Leptotrombidium

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Leptotrombidium
Scientific classification
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Acari
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Leptotrombidium

Nagayo et al., 1916

Leptotrombidium (/ˌlɛpttrɒmˈbɪdiəm/[1]) is a genus of mites in the family Trombiculidae, that are able to infect humans with scrub typhus (Orientia tsutsugamushi infection) through their bite.[2] The larval form (called chiggers) feeds on rodents, but also occasionally humans and other large mammals. They are related to the harvest mites of the North America and Europe.

Originally, rodents were thought to be the main reservoir for O. tsutsugamushi and the mites were merely

vectors of infection: that is, the mites only transferred the contagion from the rodents to humans.[3][4] However, the mites are now known to only feed once in their lifetimes, which means that transmission from rodent to human via the mites is impossible (for it to have been possible, the mite would have to feed at least twice, once on the infected rodent and again on the human who would then be infected).[5] Instead, the bacterium persists in the mites through transovarial transmission,[6][7][8] where infected mites transmit the infection to their unborn offspring. Leptotrombidium mites are therefore both vector and reservoir for O. tsutsugamushi.[5] The infection predominantly affects female mites,[9]
and does not appear to otherwise harm the mites.

Life history

The larvae are pale orange in colour and feed on liquified skin tissue, not blood, as their mouth parts (chelicerae) are too short to reach the blood vessels.[10] They have three pairs of legs. The larvae most commonly target rodents, but also attach to humans.[5] For humans, the bite is painless, but pain commonly develops only after the larvae detach from the skin, leaving red papules that may then develop into an eschar.[11]

The larval stage lasts for 1 to 2 weeks. After feeding, the larvae drop to the ground and become nymphs. Nymphs are brick-red in colour and have four pairs of legs. The nymphal stage lasts for 1 to 3 weeks. Nymphs mature into adults which have four pairs of legs, the first pair being the largest. They are harmless to humans. In the postlarval stage, they are not parasitic and feed on plant materials.[12] Females lay eggs singly, which hatch in about a week. Lifespan of the adult is about 6 months.

Taxonomy

  • L. akamushi is endemic to Japan and is the reservoir for the Kato serotype of O. tsutsugamushi;[2]
  • Northern Territory, Australia, where is carries the Litchfield serotype.[15]
  • L. pallidum is endemic to Japan and is the reservoir for Karp and Gilliam serotypes;[2][16]
  • L. scutellare is endemic to Japan and is the reservoir for Kawasaki and Kuroki serotypes.[2][16]

References

  1. ^ "Leptotrombidium". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d. Retrieved 2016-01-23.
  2. ^ a b c d "Scrub typhus (tsutsugamushi disease) in Japan, 1996–2000". Byogen Biseibutsu Kenshutsu Joho Geppo. 22: 211–212. 2001.
  3. JSTOR 3273264
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  4. ^ Fox JP (1948). "The long persistence of Rickettsia orientalis in the blood and tissues of infected animals". J Immunol. 59 (2): 109–114.
  5. ^
    PMID 11944716
    .
  6. .
  7. ^ Takahashi M, Murata M, Nogami S, Hori E, Kawamura A, Tanaka H (1988). "Transovarial transmission of Rickettsia tsutsugamushi in Leptotrombidium pallidum successively reared in the laboratory". Jpn J Exp Med. 58: 213–218.
  8. PMID 11268685
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  9. .
  10. ^ Roberts LW, Robinson DM, Rapmund G, et al. (1975). "Distribution of Rickettsia tsutsugamushi in organs of Leptotrombidium (Leptotrombidium) fletcheri (Prostigmata: Trombiculidae)". J Med Entomol. 12 (3): 345–348. .
  11. ^ Kitaoka M, Asanuma K, Otsuji J (1974). "Transmission of Rickettsia orientalis to man by Leptotrombidium akamushi at a scrub typhus endemic area in Akita Prefecture, Japan". Am J Trop Med Hyg. 23 (5): 993–9.
    PMID 4451238
    .
  12. ^ Takahashi M, Misumi H, Urakami H, et al. (2003). "Lifecycle of Leptotrombidium pallidum (Acari: Trombiculidae), one of the vector mites of scrub typhus in Japan". Ohara Sogo Byoin Nenpo. 45: 19–30.
  13. PMID 11944714
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  14. .
  15. .
  16. ^ .