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Journal ArticleDOI

Bartonellosis: an emerging infectious disease of zoonotic importance to animals and human beings

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TLDR
A review of clinically relevant observations related to Bartonella species as emerging pathogens in veterinary and human medicine to provide a review of clinical relevant observations.
Abstract
Objective – To provide a review of clinically relevant observations related to Bartonella species as emerging pathogens in veterinary and human medicine. Data Sources – Literature as cited in PubMed and as generated by each of the authors who have contributed to various aspects of the clinical understanding of bartonellosis. Human Data Synthesis – Important historical and recent publications illustrating the evolving role of animal reservoirs as a source of human infection. Veterinary Data Synthesis – Comprehensive review of the veterinary literature. Conclusions – In addition to inducing life-threatening illnesses, such as endocarditis, myocarditis, and meningoencephalitis and contributing to chronic debilitating disease, such as arthritis, osteomyelitis, and granulomatous inflammation in cats, dogs, and potentially other animal species; pets and wildlife species can serve as persistently infected reservoir hosts for the transmission of Bartonella spp. infection to veterinary professionals and others with direct animal contact.

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Citations
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Cutaneous manifestations of bartonellosis

TL;DR: Considering the broad spectrum of infection and the potential complications associated with Bartonella spp.
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Co-infection with Anaplasma platys, Bartonella henselae, Bartonella koehlerae and 'Candidatus Mycoplasma haemominutum' in a cat diagnosed with splenic plasmacytosis and multiple myeloma.

TL;DR: Co-infection with multiple vector-borne pathogens should be a diagnostic consideration in cats with chronic hypergammaglobulinemia, monoclonal gammopathy and splenic plasmacytosis.
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Feeding Behavior Modulates Biofilm-Mediated Transmission of Yersinia pestis by the Cat Flea, Ctenocephalides felis

TL;DR: This study assessed the vector competence of cat fleas by both mechanisms and found that normal feeding behavior of C. felis, more than an intrinsic resistance to infection or blockage by Y. pestis, limits its vector competence.
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It shouldn’t happen to a dog … or a veterinarian: clinical paradigms for canine vector-borne diseases

TL;DR: Six paradigms concerning the diagnosis, treatment, prevention, and zoonotic implications of CVBDs from a veterinary clinical perspective are discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental transmission of Bartonella henselae by the cat flea.

TL;DR: Data demonstrate that the cat flea readily transmits B. henselae to cats, and control of feline infestation with this arthropod vector may provide an important strategy for the prevention of infection of both humans and cats.
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Recommendations for Treatment of Human Infections Caused by Bartonella Species

TL;DR: The in vitro antibiotic susceptibility data and the knowledge of the in vivo efficacies of antibiotics for each clinical manifestation are compiled, and the treatment recommendations are summarized and ranked according to the Infectious Diseases Society of America practice guidelines.
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Rochalimaea elizabethae sp. nov. isolated from a patient with endocarditis.

TL;DR: Recognition of the procedures required to identify this and other Rochalimaea species suggests that clinical laboratories should prolong the incubation times of cultures of blood and tissue from patients with suspected endocarditis, patients with fever of unknown origin, and immunocompromised patients with Fever so that the full spectrum of disease caused by these organisms can be recognized.
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Blood culture-negative endocarditis in a reference center: etiologic diagnosis of 348 cases.

TL;DR: The improved clinical presentation and prognosis of the disease observed during the last decades is confirmed, and an evolution could be related to earlier diagnosis due to better physician awareness and more sensitive diagnostic techniques.
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