Outer
sheath encloses axial fibrils wrapped around protoplasmic cylinder
Axial
fibrils originate at both poles and may overlap at center of cell in Treponema
and Borrelia, but not in Leptospira
Relapsing
fever (a.k.a., tick fever, borreliosis, famine fever) is an acute infection
characterized by a 2-14 day (usually 6 day) incubation period followed by
recurring febrile episodes and constant spirochaetemia that worsens during
febrile stages
Louse-borne
borreliosis = Epidemic Relapsing Fever, infect host only when louse is
injured, e.g., during scratching, therefore, a single louse can only infect
a single person, but lice leave host that develops a fever and seek normal
temperature host
Arthropod
vectors; Transmitted by soft body ticks or human body lice (vectors) from
small mammal reservoir
Associated
with poverty, crowding, and warfare
Borrelia burgdorferi
Spirochetes
with outer sheath enclosing axial fibrils wrapped around protoplasmic cylinder