The epidemiology of Q fever
- 1 April 1944
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Epidemiology and Infection
- Vol. 43 (5) , 357-361
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022172400013085
Abstract
In seven years 176 cases of Q fever have been diagnosed in Queensland. Nearly all the 129 patients who lived in Brisbane were associated with meat works. Most of the forty-seven country patients worked on dairy farms.Investigation of native animals, cattle and ticks, has indicated in outline the natural history of Q fever, which is set out diagrammatically in Fig. 1. (Several steps in this outline need confirmation and much detail remains to be filled in.)First there is a basic cycle of infection with the bandicoot (and probably other bush animals) as reservoir, andHaemaphysalis humerosa(and probablyIxodes holocyclus) as vector. A bush worker may interrupt this cycle and get Q fever from the attack ofIxodes holocyclus.Cattle become infected, probably throughIxodes holocyclusand perhaps through other ticks. It is possible that there is a secondary cycle: cattle-Haemaphysalis bispinosa-cattle.Ticks on the cattle (Boophilus annulatus microplusorHaemaphysalis bispinosa) are probably the source of human infection. It is suggested that inhalation of tick faeces is the likely mode of entry ofRickettsia burneti.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
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