Co-infection with Anaplasma platys, Bartonella henselae and Candidatus Mycoplasma haematoparvum in a veterinarian

Background During a two year period, a 27-year-old female veterinarian experienced migraine headaches, seizures, including status epilepticus, and other neurological and neurocognitive abnormalities. Prior to and during her illness, she had been actively involved in hospital-based work treating domestic animals, primarily cats and dogs, in Grenada and Ireland and anatomical research requiring the dissection of wild animals (including lions, giraffe, rabbits, mongoose, and other animals), mostly in South Africa. The woman reported contact with fleas, ticks, lice, biting flies, mosquitoes, spiders and mites and had also been scratched or bitten by dogs, cats, birds, horses, reptiles, rabbits and rodents. Prior diagnostic testing resulted in findings that were inconclusive or within normal reference ranges and no etiological diagnosis had been obtained to explain the patient’s symptoms. Methods PCR assays targeting Anaplasma spp. Bartonella spp. and hemotopic Mycoplasma spp. were used to test patient blood samples. PCR positive amplicons were sequenced directly and compared to GenBank sequences. In addition, Bartonella alpha Proteobacteria growth medium (BAPGM) enrichment blood culture was used to facilitate bacterial growth and Bartonella spp. serology was performed by indirect fluorescent antibody testing. Results Anaplasma platys, Bartonella henselae and Candidatus Mycoplasma haematoparvum DNA was amplified and sequenced from the woman’s blood, serum or blood culture samples. Her serum was variably seroreactive to several Bartonella sp. antigens. Despite symptomatic improvement, six months of doxycycline most likely failed to eliminate the B. henselae infection, whereas A. platys and Candidatus M. haematoparvum DNA was no longer amplified from post-treatment samples. Conclusions As is typical of many veterinary professionals, this individual had frequent exposure to arthropod vectors and near daily contact with persistently bacteremic reservoir hosts, including cats, the primary reservoir host for B. henselae, and dogs, the presumed primary reservoir host for A. platys and Candidatus Mycoplasma haematoparvum. Physicians caring for veterinarians should be aware of the occupational zoonotic risks associated with the daily activities of these animal health professionals.


Background
Many veterinary professionals (veterinarians, veterinary technicians and veterinary support personnel) are occupationally exposed to a spectrum of domestic, production and wild animals, a subset of which can be persistently infected with bacteria, protozoans and viruses. In addition to extensive contact with infected animals and their biological fluids and tissues while performing clinical and necropsy examinations, veterinarians are frequently exposed to arthropod vectors, such as fleas, lice and ticks that infest healthy, sick and dead animals. Also, veterinarians involved in the care of production animals, wildlife or zoological collections have additional environmental exposure to biting flies, chiggers, mosquitoes, spiders and other arthropods while working in terrestrial and marine coastal environments throughout the world. Although it is well recognized that approximately 60% of all human pathogens and 75% of emerging pathogens are zoonotic in nature [1][2][3], little attention has been focused on the occupational risks associated with the daily professional activities of veterinarians.
Recently, infections with various Bartonella species, including Bartonella henselae [4][5][6], Bartonella koehlerae [6,7], Bartonella vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii genotypes I and II [4,6,8,9] and Candidatus Bartonella melophagi [10] have been reported among veterinary professionals. Two studies have also supported potential needle stick transmission of B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii and B. henselae to veterinarians, respectively [11,12]. In a study in which many of the participants were veterinary professionals [6], Bartonella spp. seroreactivity or bacteremia was documented in 49.5% (n = 95) and 23.9% (n = 46) of 192 patients, respectively; however, IFA antibodies were not detected in 30.4% (n = 14) of bacteremic patients. Thus, seronegative Bartonella bacteremia is not an uncommon phenomenon. Co-infection with B. henselae and Mycoplasma ovis was also recently described in a veterinarian, who reported frequent bites or scratches from cats, dogs, rodent pocket pets, and an assortment of wild and zoo animals [13]. On numerous occasions, that veterinarian had traveled for professional activities to Central America and Colombia. Also, while working in Texas, he was exposed to sheep, goats, llamas, camels and had frequent deer contact throughout his career. The exposure history and travel experiences reported by the Texas veterinarian and the veterinarian described in this report are typical of the experiences of many veterinary professionals working around the world throughout their careers.
Anaplasma platys, transmitted by the Brown Dog Tick (Rhipicephalus sanguineus), is an obligate intracellular rickettsial organism that infects platelets [14,15]. In 1978, this bacterium was first described in the southeastern United States as the cause of canine infectious cyclic thrombocytopenia. Historically, A. platys was thought to only infect dogs, however, a recent report from Brazil implicated A. platys infection in a cat [16].
In 2004, Sykes and colleagues described a novel hemotropic mycoplasma in the blood of a splenectomized immunocompromised dog with haemic lymphoid neoplasia and proposed the name Candidatus Mycoplasma haematoparvum [17]. We now report the medical history for a sick veterinarian from Grenada, who was infected with A. platys, B. henselae and Candidatus M. haematoparvum.

Case report
Prior to the onset of her symptoms, a 27-year-old female veterinarian had been actively involved in hospital-based work treating domestic animals, primarily cats and dogs, and anatomical research dissecting wild animals (including lions, giraffe, rabbits, mongoose, and other animals). These activities had occurred in Grenada, Ireland and South Africa. The woman reported contact with fleas, ticks, lice, biting flies, mosquitoes, spiders and mites. She also reported scratches or bites by dogs, cats, birds, horses, reptiles, rabbits and rodents. Beginning in September, 2010, headaches of approximately two weeks duration preceded a fainting episode, photophobia, generalized muscle fasciculations and the onset of tonic-clonic seizures. When hospitalized in South Africa, a CBC and serum chemistry profile were unremarkable and a contrast brain CT revealed no structural abnormalities or evidence of vascular damage. A few days later, encephalitis was diagnosed based on MRI lesions that were considered characteristic for Herpes simplex encephalitis. The patient was admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), and over the next 10 days was maintained on a sedative, lorazepam (Ativan), anticonvulsants including sodium valproate (Epilim) and phenytoin sodium (Dilantin) which was stopped after an adverse reaction, and pain medications including tramadol hydrochloride (Ultram ER) and paracetamol (Perfalgan), as required. Amoxicillin, cephazolin and doxycycline were also administered for 2 weeks. A 24 hour electroencephalogram (EEG) revealed no electrical abnormalities and CSF analysis was not indicative of inflammation or infection. Electron microscopy of CSF revealed protein fibrils suspected to be associated with "tick-bite fever". Due to the potential of a transmissible infectious agent, the National Institute of Communicable Diseases (NICD) in South Africa tested for Ebola hemorrhagic fever (Ebolavirus), Lyme disease (Borrelia burgdorferi), spotted fever group rickettsioses (Rickettsia africae and Rickettsia conorii), Rift Valley Fever (Phlebovirus), Equine Viral Encephalitis (Arbovirus), African horse sickness (Orbivirus) and Rabies(Lyssavirus), all of which were negative. The patient was also treated presumptively because of potential Streptococcus suis exposure, as she had case contact a few days prior to hospitalization with a piglet that had cerebral signs and a positive brain culture. When discharged from ICU to the ward, she was treated with sodium valproate and carbamazepine (Tegretol). One month post-discharge, the patient continued to experience tremors, mild seizures, ataxia and memory loss and had left-sided weakness. An analgesic containing paracentamol, codeine phosphate, caffeine, and meprobmate (STILPNE W Capsules) was added to the treatment regimen. During the next two weeks seizure frequency, severity, and duration increased, with seizures becoming more violent and lasting at least 10 minutes. When referred to a neurologist, the patient was monitored on the neurology ward using a three-day camera linked to an EEG, which documented seizures occurring four to seven times a day. As seizures accompanied ringing noises (drip alarms, jiggling bottles on trolleys, etc.), anticonvulsants were discontinued on the premise that seizures were induced by sound hypersensitivity and were potentially being accentuated by the medications. Sertraline hydrochloride, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) was administered for noise hypersensitivity, post-encephalitic depression, disorientation, and irritability. Results of repeat CBC, serum chemistry panel, EEG and MRI were negative or within reference ranges. The neurologist concluded that the lesion(s) inducing the seizure focus was/were microscopic and deeper than detectable by EEG. While hospitalized, a psychologist recommended further personal counseling, as he felt that the patient needed to come to terms with post-encephalitic seizures and inability to be active and to live the life she experienced before becoming ill. Before the onset of symptoms, the woman was actively involved in windsurfing, diving, surfing, running and sailing and had completed the Dublin marathon less than a year before the onset of her illness.
One month later, headaches continued, migraines were diagnosed, and vertigo had developed especially when in a moving vehicle, however the left sided weakness had improved and repeat memory testing documented substantial improvement in short term memory with residual deficits in math skills. Amitriptyline (Elavil) and clonazepam (Rivotril) were administered for treatment of the migraines and anxiety, respectively. By four months after the onset of illness, the patient associated her seizures with loud noises, bright light or long car rides, all of which she attempted to avoid. One month later, she was again hospitalized due to severe migraines, inability to enunciate words and left-sided weakness. A CBC, serum chemistry panel, and a CT scan were negative or within reference ranges. Sodium valproate was restarted after consultation with a second neurologist. A combination drug containing tramadol hydrochloride and acetaminophen (Tramacet) were added to the treatment regimen for the migraines. When discharged five days later, amitriptyline, sodium valproate, sertraline hydrochloride and Tramacet were continued until August, 2011, at which time the patient elected to discontinue medications against medical advice.
One week later, she was hospitalized for debilitating migraines, which persisted for seven days despite administration of multiple medications. Again, there were no MRI abnormalities. She was discharged by her neurologist with instructions to take clobazam (Urbanol), agomelatine (Valdoxin) and amitriptyline for depression and management of the noise hypersensitivity, Tramadol for headaches, and topiramate 100 mg bid (Topamax) as an anticonvulsant and lorazepam (Ativan SL) for emergency seizure control. Between September 2011 and January 2012, these medications were continued and the patient experienced remarkable improvement, with decreased sensitivity to flashing lights, increased tolerance to loud noises, increased energy and improved mental capacities. However in November 2011, she was admitted to the emergency room following the development of joint pain, particularly severe in the knees, left wrist, right elbow and lower back. Standard view radiographs of her left wrist, which was the most severely affected source of pain, revealed no structural abnormalities, CBC values were within reference ranges and an ANA panel, uric acid level and Rheumatoid Factor assay were negative. Initial treatment included intravenously administered dexamethasone, followed by oral steroid maintenance therapy for five days, and Etoricoxib (Arcoxia) 90 mg bid for two weeks. Joint and back pain abated after two weeks.
While in transit from South Africa to Grenada in December 2011, the patient had a seizure in JFK airport in New York, after which she continued to experience severe tonic-clonic seizures while in Grenada. When examined by a neurologist on January 6, 2012, there was a mildly abnormal EEG pattern characterized by bilateral sharp activity, and interpreted as consistent with cerebral irritability in a patient receiving anticonvulsant therapy. Medications now included topiramate (200 mg bid), lamotragine (Lamictal), clonazepam, amitriptyline, agomelatine (Valdoxane) and Tramadol as needed. Over the next two months the seizures decreased in frequency and severity. Concurrently, the woman's migraines increased in frequency and duration, often lasting 5 days. On March 1st, the patient was airlifted from Grenada to Trinidad in status epilepticus. She remained hospitalized until March 8th, during which time therapy targeted seizures and migraines, but would not have addressed an underlying infection. After discharge, the migraines continued, requiring periodic administration of buprenorphine (Temgesic), which rapidly stopped the migraine within minutes of administration.
Twenty months after the onset of the patient's illness, one of the authors visited St George's University to participate in a research collaboration involving canine ehrlichiosis, which is a highly endemic canine tick borne disease on the island of Grenada. After reciting her medical history during a casual conversation, the woman elected to enter an ongoing study regarding Bartonella spp. infection in high risk patients, i.e. veterinary professionals (North Carolina State University Institutional Review Board approval IRB 1960-11). Written permission was given to also test for other vector borne organisms.

Molecular testing
Bartonella testing was performed using the BAPGM platform, as previously described [4][5][6][7][8]. The BAPGM platform incorporates 4 separate PCR testing time points, each representing a different component of the testing process for each patient sample: 1) and 2) PCR amplification of Bartonella spp. following DNA extraction from whole blood and from serum; 3) PCR following BAPGM enrichment of whole blood culture incubated for 7 and 14 days; and 4) PCR from subculture isolates if obtained after subinoculation from the BAPGM flask onto plates containing trypticase soy agar with 10% sheep whole blood that are incubated for 4 weeks. PCR specimen preparation, DNA extraction, and PCR amplification and analysis were performed in three separate rooms with unidirectional work flow to avoid DNA contamination. In addition, BAPGM cultures were processed in a biosafety cabinet with Hepa filtration in a limited access Biosafety Level II laboratory. PCR-negative controls were prepared using 5 μL of DNA from the blood of a healthy dog, and B. henselae (Houston 1 strain) at a concentration of 1 genome copy/μL was used as a PCR-positive control during the entire course of this study. To assess for potential contamination during blood sample processing into BAPGM, an un-inoculated BAPGM culture flask was processed simultaneously and in an identical manner with each batch of patient blood and serum samples tested. In addition, molecular testing aiming at amplify Anaplasma (16SrRNA and GroEl genes), Babesia (18SrRNA), Ehrlichia (16SrRNA and GroEl genes), and hemotropic Mycoplasma (16SrRNA and RNaseP genes) was performed on DNA extracted from blood and serums samples using primers as previously described [18][19][20][21].

Results and discussion
In April 2012, whole blood and serum sample sets were obtained on Monday, Wednesday, Friday and the following Monday and shipped overnight express to the North Carolina State University, College of Veterinary Medicine, Intracellular Pathogens Research Laboratory (NCSU-CVM-IPRL), for Bartonella spp. serology and inoculation into Bartonella alpha Proteobacteria growth medium (BAPGM).
The patient was seroreactive to B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii genotype II (titer 1:256) and B. henselae antigens (1: 64), but was not seroreactive to B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii genotypes I and III or to Bartonella koehlerae antigens at the lowest testing dilution of 1:16. Bartonella spp. DNA was not amplified from four blood, four serum, or six enrichment blood culture samples obtained at 7 and 14 days post-incubation and no subculture isolates on blood agar were obtained. For all components of the BAPGM platform (PCR from blood, serum, enrichment cultures at 7 and 14 days, and subcultures), PCR-negative controls remained negative throughout the course of the study. In addition, subcultures of un-inoculated BAPGM medium (culture control) at 7 and 14 days did not yield bacterial growth.
In contrast, by targeting a conserved region of the 16S rRNA gene A. platys DNA was PCR amplified and sequenced from all four serum and 2 of 4 blood extracted DNA samples. (Table 1) The six amplified sequences were identical to each other and had 99.7% (350/351 bp) homology with A. platys (M82801) deposited in GenBank. Similarly, amplification of the GroEL gene generated a 450 bp product that was 98.3% similar to A. platys Gen Bank AY008300, and 98.9% (444/446) similar to A. platys GenBank accessions AF478129, and AF399916. In addition, Candidatus M. haematoparvum DNA was amplified and sequenced from two of the patient's serum samples using primers targeting a conserved region of the 16S rRNA and the RNaseP genes [21]. The 16S rRNA gene sequences were 99.8% (400/401 bp) similar to GenBank accession GQ129113 and the RNAseP sequences were 100% (128/128 bp) similar to Genbank accession AY380803 of Candidatus M. haematoparvum, respectively. As the authors were unable to identify a research or commercial laboratory that could provide A. platys IFA antigen slides, A. platys serology was not possible. Also, as cell wall deficient hemotropic Mycoplasma species have not been isolated to date, hemoplasma serology was not performed. Babesia and Ehrlichia genus PCR assays did not result in DNA amplification.
When the A. platys and Candidatus M. haematoparvum PCR results became available, an additional set of aseptically obtained blood and serum samples were submitted for repeat Anaplasma, Bartonella, and hemotropic Mycoplasma spp. testing. Four sample sets collected between May 5 and May 14, 2012 were shipped to the NCSU-CVM-IPRL by overnight express carrier. The patient was again seroreactive to Bartonella spp. antigens by IFA Following NCSU-CVM-IPRL confirmation of infection with A. platys, Candidatus M. haematoparvum, and B. henselae the patient returned to South Africa before initiating antimicrobial treatment on July 18, 2012. Based on the longevity of her illness, the attending physician requested a standard echocardiogram, CBC, C-reactive protein and Lyme serology (negative) be repeated. The only hematological abnormality was a mild increase in Creactive protein. When the echocardiogram revealed slight thickening of the mitral valve, a trans-esophageal echocardiogram was obtained under deep sedation. Thickening of the mitral valve was attributed to age-related myxoedamatous degeneration. Treatment was initiated with doxycycline (100 mg bid) for 6 months. Concurrent administration of azithromycin or rifampicin was not attempted due to concerns that these antibiotics could interfere with the anticonvulsant medications, resulting in patient destabilization. During the first week of doxycycline administration, the patient experienced several days in which severe tonic-clonic seizures of a few minutes duration, occurred up to three times per day. Seizures were followed by disorientation and severe migraines, with the latter only responsive to buprenorfine (Temgesic SL). Following a week of doxycycline treatment, the patient reported less frequent seizures, more clarity in her thoughts. Also, the historical lethargy, which had been a constant symptom since contracting encephalitis in September 2010, had substantially resolved.
Approximately one month before commencing antibiotic treatment, the patient injured her right wrist during a seizure. After a series of radiographs and an MRI scan, a scapholunate ligament tear was confirmed. The MRI also identified minute osteolytic lesions involving the joint surfaces of numerous bones within the wrist along with generalized osteopenia. The scapholunate ligament tear required surgical correction. Within two weeks of surgery, the patient developed complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS), requiring a follow-up bone scintigraphic scan in August 2012 that identified increased uptake in the scaphoid, lunate and pisiform bones of the right wrist and the periarticular joints distal to the right wrist. There was also moderate to intense linear uptake in the right distal ulna. A consulting orthopedic surgeon suggested that the patient's osteolytic lesions might be similar to lesions reported in immune-compromised patients with Bartonella infections.
In December 2012, after 6 months of doxycycline therapy, three aseptically obtained whole blood and serum sample sets were collected in Grenada and shipped overnight express to the NCSU-CVM-IPRL, for A. platys PCR, Bartonella sp. serology, BAPGM enrichment blood culture/ PCR, and Candidatus M. haematoparvum PCR, as described above. The patient was seroreactive to B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii genotypes II and III (titers 1:256 and 1:128, respectively) and B. henselae antigens (1: 128), but was not seroreactive to B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii genotype I or to Bartonella koehlerae antigens at the lowest testing dilution of 1:16. Anaplasma platys and Candidatus M. haematoparvum DNA was not amplified by the respective PCR assays. B. henselae SA2 DNA was amplified and sequenced from one of three blood sample sets, suggesting that the B. henselae infection may not have been eliminated by the doxycycline therapy. As Bartonella spp. DNA was not amplified from BAPGM enrichment blood cultures, the presence of viable bacteria was not documented.
Clinically, following the six months of doxycycline therapy, the patient was more alert, enjoyed a more active life-style and cognition had greatly improved. However, following periods of overexertion, she continues to develop lethargy, followed by severe migraines, which require treatment with analgesics or bed rest. The patient is being transitioned off of the anti-epileptic medications. Beginning in November 2011, because the patient was experiencing severe insomnia, lamotrogine was tapered and completely withdrawn without an increase in seizure frequency. Topiramate is being tapered gradually until a lowest effective dose is found, or the drug can be withdrawn completely. The patient was advised that the amitriptyline can be stopped once the frequency and intensity of the migraines decrease, whereas valdoxane will be continued until the patient is less sensitive to noise. If topiramate can be tapered, the treatment plan is to add rifampin and continue doxycycyline.
Documentation of co-infection with three vector-borne organisms in the same patient, two of which (A. platys and Candidatus M. haematoparvum) have not been described in association with human blood-borne infections, represents a medically important observation derived from sequential testing of blood samples provided by this veterinarian. As is typical of many veterinary professionals, this woman had frequent exposure to arthropod vectors and near daily contact with persistently bacteremic reservoir hosts, including cats, the primary reservoir host for B. henselae, and dogs, the primary reservoir host for A. platys [22,23] and Candidatus M. haematoparvum [21]. Based upon serological evidence, this veterinarian may have been exposed to both B. henselae and B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii. A previous study from Grenada documented a 19.2% A. platys PCR prevalence and an 8.2% B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii seroprevalence among dogs [24]. Those dogs were not tested serologically for B. henselae exposure, nor was BAPGM enrichment blood culture/PCR, which increases molecular diagnostic sensitivity [25,26], performed in that study, as was done with blood and serum specimens from this patient. It is obvious from the results summarized in Table 1 that consistent PCR amplification of each of these three organisms from blood, serum or enrichment blood culture samples represents an ongoing challenge for molecular diagnostic laboratories. Presumably, the patient's B. henselae infection was missed when she was first tested in April, 2012, and only one of three BAPGM enrichment cultures documented viable B. henselae infection when retested one month later and only after a 14 day BAPGM incubation period. Recently, we reported a statistical increase in the molecular detection or isolation of Bartonella spp. when three blood sample sets were tested from a one week collection period, as compared to testing a single blood sample [27]. Bartonella detection in blood by PCR and/or following enrichment blood culture remains difficult to achieve, due to the potential for very low numbers of bacteria in the patient's blood at the time of sample collection and because of the suspected relapsing nature of the bacteremia in immunocompetent individuals [27]. As B. henselae SA2 strain DNA was again sequenced from a single blood sample obtained in December 2012, after six months of doxycycline therapy, it seems likely that the woman remained infected, although it is possible that the amplified DNA in September was from dead or nonviable bacteria, whereas growth in enrichment culture in May would reflect the presence of viable blood borne bacteria. Treatment failure seems more likely in this patient, as doxycycline alone is not a consistently effective antibiotic for the elimination of B. henselae bacteremia and bacterial DNA does not persist for months in the blood, after the infection has been eliminated [13]. An ongoing limitation of the BAPGM enrichment blood culture platform is the failure to obtain isolates from most patients following subculture at 7 and 14 days of incubation [6].
In addition to treating companion animals and wildlife on three different continents, this veterinarian had the added risk of performing frequent wildlife necropsies in Grenada and South Africa, including lions and mongoose (NCSU-CVM-IPRL, Unpublished data) that could be a source of B. henselae exposure. Although NCSU-CVM-IPRL research testing efforts focused on vectorborne organisms of veterinary medical importance, it is possible that this woman was exposed to or infected with other pathogens that contributed to or influenced her clinical course of illness prior to or during the course of this investigation. Therefore, correlation of patient symptoms and disease findings with the microbiological findings reported as a component of this study should be interpreted with caution. However, in association with improved diagnostic testing modalities, co-infections with more than one vector-borne pathogen are being reported frequently in dogs and occasionally in human patients. As cats and dogs are more often exposed to fleas, ticks and other vectors as compared to their human counterparts, co-infections are commonly reported to occur in pet and working dogs with frequent flea and tick infestations [28][29][30][31]. These clinical observations have prompted veterinary researchers to study A. platys and E. canis coinfections in dogs experimentally [32]. Among other examples in the human medical literature, co-infection with E. chaffeensis and a spotted fever group Rickettsia was reported in a 44-year-old man [33]. Of medical importance to physicians and veterinarians, co-infection with organisms that can potentially persist for months to years complicates a patient's clinical presentation, can substantially influence the historical progression of illness and can make laboratory diagnosis much more challenging than an acute infection or an infection by a single pathogen. Also, in selected patients, co-infections can influence the choice of therapeutic agents, for example when a patient is infected with a bacterium and a protozoa [34]. Whenever possible, PCR amplification with DNA sequence confirmation, as was used in this study, should be the basis for diagnosis of a co-infection. Because microbial specific genes are targeted in well designed PCR assays, this increasing useful diagnostic approach is applicable to both human and veterinary patient populations. In this study, all PCR amplicons were sequenced to assure specificity. Bacteremia with the two novel organisms for human infection (A. platys and Candidatus M. haematoparvum) was confirmed by targeting two different genes, whereas DNA sequencing of the highly variable Bartonella 16S-23S ITS region was used to confirm infection with a SA2 strain of B. henselae.
During the two-year period prior to documentation of A. platys, B. henselae and Candidatus M. haematoparvum infection in this patient, extensive diagnostic testing was pursued in conjunction with efforts to define the cause of the headaches, seizures and other neurological and neurocognitive abnormalities. Unfortunately, those tests proved to be normal, negative, or inconclusive in the context of identifying an etiological diagnosis. The lack of fever, in conjunction with normal hematological, serum biochemical and cerebrospinal fluid findings and several normal MRI examinations after the initial post-encephalitic MRI diagnosis argued against an ongoing infectious cause of the neurological symptoms in this patient. During the patient's initial illness, the first consulted neurologist was convinced that the MRI lesions were residual from an unusually virulent case of African tick-bite fever. He also believed that the patient would respond to the standard two weeks of doxycycline used to treat Rickettsia conorii, Rickettsia africae and Coxiella burnetii infections in South Africa. Unfortunately, this treatment did not prove to be sufficient.
In veterinary medicine, A. platys and hemotropic Mycoplasma sp. are considered pathogens of low virulence, often documented in association with other infections or other diseases. Most dogs infected with A. platys are healthy, but experience a cyclic thrombocytopenia; however, strain variation in pathogenicity has been proposed due to more severe disease attributed to A. platys infections in dogs in Europe [14,15]. Despite development of thrombocytopenia, dogs experimentally infected with A. platys remained healthy throughout a study [32]. Currently there is also minimal evidence to support an important pathogenic role for hemotropic Mycoplasma species infecting dogs [17,21] or people [13]. Hemotropic Mycoplamsa infections that are accompanied by disease manifestations occur most often in nutritionally deprived or immunologically compromised animals, such as retroviral infected cats. Infection with Mycoplasma haemofelis was reported in an HIV-positive human from Brazil [35].
Recently, veterinary professionals have been identified as a high risk group for Bartonella spp. bacteremia [6]. Based upon repeat testing, there was serological and BAPGM enrichment blood culture PCR evidence to support B. henselae infection in this veterinarian. Although the pathophysiological mechanisms remain essentially unstudied, headaches, seizures and other neurological signs have been reported in patients with Bartonella spp. bacteremia [4][5][6][7][8]. Similar to the patient in this report, there is often no history of fever or hematological, biochemical or cerebrospinal fluid indicators of infection in patients with neurobartonellosis [5,8,36]. In addition, co-infection with B. henselae and Mycoplasma ovis, a hemotropic Mycoplasma sp. that infects sheep, has been reported in a veterinarian with long-standing neurological disease [13]. Of the three organisms infecting this patient, B. henselae alone, or in combination with the two other intravascular bacteria may have contributed to the headaches, neurocognitive abnormalities and seizures reported in this patient. The osteolytic bone lesions documented in this patient just prior to initiation of antibiotics are also consistent with lesions that have been increasingly described in immunocompromised HIV-infected patients and in children with cat scratch disease [37,38]. Despite the use of different combinations of anticonvulsant and antidepressant medications, effective control of the headaches and seizures was never achieved until treatment with doxycycline was instituted. Unfortunately, serology and PCR results following 6 months of antibiotic therapy supported the possibility of ongoing B. henselae infection.
Nearly two decades ago investigators in Venezuela described inclusions in human platelets ultrastructurally consistent with A. platys [39,40]. As those observations predated the use of PCR amplification and DNA sequencing, confirmation that the platelet inclusions were in fact A. platys was not possible and no subsequent report of human A. platys infection has been published in the English literature. Although vector competence has not been proven, there is substantial epidemiological support for R. sanguineus as the vector and the dog as the primary reservoir host for A. platys [29] and potentially M. haematoparvum [21] and B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii [41]. Dogs throughout tropical and subtropical regions of the world are frequently infested with R. sanguineus, commonly referred to as the "brown dog tick" or "kennel tick" because all three life stages (larvae, nymph and adult) prefer to feed on dogs and these ticks are frequently found in kennel environments, veterinary hospitals and homes in tropical and subtropical regions of the world. Grenada, located approximately 100 miles from Venezuela, shares very similar rural and urban ecosystems, each of which supports frequent and severe R. sanguineus infestations in dogs. In fact, R. sanguineus is the only tick known to infest dogs on the island of Grenada and is a commonly encountered tick on dogs in South Africa. Although an important vector for transmission of Babesia canis and Ehrlichia canis throughout the world, historically, the human medical importance of this tick has been underappreciated. Recently, R. sanguineus has been implicated in the transmission of Rickettsia rickettsii on Indian reservations in Arizona, resulting in fatal cases of Rocky Mountain spotted fever [42]. R. sanguineus is also the vector for Rickettsia conorii, the cause of Mediterranean spotted fever in dogs and people in southern Europe and northern Africa. Recently, persistent R. conorii bacteremia has been demonstrated experimentally in dogs infected by tick (R. sanguineus) attachment [43]. Although the timing and mode(s) of infection for this patient will remain unknown, the importance of R. sanguineus as a source of A. platys and Candidatus M. haematoparvum for dogs and people deserves additional research consideration. Similarly, fleas, the primary vector for transmission of B. henselae and likely other Bartonella spp. among cats and dogs, are currently underappreciated as a source of zoonotic bartonellosis among animals and human patients [44].

Conclusion
As is typical of many veterinary professionals, this individual had frequent exposure to arthropod vectors and near daily contact with persistently bacteremic reservoir hosts, including cats, the primary reservoir host for B. henselae, and dogs, the presumed primary reservoir host for A. platys and Candidatus Mycoplasma haematoparvum. Due to frequent contact with ticks and fleas, and the animals that harbor intravascular vector-borne pathogens for months to years, veterinary professionals should use personal protective measures, such as gloves, hand washing and optimal restraint to avoid bites and scratches. Rapid kill spray products should be used routinely to eliminate fleas and ticks from animals that are being examined at necropsy or cared for by veterinary professionals.
More importantly, physicians caring for veterinary professionals should be aware of the occupational zoonotic risks associated with the daily activities of animal health professionals.

Consent
Written informed consent was obtained from the patient for publication of this report and any accompanying images.