Hoppa till huvudinnehåll

Scrub typhus

Denna sida har arkiverats.

Det har inte granskats nyligen och är inte uppdaterat. Externa länkar och referenser kanske inte längre fungerar.

Medicinska yrkesverksamma

Professional Reference articles are designed for health professionals to use. They are written by UK doctors and based on research evidence, UK and European Guidelines. You may find one of our hälsoartiklar more useful.

This disease is notifiable in the UK.

An infection caused by Orientia tsutsugamushi - a small intracellular bacterium related to the family of Rickettsiaceae - the organism is classified on its own and not with other rickettsiaceae as it has differences in genes and cell wall structure.1 The name scrub typhus was applied after discovery of increased frequency of the disease in scrub or wasteland areas.2

Fortsätt läsa nedan

Transmission of scrub typhus

Orientia tsutsugamushi is transmitted by the ovaries of trombiculid mites. The offspring mites or larvae are then infected and these are known as "chiggers". These mites then pass the infection to humans by feeding on the fluid in skin cells.

Any surrounding which supports the chiggers will be rife in infection eg near riverbanks (especially if forest cleared close by). It follows that infections are greatest in the rainy season.

  • Scrub typhus is endemic in Eastern and Southern Asia, Northern Australia but is also found in other regions eg India, Thailand, Tibet, Japan, Russia and mountainous regions of Nepal.

  • Scrub typhus can cause outbreaks of pyrexia of unknown origin eg in a school in India.3

  • Not surprisingly, infection is commonest in the indigenous population and immunity after infection varies and may last 1 - 3 years. However, people visiting endemic areas may also be infected.

  • In endemic areas up to 5% of the population are infected.

Country-specific information on the risk of scrub typhus is available on our Travel advice by country page.

Fortsätt läsa nedan

Infection with scrub typhus is most often self-limiting but can occasionally be severe and even fatal.

The incubation period is up to ten days and the commonest features are:

  • Papule followed by an eschar at the site of chigger feeding (only in 50%)

  • Feber

  • Huvudvärk

  • Myalgia

  • Cough

  • Abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting

  • Regional lymphadenopathy

  • Maculopapular rash

Indigenous patients do not commonly develop rash or lymphadenopathy which is thought to be related to previous exposure.3

Severe cases can develop encephalitis and interstitial pneumonia and this may be fatal. If concomitant G6PD deficiency is present then the severity is increased.

  • Indirect immunofluorescence

  • PCR for Orientia tsutsugamushi from blood of feverish patients

  • Some studies have used PCR (polymerase chain reaction) on specimens obtained from eschars.45 This involves obtaining a small piece of the eschar and then amplifying the DNA to look for the genetic sequence of scrub typhus.

  • CXR may show lower zone lung infiltrates in interstitial pneumonia

Fortsätt läsa nedan

  • Pneumonitis

  • Hepatitis

  • Myocarditis

  • Meningoencephalitis

  • Disseminated intravascular coagulation6

  • Multi-organ failure

  • Antibiotics: doxycycline orally or chloramphenicol in more severe cases.

  • There may be antibiotic resistance in some areas eg Thailand.

  • Azithromycin has been used in resistant cases and may be better than doxycycline - especially in children and pregnant women.5

Fatality of untreated cases is between 5-10 % and is even higher in adults.6

Vector control and systemic acaracides have been used. No vaccine or chemoprophylaxis is available.

Exclusive updates for healthcare professionals

Stay informed with the latest clinical updates, professional insights, and evidence-based guidance. The Patient Pro newsletter curates essential content for healthcare professionals—delivered straight to your inbox.

Vänligen ange en giltig e-postadress

By subscribing you accept our Sekretesspolicy. Du kan avsluta prenumerationen när som helst. Vi säljer aldrig dina uppgifter.

Vidare läsning och referenser

  1. Tamura A, Ohashi N, Urakami H, et al; Classification of Rickettsia tsutsugamushi in a new genus, Orientia gen. nov., as Orientia tsutsugamushi comb. nov.; Int J Syst Bacteriol. 1995 Jul;45(3):589-91.
  2. Brown GW; Recent studies in scrub typhus: a review.; J R Soc Med. 1978 Jul;71(7):507-10.
  3. Sharma A, Mahajan S, Gupta ML, et al; Investigation of an outbreak of scrub typhus in the himalayan region of India.; Jpn J Infect Dis. 2005 Aug;58(4):208-10.
  4. Liu YX, Cao WC, Gao Y, et al; Orientia tsutsugamushi in eschars from scrub typhus patients.; Emerg Infect Dis. 2006 Jul;12(7):1109-12.
  5. Lee SH, Kim DM, Cho YS, et al; Usefulness of eschar PCR for diagnosis of scrub typhus.; J Clin Microbiol. 2006 Mar;44(3):1169-71.
  6. Pavithran S, Mathai E, Moses PD; Scrub typhus.; Indian Pediatr. 2004 Dec;41(12):1254-7.

Fortsätt läsa nedan

About the authorView full bio

Author image

Dr Gurvinder Rull, MBBS

Medical Author, Consultant: Clinical Pharmacology, Therapeutics and General Internal Medicine

BSC (Hons), MBBS, FRCP, MA (Medical Ethics)

Dr Gurvinder Rull qualified in 2000, joining EMIS’s content authoring team (now Patient.info) in 2007.

About the reviewerView full bio

Author image

Patient clinician team

The Patient.info Clinical Team creates and reviews our health content to ensure it is accurate, evidence-based, and guided by trusted NHS and NICE standards.

Artikelhistorik

Informationen på denna sida är skriven och granskad av kvalificerade kliniker.

flu eligibility checker

Fråga, dela, anslut.

Bläddra i diskussioner, ställ frågor och dela erfarenheter inom hundratals hälsorelaterade ämnen.

symptom checker

Känner du dig sjuk?

Bedöm dina symtom online gratis