Abstract

Introduction. The article presents data on cases of tick-borne dermatitis in medical workers caused by rat mites Ornithonyssus bacoti in unfavorable sanitary conditions. The goal is to consider the cause-effect relationship in the formation of tick-borne dermatitis as an industrial-conditioned disease. Material and methods. The clinical examination of 23 employees - female medical workers (doctors, nurses) aged from 28 to 56 years was carried out. Results. As a result of clinical examination, medical employees working in the department of a medical hospital on the first floor of the building were found to have complaints of severe itching, not associated with the time of day and the appearance of rashes in the form of roseola, small nodules in areas with thin and delicate skin, with serous or bloody crust on the top, mainly in the places of close contact with the laundry, where it fits snugly (especially the straps, collar, belt). On weekends, the improvement was noted, the itch subsided, and on returning to work the manifestations of the disease resumed. The medical staff at the workplace had contact with rat mites, triggered by the spontaneous mass infiltration of Ornithonyssus bacoti shortly after in the basement of the hospital located under this deratization department, when the main feeder-rat was destroyed and the mites were forced to look for the food, motor activity, leave the nest of rodents and crawl into the premise on the ground floor, preferring insulated places, concentrating in the crevices of the floor, walls, furniture, and there was an attack of ticks on a human. At the same time, employees working in the department did not depend on the profession, it was also noted among doctors and nurses. Conclusions. Given that the nature of the work in the performance of their duties at the workplace, medical personnel should not have direct contact with animals and substrate that can be infected with rat mites, as well as the occurrence of the disease soon after the deratization in the hospital, the mass and uniformity of the appearance of rashes allow to consider rat tick-borne dermatitis as an industrial-conditioned disease.

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