Abstract
Rickettsia felis (R. felis) infection occasionally invades the central nervous system, causing encephalitis or meningoencephalitis. Although the disease typically presents as mild to moderate illness, delayed diagnosis and treatment may increase the risk of adverse prognosis in pediatric patients. This article reports a case of R. felis meningoencephalitis in a child diagnosed by metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) of cerebrospinal fluid. mNGS analysis detected high-confidence R. felis-specific sequences, and potential background microbial contamination was effectively excluded through a bioinformatics pipeline, thereby providing critical evidence for etiological confirmation. Due to insufficient clinical awareness, limited pathogen detection methods, and the self-limiting nature of the disease, R. felis infection is prone to missed diagnosis and misdiagnosis in febrile children. The clinical manifestations are nonspecific; even with central nervous system involvement, routine laboratory tests are unlikely to suggest the microbial etiology, contributing to the underrecognition and underreporting of pediatric R. felis meningoencephalitis. Therefore, enhancing diagnostic awareness and achieving early precise diagnosis and treatment may help shorten the disease course and improve patient outcomes.