Aim: To characterise and investigate patients diagnosed with murine typhus in the Waikato District Health Board (DHB) region during 2006.
Method: We reviewed the hospital and general practitioner records of all patients presenting with clinical and serological evidence of murine typhus. All patients were interviewed by telephone using a semi-structured questionnaire to identify environmental risk factors for infection. A limited, retrospective serosurvey was undertaken and surveillance was enhanced.
Results: 12 patients were identified, all had either lived, or spent considerable time, in rural areas; 7 patients had seen rats on their properties 'regularly' and 3 remembered fleabites within the incubation period of the illness. The classic triad of symptoms is fever, headache, and rash--these symptoms were seen in 12, 11, and 8 patients respectively; lethargy, myalgias, nausea, and vomiting were also common. 11 patients had abnormal liver function tests at presentation, and 7 had low platelets. Treatment with doxycycline was associated with a shorter hospital stay.
Conclusion: Murine typhus has now been confirmed in rural areas throughout the Waikato DHB region. Rats are likely associated with disease in rural communities and rat control is a complex issue. However, a greater awareness of the disease should lead to earlier diagnosis and treatment.