Summary
Definition
History and exam
Key diagnostic factors
- constitutional symptoms
- lymphadenitis (bubonic plague)
- hemoptysis (pneumonic plague)
- diarrhea (yersiniosis)
- abdominal pain (yersiniosis)
Other diagnostic factors
- pleuritic chest pain (pneumonic plague)
- dyspnea (pneumonic plague)
- Sore throat (yersinosis)
Risk factors
- exposure to fleas (plague)
- residence in, or travel to, an endemic area (plague)
- contact with infected animals (plague)
- bioterrorism (plague)
- young children (yersiniosis)
- consumption of raw or undercooked pork products (yersiniosis)
- exposure to people with plague (plague)
- iron-overload syndromes (yersiniosis)
- chronic liver disease, diabetes, alcoholism (yersiniosis)
Diagnostic tests
1st tests to order
- blood culture (plague)
- bubo aspirate culture (bubonic plague)
- sputum culture (pneumonic plague)
- cerebrospinal fluid culture (septicemic plague)
- throat swab specimen culture (pharyngeal plague)
- antigen detection (plague)
- WBC count (plague)
- chest x-ray (pneumonic plague)
- stool culture (yersiniosis)
Tests to consider
- serology (plague or yersiniosis)
- polymerase chain reaction (plague)
Treatment algorithm
pneumonic or septicemic plague: nonpregnant adults and children
bubonic or pharyngeal plague: nonpregnant adults and children
pneumonic, septicemic, bubonic, or pharyngeal plague: pregnant
meningeal plague
yersiniosis
Contributors
Authors
John Williams, MRCP, DTM&H, Dip HIV Med

Consultant Infectious Diseases Physician
Department of Infection and Travel Medicine
The James Cook University Hospital
Middlesbrough
UK
Disclosures
JW declares that he has no competing interests.
Peer reviewers
Vladimir L. Motin, PhD
Professor
Pathology/Microbiology and Immunology
University of Texas Medical Branch
Galveston, TX
Disclosures
VLM declares that he has no competing interests.
Waleed Javaid, MD, FACP, FIDSA
Associate Professor
Medical Director of Infection Control
Infectious Disease
Department of Medicine
SUNY Upstate Medical University
Syracuse, NY
Disclosures
WJ declares that he has no competing interests.
Alistair Leanord, BSc, MBChB, MD, DTM&H, FRCPath
Consultant Microbiologist
Microbiology Department
Southern General Hospital
Glasgow
UK
Disclosures
AL declares that he has no competing interests.
Janak Koirala, MD
Associate Professor of Medicine
Division of Infectious Diseases
Department of Internal Medicine
Southern Illinois University School of Medicine
Springfield, IL
Disclosures
JK declares that he has no competing interests.
Peer reviewer acknowledgements
BMJ Best Practice topics are updated on a rolling basis in line with developments in evidence and guidance. The peer reviewers listed here have reviewed the content at least once during the history of the topic.
Disclosures
Peer reviewer affiliations and disclosures pertain to the time of the review.
References
Key articles
World Health Organization. Manual for plague surveillance, diagnosis, prevention and control. Geneva: World Health Oranization; 2024.
Nelson CA, Meaney-Delman D, Fleck-Derderian S, et al. Antimicrobial treatment and prophylaxis of plague: recommendations for naturally acquired infections and bioterrorism response. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2021 Jul 16;70(3):1-27.Full text Abstract
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Clinical testing and diagnosis for plague. May 2024 [internet publication].Full text
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Clinical care of plague. May 2024 [internet publication].Full text
Reference articles
A full list of sources referenced in this topic is available to users with access to all of BMJ Best Practice.

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