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An interstate outbreak of tick-borne relapsing fever among vacationers at a Rocky Mountain cabin.
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1998
Year
Family MembersDiagnosisDisease OutbreakColorado CabinInfectious Disease ControlTick-borne DiseaseVector Borne DiseaseClinical EpidemiologyEmerging Infectious DiseaseInfection ControlPublic HealthParasitologyInfectious Disease EpidemiologyEpidemiologyRocky Mountain CabinEmerging Infectious DiseasesZoonotic DiseasePathogenesisClinical InfectionDisease TransmissionInterstate OutbreakMedicineJuly 1995
In July 1995, an outbreak of acute febrile illness affected 11 (48%) of 23 family members from Nebraska and Kansas who had vacationed at a Colorado cabin in June. Similar symptoms were identified among five (17%) of 30 additional persons from Nebraska, Kansas, Florida, and Texas who had vacationed at the same cabin. Symptoms suggested tick-borne relapsing fever (TBRF). Although no spirochetes were detected in available blood smears from five case-patients, Borrelia hermsii was cultured from the blood of one case-patient and two chipmunks trapped near the cabin. Case-patients were more likely than non-ill cabin visitors to have slept on the floor (odds ratio [OR] = 28.0, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.0-258) or in the top bunk bed (OR = 5.2, 95% CI = 1.1-25.1). Tick-borne relapsing fever should considered in the differential diagnosis of fever in patients who have stayed overnight in mountain cabins in the western United States.
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