species) that transmit them

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Ornithodoroscharacteristics

Live in protected environment usually nest - 10 ndash 20 years

Life cycles egg single larva several nymph stages then adult male or female

All stages are obligate blood feeders

Feed within 15 to 90 minutes

The larvae and younger nymphs usually molt to the next stage after one blood meal the larger nymphs may feed twice before molting

As adults feed repeatedly and can live for many years in protected environments

The females lay clutches of eggs after each blood meal

TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations

In the United States TBRF occurs most commonly in 14 western states Arizona California Colorado Idaho Kansas Montana Nevada New Mexico Oklahoma Oregon Texas Utah Washington and Wyoming

Borrelia found in California Ticks

~ 1 caseyear

~100 casesyear

~1 caseyear

~ 2 casesyear

~5 casesyear

~8 casesyear

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii

Agent Borrelia hermsii Visible on stained red

blood smear

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Vector Soft (Argasid) ticks Ornithodoros spp

Reservoir Peridomestic rodents

Chipmunks squirrels rats mice The tick itself

Sciurids (squirrels chipmunks) 31

Tamias (chipmunks) 36

Otospermophilus (ground squirrels) 21

Neotoma (Woodrats)143

Seropositive rodents detected 1200 m ndash 2400 m (4000 ndash 7000 ft) elevation

Seropositivity increased with elevation

Serologic assessment Rodents

Fritz et al 2013 Vector Borne Zoonotic Disease

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 4: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Overview of todayrsquos presentation

General characteristics of the agent and vector at global national state level

Clinical aspects in humans

Disease reporting and California human data

Other Borrelia sp and animal considerations

In the field following up on a TBRF case

Prevention

Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)

Caused by infection with Borrelia species

During infection the Borrelia change their surface antigens (antigenic variation) lending to repeated spirochetemias and stimulation of the immune system by each new antigen and a febrile response by the patient

Transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected Ornithodoros tick (Argasidae)

Typically the Borrelia species take their specific names from the soft ticks (Ornithodoros species) that transmit them

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Ornithodoroscharacteristics

Live in protected environment usually nest - 10 ndash 20 years

Life cycles egg single larva several nymph stages then adult male or female

All stages are obligate blood feeders

Feed within 15 to 90 minutes

The larvae and younger nymphs usually molt to the next stage after one blood meal the larger nymphs may feed twice before molting

As adults feed repeatedly and can live for many years in protected environments

The females lay clutches of eggs after each blood meal

TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations

In the United States TBRF occurs most commonly in 14 western states Arizona California Colorado Idaho Kansas Montana Nevada New Mexico Oklahoma Oregon Texas Utah Washington and Wyoming

Borrelia found in California Ticks

~ 1 caseyear

~100 casesyear

~1 caseyear

~ 2 casesyear

~5 casesyear

~8 casesyear

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii

Agent Borrelia hermsii Visible on stained red

blood smear

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Vector Soft (Argasid) ticks Ornithodoros spp

Reservoir Peridomestic rodents

Chipmunks squirrels rats mice The tick itself

Sciurids (squirrels chipmunks) 31

Tamias (chipmunks) 36

Otospermophilus (ground squirrels) 21

Neotoma (Woodrats)143

Seropositive rodents detected 1200 m ndash 2400 m (4000 ndash 7000 ft) elevation

Seropositivity increased with elevation

Serologic assessment Rodents

Fritz et al 2013 Vector Borne Zoonotic Disease

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 5: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)

Caused by infection with Borrelia species

During infection the Borrelia change their surface antigens (antigenic variation) lending to repeated spirochetemias and stimulation of the immune system by each new antigen and a febrile response by the patient

Transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected Ornithodoros tick (Argasidae)

Typically the Borrelia species take their specific names from the soft ticks (Ornithodoros species) that transmit them

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Ornithodoroscharacteristics

Live in protected environment usually nest - 10 ndash 20 years

Life cycles egg single larva several nymph stages then adult male or female

All stages are obligate blood feeders

Feed within 15 to 90 minutes

The larvae and younger nymphs usually molt to the next stage after one blood meal the larger nymphs may feed twice before molting

As adults feed repeatedly and can live for many years in protected environments

The females lay clutches of eggs after each blood meal

TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations

In the United States TBRF occurs most commonly in 14 western states Arizona California Colorado Idaho Kansas Montana Nevada New Mexico Oklahoma Oregon Texas Utah Washington and Wyoming

Borrelia found in California Ticks

~ 1 caseyear

~100 casesyear

~1 caseyear

~ 2 casesyear

~5 casesyear

~8 casesyear

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii

Agent Borrelia hermsii Visible on stained red

blood smear

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Vector Soft (Argasid) ticks Ornithodoros spp

Reservoir Peridomestic rodents

Chipmunks squirrels rats mice The tick itself

Sciurids (squirrels chipmunks) 31

Tamias (chipmunks) 36

Otospermophilus (ground squirrels) 21

Neotoma (Woodrats)143

Seropositive rodents detected 1200 m ndash 2400 m (4000 ndash 7000 ft) elevation

Seropositivity increased with elevation

Serologic assessment Rodents

Fritz et al 2013 Vector Borne Zoonotic Disease

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 6: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Ornithodoroscharacteristics

Live in protected environment usually nest - 10 ndash 20 years

Life cycles egg single larva several nymph stages then adult male or female

All stages are obligate blood feeders

Feed within 15 to 90 minutes

The larvae and younger nymphs usually molt to the next stage after one blood meal the larger nymphs may feed twice before molting

As adults feed repeatedly and can live for many years in protected environments

The females lay clutches of eggs after each blood meal

TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations

In the United States TBRF occurs most commonly in 14 western states Arizona California Colorado Idaho Kansas Montana Nevada New Mexico Oklahoma Oregon Texas Utah Washington and Wyoming

Borrelia found in California Ticks

~ 1 caseyear

~100 casesyear

~1 caseyear

~ 2 casesyear

~5 casesyear

~8 casesyear

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii

Agent Borrelia hermsii Visible on stained red

blood smear

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Vector Soft (Argasid) ticks Ornithodoros spp

Reservoir Peridomestic rodents

Chipmunks squirrels rats mice The tick itself

Sciurids (squirrels chipmunks) 31

Tamias (chipmunks) 36

Otospermophilus (ground squirrels) 21

Neotoma (Woodrats)143

Seropositive rodents detected 1200 m ndash 2400 m (4000 ndash 7000 ft) elevation

Seropositivity increased with elevation

Serologic assessment Rodents

Fritz et al 2013 Vector Borne Zoonotic Disease

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 7: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations

In the United States TBRF occurs most commonly in 14 western states Arizona California Colorado Idaho Kansas Montana Nevada New Mexico Oklahoma Oregon Texas Utah Washington and Wyoming

Borrelia found in California Ticks

~ 1 caseyear

~100 casesyear

~1 caseyear

~ 2 casesyear

~5 casesyear

~8 casesyear

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii

Agent Borrelia hermsii Visible on stained red

blood smear

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Vector Soft (Argasid) ticks Ornithodoros spp

Reservoir Peridomestic rodents

Chipmunks squirrels rats mice The tick itself

Sciurids (squirrels chipmunks) 31

Tamias (chipmunks) 36

Otospermophilus (ground squirrels) 21

Neotoma (Woodrats)143

Seropositive rodents detected 1200 m ndash 2400 m (4000 ndash 7000 ft) elevation

Seropositivity increased with elevation

Serologic assessment Rodents

Fritz et al 2013 Vector Borne Zoonotic Disease

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 8: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

In the United States TBRF occurs most commonly in 14 western states Arizona California Colorado Idaho Kansas Montana Nevada New Mexico Oklahoma Oregon Texas Utah Washington and Wyoming

Borrelia found in California Ticks

~ 1 caseyear

~100 casesyear

~1 caseyear

~ 2 casesyear

~5 casesyear

~8 casesyear

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii

Agent Borrelia hermsii Visible on stained red

blood smear

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Vector Soft (Argasid) ticks Ornithodoros spp

Reservoir Peridomestic rodents

Chipmunks squirrels rats mice The tick itself

Sciurids (squirrels chipmunks) 31

Tamias (chipmunks) 36

Otospermophilus (ground squirrels) 21

Neotoma (Woodrats)143

Seropositive rodents detected 1200 m ndash 2400 m (4000 ndash 7000 ft) elevation

Seropositivity increased with elevation

Serologic assessment Rodents

Fritz et al 2013 Vector Borne Zoonotic Disease

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 9: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Borrelia found in California Ticks

~ 1 caseyear

~100 casesyear

~1 caseyear

~ 2 casesyear

~5 casesyear

~8 casesyear

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii

Agent Borrelia hermsii Visible on stained red

blood smear

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Vector Soft (Argasid) ticks Ornithodoros spp

Reservoir Peridomestic rodents

Chipmunks squirrels rats mice The tick itself

Sciurids (squirrels chipmunks) 31

Tamias (chipmunks) 36

Otospermophilus (ground squirrels) 21

Neotoma (Woodrats)143

Seropositive rodents detected 1200 m ndash 2400 m (4000 ndash 7000 ft) elevation

Seropositivity increased with elevation

Serologic assessment Rodents

Fritz et al 2013 Vector Borne Zoonotic Disease

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 10: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

~ 1 caseyear

~100 casesyear

~1 caseyear

~ 2 casesyear

~5 casesyear

~8 casesyear

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii

Agent Borrelia hermsii Visible on stained red

blood smear

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Vector Soft (Argasid) ticks Ornithodoros spp

Reservoir Peridomestic rodents

Chipmunks squirrels rats mice The tick itself

Sciurids (squirrels chipmunks) 31

Tamias (chipmunks) 36

Otospermophilus (ground squirrels) 21

Neotoma (Woodrats)143

Seropositive rodents detected 1200 m ndash 2400 m (4000 ndash 7000 ft) elevation

Seropositivity increased with elevation

Serologic assessment Rodents

Fritz et al 2013 Vector Borne Zoonotic Disease

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 11: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii

Agent Borrelia hermsii Visible on stained red

blood smear

Source Gary Green MD Sonoma Co

Vector Soft (Argasid) ticks Ornithodoros spp

Reservoir Peridomestic rodents

Chipmunks squirrels rats mice The tick itself

Sciurids (squirrels chipmunks) 31

Tamias (chipmunks) 36

Otospermophilus (ground squirrels) 21

Neotoma (Woodrats)143

Seropositive rodents detected 1200 m ndash 2400 m (4000 ndash 7000 ft) elevation

Seropositivity increased with elevation

Serologic assessment Rodents

Fritz et al 2013 Vector Borne Zoonotic Disease

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 12: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Sciurids (squirrels chipmunks) 31

Tamias (chipmunks) 36

Otospermophilus (ground squirrels) 21

Neotoma (Woodrats)143

Seropositive rodents detected 1200 m ndash 2400 m (4000 ndash 7000 ft) elevation

Seropositivity increased with elevation

Serologic assessment Rodents

Fritz et al 2013 Vector Borne Zoonotic Disease

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 13: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

High risk sites Rodent-infested cabins 3000 - 9000

feet elevation

coniferous forest

Soft ticks live in rodent nests in building Seek out blood meal when rodents vacate nest

Humans vulnerable when sleeping on floor or in beds in contact with walls

Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure

Rodent nest in crawl space

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 14: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Clinical TBRF The mean incubation period of TBRF is 7 days (range 4 to gt 18

days) High fever (eg 103deg F) headache muscle and joint aches

Symptoms can reoccur producing a telltale pattern of fever lasting roughly 3 days followed by 7 days without fever followed by another 3 days of fever

Diagnosis stained blood smear during febrile phase ELISA or IFA (whole cell or GlpQ) PCR

Source NEJM case description

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 15: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

November 15 2005 10486611048661 Volume 72 Number 10 wwwaafporgafp American Family Physician

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 16: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Treatment and Treatment Complications Penicillin and other beta-lactam antimicrobials tetracyclines

macrolides and possibly fluoroquinolones CDC has not developed treatment guidelines in general tetracycline

500 mg every 6 hours for 10 days is typical

Parenteral therapy with ceftriaxone 2 grams per day for 10-14 days for patients with central nervous system involvement

All patients should be observed during the first 4 hours of treatment for a Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction a worsening of symptoms with rigors hypotension and high fever

occurs in over 50 of cases and may be difficult to distinguish from a febrile crisis

In addition acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring intubation has been described recently in several patients undergoing treatment for TBRF

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 17: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information

Reporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Health care providers laboratories others report to local health department (LHD)

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 18: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of InformationReporting mandated by state law (Title 17 CCR)

Reportable TBD include anaplasmosis babesiosis Lyme disease relapsing fever (B hermsii) spotted fever and non-spotted fever group rickettsia

Local health department (LHD) receives follows-up reviews reports

LHD submits reports to CDPH

Reports transmitted to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 19: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Working surveillance case definition

CLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

LABORATORY EVIDENCEFor the purpose of surveillance

Laboratory confirmed

bull Observation of Borrelia sp spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode

Laboratory supportive

bull Elevated IgM or IgG serum antibodies to B hermsii detected by commercial EIA or IFA

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 20: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Working surveillance case definitionCLINICAL EVIDENCEOne or more episodes of fever (gt1005 degF) lasting 2-7 days and separated by afebrile periods of 4-14 days often accompanied by headache muscle and joint aches and nausea

CASE CLASSIFICATION

Confirmed A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that is laboratory confirmed (observation of Borrelia spirochetes on blood smear)

Probable A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results (elevated IgM or IgG to B hermsii by commercial EIA or IFA) and a history of being in the same location as a confirmed case 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Suspect A clinically compatible case (meets clinical evidence criteria) that has supportive laboratory results and a history of residing in or visiting an area in the western US between 2000 and 9000 feet elevation 2 to 14 days prior to onset of first febrile episode

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 21: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Includes all classifications (confirmed probable suspect and not reported) ldquonot reportedrdquo = anecdotal cases that did not fit surveillance criteria due to lack of testing or other reasons but were known to be treated

0

5

10

15

20

25

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Number of TBRF Cases in California 1980 -2018

Not reported Reported

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 22: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

confirmed probable suspect

Reported cases TBRF California 2011 - 2018

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 23: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

7 7 8 4 13 23

98

5631

7 2 50

20

40

60

80

100

120

Month of exposure TBRF cases California 1980 - 2018

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 24: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Sex Frequency Percent

Female 125 3943

Male 192 6057

TOTAL 317 10000

Obs Mean Min Median Max

Age 313 341885 1 33 86

reporting Mean Min Median Max Mode

Number of febrile episodes 249 26908 1 3 8 3

Basic demographics clinical TBRF cases 1980-2018

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 25: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)

Symptom (n= responding to

question)Percentage reporting

SymptomFever (n=68) 100Chills (n=63) 94Headache (n=62) 87Bodyaches (n=64) 83Nausea (n=63) 78Loss of Appetite (n=55) 75Sweats (n=60) 75Dry Cough (n=54) 27Other (n=39) 89Fatigue 50Joint pain 26Shortness of breath 15Abdominal pain 13Photophobia 15

Case statusPercent Hospitalized

Confirmed 43

Probable 58

Suspect 43

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 26: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease

Amador exposure (2018)Eldorado exposure (2017)San Diego resident (2016) Inyo County exposure (2016)

Treating physician saw spirochetes on blood smear (Very unlikely to see Borrelia burgdorferi on blood

smear)

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 27: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

TBRF Can be Severe

3 cases

bull Nevada ndash intubated 12 days required 21 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull California ndash intubated 10 days required 19 days hospitalization spirochetes on blood smear Exposure South Lake Tahoe

bull Washington intubated 3 days required 10 days hospitalization Exposure Washington state

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 28: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

ExposureReport Insect

bite

No 40 5970

Unknown 10 1493

Yes 17 2537

TOTAL 6710000

Travel History Frequency Percent

N 14 2059

Y 54 7941

TOTAL 68 10000

part of outbreak Frequency Percent

N 35 6481U 10 1852Y 9 1667

TOTAL 54 10000

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 29: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

CDPH surveillance data includes confirmed probable suspect

gt 30

20-29

10-19

lt 10

Number of cases

County

Mono 54 183

El Dorado 35 119

San Bernardino 29 98

Nevada 24 81

Fresno 21 71

Tulare 19 64

Placer 18 61

Tuolumne 11 37

Inyo 8 27

Alpine 7 23

Counties of exposure

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 30: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Other TB Relapsing Fever in California

B parkeri B coriacea and B miyamotoi

Ornithodoros parkeri vectoring B parkeri assumed range of lower Sierra Nevada Central Valley floor some coastal regions and parts of southern California

One published human case of B parkeriin California 1939 Stanislaus County with spirochetes detected in O parkericollected from Fresno County

Recent study (Osborne et al) demonstrated PCR positive O parkerinymphs in Madera County at picnicrecreation area

Osborne et al J Med Ent 2019

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 31: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

What About My Dog

Dogs can be fed upon by Borrelia-infected Ornithodoros ticks when they sleep in tick-infested cabins or while foraging in excavated or underground burrows or caves

Reports and detection of B turicatae in dogs in Texas Florida

One report of B hermsii infection in dog from Washington state

Clinical presentation in dogs similar to humans fever lethargy anorexia neurological signs (ataxia tail tucking and cranial nerve deficits)-non specific

Elieu Vet Med Sci 2018 Nov 4(4) 271ndash279

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 32: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases

Utica reservoir (1 case) camping exposure

Old Mammoth Cabin (4 cases) many ticks recovered

Research station (1 case) ticks recovered

SEKI National park (5+ cases in park residents 4 cases last year)

Motivation for environmental follow-upbull Prevent more cases

from same cabinbull Identify place of

likely infection in case of multiple exposure potential

bull Investigate unusual exposures (eg camping)

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 33: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Investigation Research Station

Bed where patient slept pulled away from wall for investigation

Carpet pulled up

Tick found under carpet weaving

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 34: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Description of case and exposure follow upProbable case (serologic support only) ticks with B hermsii infectionrecovered from exposure at Mt Wison Observatory (1737 m elevation) outside urban Los Angeles

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 35: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Prevent rodent infestations of dwellings

Discourage feeding of chipmunks and squirrels

Store firewood away from dwelling

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 36: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Preventing Tick-borne Relapsing Fever

Keep beds away from walls

Removal of rodents from structure without ectoparasite control may increase disease potential Insect foggers aka ldquobug bombsrdquo may

be helpful (Schwann et al 2003 EID)

attempt to identify and remove rodent nests critical

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 37: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions
Page 38: Repeat Performances: Clinical and Epidemiological …...spirochetes on thick or thin smear of peripheral blood collected during a febrile episode Laboratory supportive • Elevated

Questions

  • Repeat Performances Clinical and Epidemiological Aspects of Tick-borne Relapsing Fever in California
  • It takes a teamhellip
  • Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance
  • Overview of todayrsquos presentation
  • Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (Borrelia spp)
  • Ornithodoros characteristics
  • TBRF World wide distribution with various tickBorrelia species combinations
  • Slide Number 8
  • Slide Number 9
  • Slide Number 10
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) B hermsii
  • Serologic assessment Rodents
  • Tick-borne Relapsing Fever Exposure
  • Clinical TBRF
  • Slide Number 15
  • Treatment and Treatment Complications
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Notifiable Disease Surveillance Route of Information
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Working surveillance case definition
  • Slide Number 21
  • Slide Number 22
  • Slide Number 23
  • Slide Number 24
  • Common Symptoms TBRF (2010 ndash 2019)
  • Several recent cases misdiagnosed as Lyme Disease
  • TBRF Can be Severe
  • Exposure
  • Counties of exposure
  • Other TB Relapsing Fever in California
  • What About My Dog
  • Follow-up sites of some 2016 TBRF Cases
  • Investigation Research Station
  • Description of case and exposure follow up
  • Slide Number 35
  • Slide Number 36
  • Finishing thought why NOT to sleep on cabin floors no matter how nice the cabinhellip
  • Questions