2024-03-29T06:27:05Zhttp://digital.csic.es/dspace-oai/requestoai:digital.csic.es:10261/109082019-05-09T10:50:37Zcom_10261_53com_10261_6col_10261_306
Fernández Soto, Pedro
Pérez Sánchez, Ricardo
Encinas Grandes, Antonio
Álamo Sanz, Rufino
2009-02-24T08:12:23Z
2009-02-24T08:12:23Z
2006-02-01
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases 25(2): 129-131 (2006)
0934-9723
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/10908
10.1007/s10096-006-0087-1
1435-4373
Rickettsia slovaca, a spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsiae, was first isolated in 1968 from a Dermacentor marginatus tick in Slovakia. Since then, it has been found in both D. marginatus and D. reticulatus ticks from Western Europe to central Asia. The first human infection by R. slovaca was reported in 1997 in a patient who presented with a single inoculation lesion of the scalp and enlarged cervical lymph nodes after receiving a bite from a D. marginatus
tick. Later, the isolation of R. slovaca from a French patient provided the first definitive evidence that R. slovaca was a human pathogen. Currently, the rickettsial
disease caused by R. slovaca is called tick-borne lymphadenopathy (TIBOLA) or Dermacentor-bornenecrosis-
erythema-lymphadenopathy (DEBONEL)
and its epidemiological pattern and clinical features in patients from France, Hungary and Spain are being unveiled.
eng
closedAccess
Rickettsia slovaca in Dermacentor ticks found on humans in Spain
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