Flea-borne typhus is endemic to Texas and Southern California.11,12 Evidence suggests that the pathogenic bacteria, Rickettsia typhi and Rickettsia felis, also commonly infect fleas in the Great Plains area.13 Opossums carry R felis, and the fleas transmit murine or endemic typhus. A retrospective case series in Texas identified 11 cases of fatal flea-borne typhus from 1985 to 2015.11 More than half of the patients reported contact with animals or fleas prior to the illness. Patients with typhus may present with fever, nausea, vomiting, rash (macular, maculopapular, papular, petechial, or morbilliform), respiratory or neurologic symptoms, thrombocytopenia, and elevated hepatic liver enzymes. Unfortunately, there often is a notable delay in initiation of treatment with the appropriate class of antibiotics—tetracyclines—and such delays can prove fatal.11 The current recommendation for nonpregnant adults is oral doxycycline 100 mg twice daily continued 48 hours after the patient becomes afebrile or for 7 days, whichever therapy duration is longer.14 Because of the consequences of delayed treatment, it is important for clinicians to consider a diagnosis of vector-borne illness in a febrile patient with other associated gastrointestinal, cutaneous, respiratory, or neurologic symptoms, especially if they have animal or flea exposures. Flea control and exposure awareness remains paramount in preventing and treating this illness.
Yersinia pestis causes the plague, an important re-emerging disease that causes infection through flea bites, inhalation, or ingestion.15 From 2000 to 2009, 56 cases and 7 deaths in the United States—New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, California, and Texas—and 21,725 cases and 1612 deaths worldwide were attributed to Y pestis. Most patients present with the bubonic form of the disease, with fever and an enlarging painful femoral or inguinal lymph node due to leg flea bites.16 Other forms of disease, including septicemic and pneumonic plague, are less common but relevant, as one-third of cases in the United States present with septicemia.15,17,18 Although molecular diagnosis and immunohistochemistry play important roles, the diagnosis of Y pestis infection often is still accomplished with culture. A 2012 survey of 392 strains from 17 countries demonstrated that Y pestis remained susceptible to the antibiotics currently used to treat the disease, including doxycycline, streptomycin, gentamicin, tetracycline, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and ciprofloxacin.19
Human infection with Dipylidium caninum, a dog tapeworm, has been reported after suspected accidental ingestion of cat fleas carrying the parasite.20 Children, who may present with diarrhea or white worms in their feces, are more susceptible to the infection, perhaps due to accidental flea consumption while being licked by the pet.20,21
Conclusion
Cat fleas may act as a pruritic nuisance for pet owners and even deliver deadly pathogens to immunocompromised patients. Providers can minimize their impact by educating patients on flea prevention and eradication as well as astutely recognizing and treating flea-borne diseases.