The effect of combinations of penicillin, tetracycline and rifampicin on R. prowazekii (the causative agent of typhus) and R. sibirica (the causative agent of tick-borne rickettsiosis of the North Asia) was studied. It was shown that tetracycline and penicillin used in combination had a summation effect on both R. sibirica and R. prowazekii. The dose of each antibiotic was 2 times lower than the doses of the antibiotics used alone. However, R. sibirica was less sensitive to this combination than R. prowazekii: the minimum rickettsiocidic doses of the combination were 0.5 mg of tetracycline + 10000 units of penicillin per embryo with respect to R. sibirica and 0.1 mg of tetracycline + 10000 units of penicillin per embryo with respect to R. prowazekii. The combinations of rifampicin with penicillin or tetracycline in the concentrations used had no rickettsiocidic effect on either R. sibirica or R. prowazekii. However, it should be noted that these combinations had a synergistic action and provided a rickettsiostatic effect on R. prowazekii: the dose of rifampicin in its combination with penicillin was decreased 10 times and in the combination of rifampicin with tetracycline the doses of both rifampicin and tetracycline were decreased 10 times. Still, penicillin even in a dose of 20000 units per embryo had only a rickettsiostatic effect on R. sibirica and R. prowazekii.
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Microbes Infect
October 2016
Infectious Diseases Department, Hospital San Pedro-CIBIR, Logroño, Spain. Electronic address:
Bacteria of the genera Rickettsia and Orientia (family rickettsiaceae, order rickettsiales) cause rickettsioses worldwide, and are transmitted by lice, fleas, ticks and mites. In Europe, only Rickettsia spp. cause rickettsioses.
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December 2012
Department of Infectious Diseases, Batna Hospital, Algeria.
In order to investigate the prevalence of rickettsioses in febrile exanthemas in eastern Algeria, we conducted a prospective serological analysis of all patients presenting with this clinical picture at the Infectious Diseases Department in the Batna Hospital from January 2000 to September 2006. One hundred and eight adult patients were included in the study, 46% of whom younger than 25 years, and 72.5% were admitted from May to September.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn N Y Acad Sci
October 2006
Laboratory of Rickettsial Ecology, Gamaleya Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology, ul. Gamalei, 18, Moscow, Russia.
Currently, several rickettsioses are officially being reported in the Russian Federation. These are epidemic typhus and Brill-Zinsser disease, both caused by Rickettsia prowazekii which has a historic prevalence in Russia. Nowadays only single sporadic cases of R.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn N Y Acad Sci
October 2006
Unité des Rickettsies, CNRS UMR 6020 IFR 48, WHO Collaborative Center for Rickettsial Reference and Research, Faculté de Médecine, 27 Bd Jean Moulin, 13385 Marseille Cedex 5, France.
Although rickettsioses are among the oldest known vector-borne zoonoses, several species or subspecies of rickettsias have been identified in recent years as emerging pathogens throughout the world including in sub-Saharan Africa. To date, six tick-borne spotted fever group pathogenic rickettsias are known to occur in sub-Saharan Africa, including Rickettsia conorii conorii, the agent of Mediterranean spotted fever; R. conorii caspia, the agent of Astrakhan fever; R.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Trop Med Hyg
December 2005
The Australian Rickettsial Reference Laboratory, Department of Clinical and Biomedical Sciences, The University of Melbourne, The Geelong Hospital, Victoria, Australia.
A highly specific real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay was developed to detect spotted fever and typhus group rickettsiae using the citrate synthase gene as the target. The assay amplified rickettsial members of the spotted fever and typhus group including Rickettsia akari, R. australis, R.
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