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Cat-scratch disease

Cat scratch fever or Cat-scratch disease is a usually benign infectious disease, most commonly found in children 1-2 weeks following a cat scratch. It was first described in 1889 by Henri Parinaud and has been called Parinaud oculoglandular disease and la maladie des griffes du chat. The cat was recognized as the vector of the disease in 1931 by Dr. Robert Debré. more...

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The disease begins with a small pustule at the site of the scratch, and painful swelling of the local lymph nodes follows. In more severe cases there may be fever, malaise and anorexia. The disease usually resolves spontaneously, with or without treatment, in one month. In immunocompromised patients more severe complications sometimes occur.

The causative organism was first thought to be Afipia felis, but this was disproven by immunological studies demonstrating that cat scratch fever patients developed antibodies to another organism, called Bartonella henselae. It is a rod-shaped Gram negative organism.

Kittens are more likely to carry the bacteria in their blood, and are therefore more likely to transmit the disease than are adult cats.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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Serologic testing for cat-scratch disease
From American Family Physician, 6/15/04 by Bill Zepf

Cat-scratch disease (CSD) may lead to prolonged lymphadenopathy, which sometimes is accompanied by fever and malaise that may raise concerns about an occult malignancy. Some patients with CSD have atypical features, such as eye involvement, encephalitis, endocarditis, hepatitis, or osteomyelitis. Recent advances in serologic testing have improved the ability to reliably diagnose this often clinically vague infection. Metzkor-Cotter and colleagues describe the use of an enzyme immunoassay (EIA) technique for diagnosis of CSD.

The most widely used diagnostic test for CSD at present is an immunofluorescent antibody assay, but it is technically difficult to perform and prone to interobserver variability regarding the interpretation of immunofluorescence. Because the EIA described in this study is numeric, there is no need for subjective interpretation. The authors enrolled 98 patients with clinical and serologic evidence of CSD in their study. About 95 percent of the subjects had regional lymphadenopathy (most commonly axillary, inguinal, or cervical), and about one half reported fever and malaise. The most common atypical manifestation was eye involvement (oculoglandular syndrome or neuroretinitis), which was noted in about 10 percent of subjects.

Anti-Bartonella henselae IgM titers were positive in 53 percent of patients, while 92 percent had positive anti-B. henselae IgG levels. The first serologic sample was obtained three weeks after the infection began, on average, and patients were followed for a median duration of 35 weeks. Both IgM and IgG titers declined over time. Within three months, 92 percent of patients with initially positive IgM levels became seronegative. IgG titers persisted for more than two years in some patients. All patients with positive IgG titers measured at a level of 1.0 optical density or more were within the first 12 months of CSD infection. Neither the initial antibody titers nor their decline over time correlated with disease severity or duration.

The authors conclude that the presence of anti-B. henselae IgM by EIA indicates an acute onset of infection within the previous three months, but it is present in only one half of CSD patients. The slow decline in IgG levels prevents any use of acute and convalescent titers to identify the onset of infection, and the lack of correlation between antibody titers and CSD course precludes its use as a monitor of disease activity.

Metzkor-Cotter E, et al. Long-term serological analysis and clinical follow-up of patients with cat scratch disease. Clin Infect Dis November 1, 2003;37:1149-54.

COPYRIGHT 2004 American Academy of Family Physicians
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

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