Article1 July 1953THE RELATIONSHIP OF THE HABITS OF THE HOUSE MOUSE AND THE MOUSE MITE (ALLODERMANYSSUS SANGUINEUS) TO THE SPREAD OF RICKETTSIALPOXEDWARD NICHOLS, M.D., F.A.C.P., MILA E. RINDGE, M.D., G. GARDINER RUSSELL, M.D., F.A.C.P.EDWARD NICHOLS, M.D., F.A.C.P.Search for more papers by this author, MILA E. RINDGE, M.D.Search for more papers by this author, G. GARDINER RUSSELL, M.D., F.A.C.P.Search for more papers by this authorAuthor, Article, and Disclosure Informationhttps://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-39-1-92 SectionsAboutPDF ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail ExcerptIt was prophetic that one of the early and undoubtedly most widely read reports of Rickettsialpox should have appeared inThe New Yorkerin August, 1947.1At the time of the Kew Gardens outbreak in 1946, investigations establishedRickettsia akarias the etiologic agent of the disease and identified the rôle played by the mite,Allodermanyssus sanguineus, and the house mouse in transmitting the disease to man.2, 3, 4Until a small outbreak occurred in an apartment house in Hartford in 1952,5only two other naturally occurring cases, both from Boston,6, 7had been reported beyond the metropolitan limits of...Bibliography1. Reporter at Large: The alerting of the Pomerantz, The New Yorker, Aug. 30, 1947, p. 28. Google Scholar2. HeubnerStampsArmstrong RJPC: Rickettsialpox—a newly recognized disease. I. Isolation of the etiological agent, Pub. Health Rep. 61: 1605-1614, 1946. CrossrefGoogle Scholar3. HeubnerJellisonPomerantz RJWLC: Rickettsialpox—a newly recognized rickettsial disease. IV. Isolation of a rickettsia apparently identical with the causative agent of Rickettsialpox from Allodermanyssus sanguineus, a rodent mite, Pub. Health Rep. 61: 1677-1682, 1946. CrossrefGoogle Scholar4. GreenbergPelliteriJellison MDJWJ: Rickettsialpox—a newly recognized disease. III. Epidemiology, Am. J. Pub. Health 37: 860-868, 1947. CrossrefGoogle Scholar5. Rindge MD: Connecticut has first Rickettsialpox outbreak, Connecticut Health Bull. 66: 73 (March) 1952. Google Scholar6. PikeCohenMurray GSES: Rickettsialpox. Report of a serologically proved case occurring in a resident of Boston, New England J. Med. 243: 913-915 (Dec. 7) 1950. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar7. FranklinWassermanFuller JEHS: Rickettsialpox in Boston. A case report, New England J. Med. 244: 509-511 (Apr. 5) 1951. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar8. Emlen JT: How far will a mouse travel to a poisoned bait, Pest Control, August, 1950. Google Scholar9. Piper SE: The mouse infestation of Buena Vista Lake Basin, Kern County, California, Sept. 1926-Feb. 1927, California Department of Agriculture Monthly Bulletin. Vol. XVII, No. 10, 1928, pp. 538-560. Google Scholar10. Personal communication from Morris Greenberg M.D., Acting Director, Bureau of Preventable Diseases, and Epidemiologist, New York City Department of Health. Google Scholar11. Personal communication from Clinton A. Garvin Borough Chief of Manhattan, New York City Department of Health. Google Scholar12. PrattLaneHammerston HDJEFC: New locality records of Allodermanyssus sanguineus, vector of Rickettsialpox, J. Econ. Entomology 42: 414 (Aug. 17) 1949. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar13. Personal communication from Henry S. Fuller M.D., Assistant Professor of Microbiology, Harvard School of Public Health. Google Scholar14. Personal communication from William L. Jellison Parasitologist, National Microbiological Institute, Rocky Mountain Laboratory, Hamilton, Montana. Google Scholar15. EustisFullerSnyder EBHSJC: Studies of Rickettsialpox. II. Recovery of Rickettsia akari from mites, Allodermanyssus sanguineus, from West Hartford, Connecticut, Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol. and Med. 80: 546-549 (July) 1952. CrossrefMedlineGoogle Scholar16. Personal communication from Carl O. Mohr, Senior Scientist, Chief of Rodent Control and Investigation Section, Public Health Service, Atlanta, Georgia. Google Scholar This content is PDF only. To continue reading please click on the PDF icon. Author, Article, and Disclosure InformationAffiliations: *Received for publication December 15, 1952. (Presented at a meeting of the American Clinical and Climatological Association, October, 1952.)From the Medical Department of the Hartford Hospital and the Bureau of Preventable Diseases, Connecticut State Department of Health. PreviousarticleNextarticle Advertisement FiguresReferencesRelatedDetails Metrics Cited byGENOMOSYSTEMATICS OF RICKETTSIAENew approaches in the systematics of rickettsiaeRickettsialpoxRickettsialpox in New York CityUrban Zoonoses Caused by Bartonella , Coxiella , Ehrlichia , and Rickettsia SpeciesRickettsialpox in a New York City Hospital, 1980 to 1989Selected Zoonoses and Other Health HazardsZoonoses and Other Human Health HazardsA review of commensal rodents and their controlRickettsienpockenParasitic MitesA Review of Information on Rickettsialpox in the United StatesÄtiologie und Epidemiologie der Rickettsiosen des MenschenRickettsial-PoxSpread of rickettsialpox 1 July 1953Volume 39, Issue 1Page: 92-102KeywordsHabitsMitesRickettsiaTemperature ePublished: 1 December 2008 Issue Published: 1 July 1953 PDF downloadLoading ...