RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Scrub typhus is an acute infectious disease caused by rickettsia infection. The diagnosis is based on eschar, and clinical manifestations can range from asymptomatic to multiorgan dysfunction. CASE SUMMARY: We report the case of a 35-year-old man living in Zhuhai, Guangdong, China, who had repeated high fever with a maximum body temperature of 40.2 °C and elevated white blood cells and procalcitonin levels. After 7 d of persistent high fever, the patient developed rash, abdominal pain, and symptoms of peritonitis. Within 24 h after admission, the patient developed diffuse peritonitis and pneumonedema, requiring ventilator support in the intensive care unit. However, there was no eschar on the body, and the first Weil-Felix test was negative. Taking into account that the patient had a history of jungle activities, doxycycline combined with meropenem was selected. The patient improved, healed, and was discharged after a week. The diagnosis of scrub typhus was confirmed by a repeat Weil-Felix test (Oxk 1:640), and pathology of the appendix resected by laparotomy suggests vasculitis. CONCLUSION: This rare presentation of peritonitis, pulmonary edema, and pancreatitis caused by scrub typhus reminds physicians to be alert to the possibility of scrub typhus.