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- Wycliffe Wanzala and Sopher Natuluku Ondiaka.
- Behavioural and Chemical Ecology Department, Arthropod Pathology Unit, International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology, Nairobi, Kenya.
- J Res Med Sci. 2013 Oct 1; 18 (10): 918921918-21.
AbstractA 30-year-old African woman in Kenya succumbed to severe swollen regional lymph nodes, development of painful boils and ulcer formation and rashes at specific tick-biting sites together with an intermittent fever and headache following repeated tick bites of Rhipicephalus pulchellus. She later developed nuchal lymphadenopathy-like condition and an eschar with edematous margins at bitten sites. A sustained high fever and fatigue then followed. She became well after treatment with antibiotics and topical application of anti-histamine daily for a week. This pose dangers of emerging tick-borne pathogens such as this one as their epidemiology, biology, socio-economics and prognosis remain unknown.
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