
Some people have mild symptoms, but most have flu-like symptoms, such as a fever, a severe headache, chills, a dry cough, extreme weakness, and muscle aches.
A few people develop chronic Q fever, a severe disease that can affect the heart.
If people may have been exposed to sheep, cattle, or goats and doctors suspect Q fever, they may do blood tests and examine a sample of infected tissue to confirm the infection.
People with Q fever are treated with an antibiotic, usually for a few weeks, but if chronic Q fever develops, treatment is needed for months or years.
The bacteria that cause Q fever, like rickettsiae Overview of Rickettsial Infections Rickettsial infections and related infections (such as anaplasmosis, ehrlichiosis, and Q fever) are caused by an unusual type of bacteria that can live only inside the cells of another organism... read more , can live only inside the cells of other organisms.
Q fever occurs worldwide. The bacteria that cause Q fever live mainly in sheep, cattle, and goats. Infected animals (which often do not show symptoms) shed the bacteria in their milk, urine, and stool (feces). People are infected when they inhale airborne droplets containing the bacteria or consume contaminated raw (unpasteurized) milk. Airborne droplets containing the bacteria can travel long distances affecting people living downwind of an infected goat or sheep farm. Very rarely, the disease is transmitted from person to person.
People at risk of developing Q fever include the following:
Veterinarians
Meat processing plant workers
Slaughterhouse and dairy workers
Livestock farmers
Researchers at laboratories where sheep are kept
People who live within several miles downwind from a farm with infected animals
The bacteria that cause Q fever survives in dust and stool for months. Even a single bacterium can cause infection. Because of these characteristics, these bacteria are considered a potential biological warfare agent Biological Weapons Biological warfare is the use of microbiological agents as weapons. Such use is contrary to international law and has rarely taken place during formal warfare in modern history, despite the... read more .
Symptoms of Q Fever
About 9 to 28 days after bacteria enter the body, symptoms begin suddenly. Some people have mild or no symptoms. Other people have flu-like symptoms.
Symptoms of Q fever include fever, a severe headache, chills, extreme weakness, muscle aches, loss of appetite, and sweating, but no rash. The lungs are often affected, causing a dry (unproductive) cough, chest pain, and shortness of breath (caused by pneumonia Overview of Pneumonia Pneumonia is an infection of the small air sacs of the lungs (alveoli) and the tissues around them. Pneumonia is one of the most common causes of death worldwide. Often, pneumonia is the final... read more ). Symptoms may be severe in older people and in people who have been weakened (debilitated) by a disorder.
Occasionally, the liver is involved. People then have pain in the upper right part of the abdomen and sometimes jaundice Jaundice in Adults In jaundice, the skin and whites of the eyes look yellow. Jaundice occurs when there is too much bilirubin (a yellow pigment) in the blood—a condition called hyperbilirubinemia. (See also Overview... read more .
Women who are infected during pregnancy have an increased risk of a miscarriage or delivery before the baby is due.
A post-Q fever fatigue syndrome may occur in up to 20% of people with Q fever. People may have severe fatigue, muscle pains, headache, sensitivity to light, changes in mood, and difficulty sleeping.
Chronic Q fever is a severe disease that occurs in fewer than 5% of infected people. It may develop from a few weeks to many years after the initial infection. The risk is greatest for the following:
Pregnant women
People whose immune system has been weakened by a disorder or drugs
People who have a heart valve disorder
Chronic Q fever often involves the lining of the heart and heart valves (called Q fever endocarditis Infective Endocarditis Infective endocarditis is an infection of the lining of the heart (endocardium) and usually also of the heart valves. Infective endocarditis occurs when bacteria enter the bloodstream and travel... read more ). It sometimes involves the bones, artificial (prosthetic) joints, and the liver.
Without treatment, only 1% of people with Q fever die. Untreated Q fever endocarditis is almost always fatal but with antibiotic treatment, mortality is under 5%.
Diagnosis of Q Fever
Biopsy and testing of infected tissue
Blood tests
Sometimes a chest x-ray
Symptoms of Q fever resemble those of other disorders and thus do not help doctors with the diagnosis. If doctors suspect Q fever, they ask whether people were at or near a farm because the bacteria that cause Q fever live mainly in cattle, sheep, and goats.
To confirm the diagnosis, doctors may do an immunofluorescence assay Testing to check for antibodies in blood samples. However, doing the test once is not enough. The test must be repeated 3 to 6 weeks later to check for an increase in the antibody level. In addition, doctors use the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique Testing
to enable them to detect the bacteria more rapidly. Thus, the antibody tests do not usually help diagnose the infection immediately after someone becomes ill but can help confirm the diagnosis later.
Doctors may do biopsies of infected tissue if there is an obvious site of infection.
If people have a cough or other respiratory symptoms, doctors take a chest x-ray.
Prevention of Q Fever
Measures to prevent Q fever involve mainly using appropriate sanitation and testing (for the bacteria) in facilities where sheep, cattle, and goats are kept. Consuming only pasteurized milk and milk products can also help.
In Australia, a vaccine is available and has been used to prevent the infection in people likely to be exposed (such as slaughterhouse and dairy workers, livestock farmers, and laboratory workers). This vaccine is not available in the United States.
Before giving people the vaccine, doctors do blood and skin tests to determine whether people already have immunity to Q fever. If people already have immunity, vaccinating them can cause severe reactions near the injection site.
Treatment of Q Fever
Antibiotics
The initial infection is treated with the antibiotic doxycycline, taken by mouth. People take the antibiotic until they improve and have had no fever for about 5 days, but they must take it for at least 7 days. Typically, 2 to 3 weeks of treatment is required.
Q fever endocarditis
If the heart is affected, treatment is given for months to years. Typically, treatment is given for at least 18 months, but some people need to be treated their entire life. People are usually given doxycycline plus hydroxychloroquine. Both are taken by mouth. To determine when treatment can be stopped, doctors periodically examine the person and do blood tests.
However antibiotic treatment is often only partially effective, and surgery is often needed to replace the damaged heart valves (see figure ).
Drugs Mentioned In This Article
Generic Name | Select Brand Names |
---|---|
doxycycline |
Acticlate, Adoxa, Adoxa Pak, Avidoxy, Doryx, Doxal, Doxy 100, LYMEPAK, Mondoxyne NL, Monodox, Morgidox 1x, Morgidox 2x , Okebo, Oracea, Oraxyl, Periostat, TARGADOX, Vibramycin, Vibra-Tabs |
hydroxychloroquine |
Plaquenil, Quineprox |