Rickettsiosis Vesicular

Vesicular rickettsiosis is an acute infectious disease caused by the bacterium Rickettsia ricketsii and transmitted through the bites of blood-sucking insects. The epidemiology of the disease was studied in Russia in the mid-20th century, when clinical signs of a common disease appeared in Central Asia, which resembled some known forms of diseases associated with



Rickettsia Vesicular

Rickettziosis is an acute infectious disease of a bacterial nature, accompanied by symptoms of intoxication and exanthema. Outbreaks of spotted pox are usually observed in the warm season. Treatment is carried out by administering antibiotics orally or topically to skin lesions. The disease begins acutely, body temperature rises to high levels, weakness and headache appear. Sometimes severe muscle and joint pain, nausea, and vomiting develop. A runny nose, sore throat, and cough are possible. Against the background of a high temperature, the patient’s consciousness is impaired, delirium and hallucinations occur. Pain often occurs



Rickettsial diseases are a group of acute human infectious diseases caused by rickettsia. Rickettsia includes microorganisms that can infect both animals and humans. These microorganisms are also the causative agents of typhus, endemic or epidemic typhus, epidemic fever, tsutsugamushi (Ku and Laxmans spotted fever), Vesicular fever.



Rickettsiosis is an acute infectious disease caused by rickettsiae (Rickettsiae), with natural focality, transmitted to humans by arthropods, characterized by fever, intoxication, pinpoint or spotty rash on the extensor surfaces of the extremities.