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Agents of Bioterrorism

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Agents of Bioterrorism. 4th Intermountain Hazardous Materials Conference. May 20 ... Chicken pox vs. Smallpox. Smallpox. Disease Progression. Incubation Period ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Agents of Bioterrorism


1
Agents of Bioterrorism
  • 4th Intermountain Hazardous Materials Conference
  • May 20-22, 2003
  • Kim Christensen
  • Utah Department of Health Laboratory

2
Objectives
  • Public Healths Role in BT
  • LRN
  • Bioterrorism Agents
  • Specimen selection
  • Specimen packaging
  • Shipping/Transport
  • Training Opportunities
  • Contact Information

3
UDOH Labs Core Functions
  • Disease Identification and Outbreak Investigation
  • Reference Services
  • Specialized Testing
  • Direct Services
  • Environmental Testing

4
UDOH Labs Core Functions
  • Rapid Testing
  • Laboratory Improvement
  • Applied Research
  • Support of Surveillance and Epidemiology
    Investigations
  • Emergency Preparedness and Response

5
UDOH Lab Testing
  • Newborn Screening
  • Rabies
  • Influenza
  • HIV
  • STDs
  • TB
  • Arbovirus Surveillance
  • Foodborne Organism Identification
  • OME
  • Molecular Biology

6
Why is the UDOH LabInvolved with BT?
  • Mandate by Congress
  • Experience with Biological Agents of Concern and
    Outbreak Investigations
  • Link between Local Laboratory Level and
    CDC/Federal Agencies

7
Laboratory Response NetworkLRN
  • Test According to Consensus Protocols
  • Timely and Accurate Testing and Reporting
  • Linked with Local, State and Federal Agencies

8
LRN Laboratory Levels
  • LEVEL A Clinical Labs
  • LEVEL B Public Health Labs
  • LEVEL C Typing Labs, Public Health Labs
  • LEVEL D CDC

9
Agents of Bioterrorism
10
Agents of Highest ConcernCategory A
  • Bacillus anthracis (Anthrax)
  • Francisella tularensis (Tularemia)
  • Yersinia pestis (Plague)
  • Clostridium botulinum (Botulism)
  • Variola major (Smallpox)
  • Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers

11
Other possible agentsCategory B
  • Brucella species (Brucellosis)
  • Burkholderia mallei (Glanders)
  • Burkholderia pseudomallei (Melioidiosis)
  • Coxiella burnetti (Q-fever)
  • Arboviruses
  • Mycotoxins
  • Ricin toxin (castor beans)
  • SEB (Staphylococcus Enterotoxin B)

12
Why these Organisms?
  • Can cause disease via aerosol route
  • Fairly stable in aerosolized form
  • Susceptible civilian population
  • High morbidity and mortality rates
  • Difficult to diagnose and/or treat
  • Some can be transmitted person-to-person

13
SmallpoxVariola major
  • Orthopox virus
  • DNA virus
  • Brick-shaped structure 200 nm in diameter
  • Incubation 8-16 days
  • Mortality 30
  • Clinical symptoms
  • Acute
  • Fever
  • Headache
  • Vomiting
  • Backache

14
Smallpox
  • Spread by infected droplets
  • Most infectious after onset of rash
  • Contagious until the last scab falls off
  • Vaccine given within 4 days of exposure can
    prevent disease or lessen symptoms
  • 70 recovery rate
  • Chicken pox vs. Smallpox

15
Smallpox
  • Disease Progression
  • Incubation Period
  • Initial Symptoms Prodrome
  • Rash Development Distribution

16
Smallpox - Rash
  • Rash
  • Begins on face, hands, forearms spreads to
    lower extremities within 7 days
  • Lesions on palms soles of feet

17
Smallpox - Rash
  • Rash
  • Synchronous progression
    macules?vesicles ?pustules ?scabs

18
SmallpoxUDOH Testing
  • Vaccinia virus
  • Rule-out for Smallpox
  • Varicella zoster virus
  • Rule-out for Smallpox
  • Variola major virus
  • Smallpox beta testing lab

19
Smallpox Specimen Selection
  • Tissue biopsy
  • Scabs
  • Vesicular fluid
  • Swab
  • Dried on slide (touch prep)

20
Utah Smallpox Immunization Program
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26
AnthraxBacillus anthracis
  • Bacillus anthracis
  • Gram-positive, spore-forming bacillus (rod)

27
AnthraxBacillus anthracis
  • Three forms of human anthrax occur
  • Cutaneous
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Oropharyngeal
  • Abdominal
  • Inhalation

28
AnthraxBacillus anthracis
  • Cutaneous Exposure-
  • A skin lesion evolving during a period of 2-6
    days from a papule, through a vesicular stage, to
    a depressed black eschar.

29
Anthrax Lesion on Neck
30
Cutaneous Anthrax
  • Intense itching
  • Painless skin sore
  • Incubation 1-5 days (up to 60)
  • 20 fatality if untreated (may spread to blood)
  • Direct contact with skin lesion may result in
    cutaneous infection

31
Inhalation Anthrax
  • Inhalation Anthrax-
  • A brief prodrome resembling a viral respiratory
    illness with radiograph evidence of mediastinal
    widening

32
Inhalation Anthrax
  • Flu-like symptoms
  • Fever, fatigue, muscle aches, difficulty
    breathing, headache, chest pain
    non-productive cough
  • 1-2 day improvement followed by respiratory
    failure, meningitis may develop
  • No person-to-person spread

33
Anthrax Specimens
  • Inhalational
  • Sputum
  • Blood
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Blood
  • Stool
  • Cutaneous
  • Vesicles
  • Eschars
  • Swabs
  • Environmental
  • Powder
  • Evidentiary

34
TularemiaFrancisella tularensis
  • Plague-like disease in rodents (California)
  • Deer-fly fever (Utah)
  • Glandular tick fever (Idaho and Montana)
  • Market mens disease (Washington, DC)
  • Rabbit fever (Central States)
  • OHaras disease (Japan)
  • Water-rat trappers disease (Russia)

35
Tularemia
  • Person-to-person transmission NO
  • Infective dose 10-50 organisms
  • Incubation period 1-21 days (avg. 3-5)
  • Duration of Illness 2 weeks
  • Mortality low (treated), moderate (untreated)
  • Persistence of organism months in moist soil
  • Vaccine efficacy good 80

36
TularemiaClinical Presentations
  • Pneumonic-
  • Incubation 3-5 days
  • Flu-like symptoms
  • Mortality
  • 30 untreated
  • lt10 treated
  • Ulceroglandular
  • Ulcer w/adenopathy
  • Glandular
  • Adenopathy w/o lesion
  • Oculoglandular
  • Painful, purulent conjunctivitis
  • Typhoidal
  • Possible presentation for BT
  • Septicemia

37
Tularemia Specimen Selection
  • Blood
  • Tissue
  • Lesion aspirate, swab
  • Sputum
  • Serum
  • Environmental samples

38
PlagueYersinia pestis
  • Distribution
  • Highest in 4 corners area Western states
  • Prairie dog population

39
Plague Yersinia pestis
  • Transmission
  • Inhalation
  • Direct contact
  • Fleas

40
Plague
  • Clinical presentations
  • Bubonic
  • Infected lymph nodes
  • Septicemic
  • Blood-borne organisms
  • Pneumonic
  • Transmissible by aerosol deadliest

41
Plague
  • Bubonic
  • Flu-like with painful buboes (lymph nodes)
  • Septicemic
  • Similar to bubonic
  • No swelling of lymph nodes

42
Plague
  • Pneumonic
  • Highest mortality
  • Rapid transmission
  • Fever
  • Hemoptosis
  • Lymphadenopathy
  • Cough

43
Plague Specimen selection
  • Specimen selection is Important!!
  • Bubonic
  • Bubo, lymph node aspirate
  • Septecemic
  • Blood
  • Pneumonic
  • Sputum
  • Bronchial washings/tracheal aspirate
  • Environmental
  • Fleas
  • powder

44
Botulism Clostridium botulinum
  • A neuroparalytic illness
  • Action of a potent toxin
  • 7 types of botulinum toxin
  • Types A, B, E and F (humans)
  • Types C and D (birds mammals)
  • Type G (not yet confirmed as cause)

45
Botulism
  • Foodborne
  • Diplopia (double vision), blurred vision,
    flaccid, symmetric paralysis (rapid progression)
  • Infant
  • Constipation, poor-feeding, failure to thrive,
    weakness, impaired respiration and death
  • Wound
  • Same symptoms as foodborne w/infection through a
    wound
  • Other
  • Non-infant patient with no suspect food or wound

46
Botulism
  • Foodborne
  • Incubation 18-36 hours
  • Most likely presentation for BT event
  • Mortality
  • Currently 5-10
  • Previously 60
  • Wound
  • Mortality 15
  • Emerging problem of drug users
  • Injecting Black Tar Heroin

47
BotulismSpecimen Selection
  • Clinical specimens
  • Serum
  • Gastric contents or vomitus
  • Stool or sterile water enema return
  • Food samples
  • Autopsy specimens
  • Serum
  • Gastric and intestinal contents

48
BotulismSpecimen Selection
  • Bioterrorism Intentional Release
  • Serum
  • Stool
  • Enema fluid
  • Gastric aspirate
  • Nasal swab
  • Food samples
  • Environmental samples

49
Brucellosis Brucella species
  • Transmission
  • Unpasteurized dairy products
  • Most common mode
  • Direct skin contact
  • Occupational hazard for farmers, butchers,
    veterinarians, lab personnel
  • Aerosols
  • Highly infectious

50
Brucellosis Brucella species
  • Infective dose 10 -100 organisms
  • Incubation period 5 days - gt 6 months
  • Duration of illness weeks to months
  • Fever, profuse sweating, malaise, headache and
    muscle/back pain.
  • Person to person transmission no
  • Mortality lt5
  • Persistence of organism very stable

51
BrucellaSpecimen Selection
  • Blood or bone marrow
  • Serum
  • Tissue
  • Spleen
  • Liver
  • Abscess
  • Environmental Evidentiary Samples

52
Ricin
  • Castor bean waste
  • Many forms
  • Powder
  • Mist
  • Pellet
  • Dissolved in water or acid
  • Very stable substance

53
Ricin
  • Medical uses (potential)
  • Bone marrow transplants
  • Cancer treatment

54
Ricin
  • Exposure
  • Accidental unlikely
  • Inhalation
  • Mist or powder
  • Ingestion
  • Injection
  • Absorption
  • Exposure
  • 500 micrograms
  • Head of a pin
  • Georgi Markov, 1978
  • Iran-Iraq War
  • Al Qaeda

55
RicinSigns Symptoms
  • Inhalation
  • Coughing, chest tightness, nausea, difficulty
    breathing, muscle aches (1st few hours)
  • Inflammed airways, excess fluid in lungs, blue
    skin, breathing more difficult (next few hours)

56
RicinSigns Symptoms
  • Ingestion
  • Pupil dilation
  • Fever
  • Thirst
  • Sore throat
  • Headache
  • Vascular collapse
  • Shock
  • Ingestion
  • Internal bleeding (stomach, intestines)
  • Blood diarrhea and vomiting
  • Liver, spleen and kidney failure
  • Low/no urine output

57
RicinSigns Symptoms
  • Injection
  • Muscle and lymph node death (injection site)
  • Liver, kidney and spleen failure
  • Massive bleeding from stomach intestines
  • Death multiple organ failure
  • 36-48 hours after exposure

58
RicinNon-clinical specimens only!
  • Paper
  • Powder
  • Water
  • Soil
  • Food
  • Drink
  • Swabs (cotton, polyester, rayon or foam)
  • Wipes (non-cotton gauze, polyester blend
    Handi-Wipes)

59
Staphylococcus Enterotoxin B
  • Exotoxin produced by Staphylococcus aureus
  • Food poisoning
  • Moderately stable
  • Exposure
  • Inhalation (incubation 3-12 hours)
  • Ingestion (incubation 4-10 hours)
  • Skin contact

60
Staphylococcus Enterotoxin BSigns Symptoms
  • Non-specific flu-like symptoms-
  • Fever
  • Chills
  • Headache
  • Myalgia
  • Prostration

61
Staphylococcus Enterotoxin BSigns Symptoms
  • Inhalation specific
  • Non-productive cough, chest pain, dyspnea
  • Pulmonary edema respiratory failure (severe
    cases)
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Ingestion specific
  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Diarrhea

62
Staphylococcus Enterotoxin B
  • Toxins No person to person transmission
  • Not dermally active
  • Secondary aerosols not a hazard
  • Significant morbidity
  • Inhalation 50-80 (untreated)

63
Staphylococcus Enterotoxin BNon-clinical
specimens only!
  • Paper
  • Powder
  • Water
  • Soil
  • Food
  • Drink
  • Swabs (cotton, polyester, rayon or foam)
  • Wipes (non-cotton gauze, polyester blend
    Handi-Wipes)

64
UDOH Lab Process
  • Sample Check-in
  • Chain of Custody
  • Test request forms
  • Pre-screen
  • Testing
  • Reporting
  • Provider/designee, FBI, UDOH Epi

65
Chain of Custody
  • Always observe a Chain of Custody
  • Evidence
  • Collector?Transporter ?Laboratory
  • Each person to touch the sample must sign for it.
  • Laboratory
  • Signed for each time the sample is manipulated

66
Test Request Forms
  • UDOH Client Services Manual
  • Testing available
  • Test Request Forms
  • Bioterrorism specific
  • Available at
  • www.health.utah.gov/els/microbiology

67
Environmental SamplesPlease Pre-screen
  • Credible Threat
  • Determined by FBI/Local law enforcement
  • Directly related to an event
  • FBI 801-579-1400
  • FBI or HAZMAT
  • Pre-screen
  • Bombs
  • Incendiary Devices
  • Radiological Materials
  • Chemicals

68
Specimen Packaging
  • Clinical-
  • Containers
  • Sterile, leak-proof
  • Blood collection tubes
  • Sterile swabs
  • Labeled, individually, with patient ID
  • According to institutions protocols
  • www.health.utah.gov/els/microbiology

69
Specimen Packaging
  • Non-clinical-
  • Original containers if possible
  • 1. Sample placed in sealed, clean, dry
    container Ziplock bags okay
  • 2. Change/add gloves
  • 3. Sample placed in 2nd container
  • a. In a clean area
  • b. Seal 2nd container
  • 4. Change/add gloves
  • 5. Decontaminate outer container with 10
  • bleach solution OR add a 3rd container.

70
Local Transport
  • Usually courier service personal vehicle
  • As important as air transport
  • No possibility of contents escaping under normal
    transport conditions
  • FedEx/Commercial carrier
  • Strict regulations

71
Transporting
  • Sample containers placed in leak-proof,
    unbreakable
  • Transport Box
  • Secure, tight-fitting cover
  • Biohazard label
  • Frozen specimens
  • Labeled, insulated box w/ice

72
Transporting
  • Transport box ?
  • Carried to courier vehicle
  • Secure in position for transport
  • VERY IMPORTANT!!
  • Courier Vehicle
  • Should carry a spill kit with
  • Absorbent material
  • Disposable gloves
  • Chlorine disinfectant
  • Leak-proof waste disposal container

73
Additional comments
  • Call ahead of time 801-584-8400
  • Clinical/Environmental
  • Let lab know sample is on its way
  • UDOH - 24/7 coverage 1-888-EPI-UTAH
  • Training Opportunities
  • Websites of Interest
  • www.asmusa.org
  • www.bt.cdc.gov

74
Contact Information
  • Utah Department of Health Lab Response
  • Kim Christensen 801-584-8449 kchriste_at_utah.gov
  • June Pounder 801-584-8449 jpounder_at_utah.gov
  • Barbara Jepson 801-584-8595 bjepson_at_utah.gov
  • Emergency Pager 888-EPI-UTAH
  • FBI - 801-579-1400
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