All Posts Tagged With: "cat scratch fever"

Wormser comments innaccurate

Linda’s comments:  This comment by Wormser  raises my blood pressure ::::“It is so new in our area, it has flown under the radar,” says Moore’s physician Gary P. Wormser, M.D., the chief of infectious diseases at Westchester Medical Center and New York Medical College and head of a team researching tick diseases. “A lot of patients haven’t heard of it, and a lot of doctors don’t know about it.”::::

Link: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41973641/ns/health-infectious_diseases/

Excerpt:

Wild raspberries lured Jacqueline Moore over the wall of her new garden in Westchester County, New York. It was July 2008, and Moore, her husband and their two small kids had just moved up from Manhattan. She was painting the kitchen, up on a ladder, when she glanced out the window and spotted the flash of red. She was thrilled: This was what they had left the city for. She called the kids, and they hopped over the wall. They picked raspberries every day for two weeks. 

About the time the berries ran out, Moore—who was 34 then, a personal trainer and marathoner—started feeling an achein her neck and shoulder. She thought painting the ceiling was to blame; or maybe it was the borrowed mattress she and her husband were sleeping on. Then she noticed herself getting irritable. Family were visiting to see the new house, and “I was having trouble taking care of the guests,” she recalls. “Every day, I would be twice as tired as I had been the day before.” …..

“It is so new in our area, it has flown under the radar,” says Moore’s physician Gary P. Wormser, M.D., the chief of infectious diseases at Westchester Medical Center and New York Medical College and head of a team researching tick diseases. “A lot of patients haven’t heard of it, and a lot of doctors don’t know about it.”

Bartonella infection: treatment and drug resistance

Link: http://eutils.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&id=21133691&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks

Excerpt:


Bartonella species, which belong to the alpha-2 subgroup of Proteobacteria,
are fastidious Gram-negative bacteria that are highly adapted to their
mammalian host reservoirs. Bartonella species are responsible for different
clinical conditions affecting humans, including Carrion’s disease, cat
scratch disease, trench fever, bacillary angiomatosis, endocarditis and
peliosis hepatis. While some of these diseases can resolve spontaneously
without treatment, in other cases, the disease is fatal without antibiotic
treatment. In this article, we discuss the antibiotic susceptibility
patterns of Bartonella species, detected using several methods. We also
provide an overview of Bartonella infection in humans and animals and
discuss the antibiotic treatment recommendations for the different
infections, treatment failure and the molecular mechanism of antibiotic
resistance in these bacteria.