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  1. Rocky Mountain spotted fever can be a severe illness and the majority of the patients are hospitalized. How is Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever spread? Rocky Mountain spotted fever is spread through the bite of an infected tick. The American dog tick and the Rocky Mountain wood tick are the primary carriers of Rocky Mountain spotted fever bacteria ...

  2. Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) is a bacterial infection. People get it from the bite of an infected tick. Most infections happen in the spring and summer, when ticks are active. Doctors treat RMSF with antibiotics. With prompt treatment, most people recover in a few days. If it's not treated, RMSF can be life-threatening.

  3. Nov 7, 2018 · This should get you through the night until you are able to check with your doctor the next morning. Conclusion. In a young baby, you should call a doctor for a temperature of more than 100.4. For toddlers with high fevers at night only, a fever higher than 103 degrees can be concerning. It is important to note the child’s reaction as well.

  4. Dr. Robert Kwok answered. Specializes in Pediatrics. Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) is a rickettsia (type of bacteria) infection transmitted by a tick bite (feeding > several hrs). Symptoms start in 1 week (2-14d range). The germ attacks the cells lining the small blood vessels in the body, causing multi-organ damage and maybe death.

  5. Jan 3, 2022 · High-altitude cerebral edema is considered by many experts to be an extreme form of acute mountain sickness. It usually develops after symptoms of acute mountain sickness. Symptoms of this more severe altitude disease may not be noticed immediately because the illness can begin during the night.

  6. Apr 8, 2009 · Symptoms associated with spotted fever rickettsioses may include headache, fever, chills, muscle aches (myalgia), joint pain (arthralgia), extreme exhaustion (prostration), and/or a characteristic skin rash. In some cases, additional symptoms may include nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and/or other abnormalities.

  7. Symptoms usually develop about 2 to 14 days after the tick bite. They may include: Chills and fever. Confusion. Headache. Muscle pain. Rash -- usually starts a few days after the fever; first appears on wrists and ankles as spots that are 1 to 5 mm in diameter, then spreads to most of the body.

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