Human ehrlichiosis: Hematopathology and immunohistologic detection of Ehrlichia chaffeensis

Human ehrlichiosis is a recently described zoonosis caused by a rickettsia that infects leukocytes. Most patients have fever, headache, chills, and myalgias and develop leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, and elevations in serum hepatic aminotransferases. The cause of the peripheral leukopenia and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human pathology 1993-04, Vol.24 (4), p.391-396
Hauptverfasser: Stephen Dumler, J., Dawson, Jacqueline E., Walker, David H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Human ehrlichiosis is a recently described zoonosis caused by a rickettsia that infects leukocytes. Most patients have fever, headache, chills, and myalgias and develop leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, and elevations in serum hepatic aminotransferases. The cause of the peripheral leukopenia and thrombocytopenia is not known. We studied peripheral blood smears, bone marrow aspirates, and bone marrow biopsy specimens from patients with serologically proven ehrlichiosis to characterize the pathologic changes associated with leukopenia or thrombocytopenia, to detect the presence of immunohistologically demonstrable ehrlichiae, and to establish the infected host target cell(s). Specimens were obtained from 12 patients, and immunohistology for Ehrlichia chaffeensis was performed on tissue sections, aspirated bone marrow, and peripheral blood smears. Mean leukocyte and platelet counts available for nine patients were white blood cell count 3,300/μL (range, 1,100 to 10,300/μL) and platelets 61,000/μL (range, 40,000 to 82,000/μL). Findings included myeloid hyperplasia (eight cases), megakaryocytosis (seven cases), granulomas (eight cases), marrow histiocytosis (one case), myeloid hypoplasia (one case), pancellular hypoplasia (one case), and normocellular marrow (two cases). Morulae of E chaffeensis were detected in four of 10 cases examined by immunohistology. Most ehrlichiae were detected within histiocytes, although morulae were rarely present within lymphocytes. Leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, or pancytopenia apparently most often results from peripheral sequestration or destruction; however, hypoplasia of marrow elements is present occasionally. Immunohistologic demonstration of E chaffeensis offers a direct means for establishing the etiologic diagnosis. These observations show the relatively frequent occurrence of bone marrow granulomas and suggest that infection of cells of the reticuloendothelial system may participate in the pathogenesis of human ehrlichiosis.
ISSN:0046-8177
1532-8392
DOI:10.1016/0046-8177(93)90087-W