## Correct Answer: D. Rickettsia prowazekii **Rickettsia prowazekii** causes **epidemic typhus** (louse-borne typhus), transmitted by the human body louse (*Pediculus humanus humanus*). The clinical presentation is pathognomonic: high fever, headache, and a characteristic **maculopapular rash that appears on the trunk and extremities but characteristically spares the palms and soles**. The presence of lice on examination is the key epidemiological clue—epidemic typhus spreads in crowded, unhygienic conditions (refugee camps, prisons, militant hideouts) where louse infestation is endemic. The rash typically appears 5–7 days after infection and progresses from trunk to periphery. *R. prowazekii* is an obligate intracellular gram-negative bacterium that causes vasculitis of small blood vessels, leading to the rash. The sparing of palms and soles distinguishes it from other rickettsial infections and is a high-yield discriminator in Indian medical exams. In India, while endemic typhus (*R. typhi*) is more common in urban areas, epidemic typhus remains a concern in conflict zones and refugee populations. Treatment is doxycycline (or chloramphenicol in pregnancy). ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Rickettsia akari** — **Rickettsia akari** causes **rickettsial pox**, transmitted by mites from infected mice. The rash is vesicular (not maculopapular), appears as a painless eschar at the bite site followed by a sparse vesicular rash, and is typically mild and self-limited. Lice are not the vector; mites are. This is a rare zoonotic infection in India and does not present with widespread rash sparing palms/soles in a louse-infested patient. **B. Rickettsia conorii** — **Rickettsia conorii** causes **spotted fever** (Mediterranean spotted fever, Indian tick typhus), transmitted by *Ixodes* ticks, not lice. The rash typically **includes the palms and soles** (unlike the clinical picture here), and an eschar is often present at the tick bite site. The vector is a tick, not a louse, making this incompatible with the lice-infested presentation described. **C. Rickettsia typhi** — **Rickettsia typhi** causes **endemic typhus** (murine typhus), transmitted by fleas from infected rats, not lice. While endemic typhus presents with fever and rash, it is associated with flea-infested rodents in urban/peridomestic settings, not louse-infested populations. The rash pattern and epidemiology differ significantly; lice infestation is not a feature of endemic typhus. ## High-Yield Facts - **Epidemic typhus (R. prowazekii)** is transmitted by the human body louse (*Pediculus humanus humanus*), not by ticks or fleas. - **Rash spares palms and soles** in epidemic typhus; this is the key discriminator from spotted fever (*R. conorii*), which includes palms/soles. - **Epidemic typhus** spreads in crowded, unhygienic conditions (refugee camps, prisons, conflict zones); endemic typhus (*R. typhi*) is associated with rats and fleas in urban areas. - **Incubation period** is 5–7 days; rash appears on trunk first and spreads centrifugally. - **Treatment**: doxycycline 100 mg BD for 7 days (or chloramphenicol in pregnancy); early treatment prevents complications (DIC, renal failure). - **Weil-Felix test** (heterophile agglutination) is positive in rickettsial infections; **PCR and immunofluorescence** are confirmatory. ## Mnemonics **RICKETTSIAL RASH PATTERN (Palms & Soles Rule)** **SPOTTED** (R. conorii) = Spots on **Palms & Soles** | **EPIDEMIC** (R. prowazekii) = **Excludes Palms & Soles**. Use: When you see 'spares palms/soles,' think epidemic typhus + louse. **VECTOR MATCH (Rickettsia)** **R. prowazekii** → **Louse** | **R. conorii** → **Tick** | **R. typhi** → **Flea**. Use: Match the vector in the stem to the organism. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs the presence of lice with a rash and expects students to confuse epidemic typhus (*R. prowazekii*) with endemic typhus (*R. typhi*) or spotted fever (*R. conorii*). The key trap is the **rash sparing palms and soles**—students who memorize only "rickettsial rash" without the distribution pattern will select the wrong organism. ## Clinical Pearl In India, epidemic typhus is rare but resurfaces in conflict zones, refugee camps, and overcrowded prisons where louse-borne transmission occurs. A militant or displaced person with fever, lice, and a characteristic rash should immediately raise suspicion for *R. prowazekii*; early doxycycline prevents life-threatening complications like DIC and multi-organ failure. _Reference: Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology, Ch. 27 (Rickettsiae); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Ch. 167 (Rickettsial Infections)_
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