Tick-borne relapsing fever Relapsing fever in humans is a
vector-borne infectious disease caused by certain
bacteria of the genus
Borrelia.
Tick-borne relapsing fever is transmitted through the
bites of
lice or
soft-bodied ticks (genus
Ornithodoros). Each species of
Borrelia is typically associated with a single tick species, with
Borrelia duttoni being transmitted by
O. moubata, and being responsible for the relapsing fever found in central, eastern, and southern Africa. Unlike in most other species of
Borrelia, which have
rodents as
reservoir hosts,
B. duttoni has humans as reservoir hosts.
O. moubata exhibits
vertical transmission of the pathogen across generations and thereby appears to represent its major reservoir. It excretes the pathogen in saliva and
coxal fluid.
Other infections Other infections that can survive inside this tick include
West Nile virus,
HIV,
hepatitis B,
Royal Farm virus,
Langat virus,
Rickettsia,
Babesia equi, and
Acanthocheilonema viteae, but only some of these can be transmitted by the ticks to humans. Although HIV-1BRU can remain viable in the tick's digestive tract for up to ten days, this is a shorter interval than the tick normally takes between blood meals, and laboratory tests indicate that mechanical transmission of HIV is unlikely. ==See also==