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Title: ZOONOSES


1
ZOONOSES
  • Suzanne R. Jenkins, VMD, MPH, Dpl. ACVPM
  • Office of Epidemiology
  • Virginia Department of Health

2
Introduction
  • Focus on prevention
  • Hundreds of zoonotic diseases
  • Using method of transmission as outline,
    highlight some more common zoonotic diseases as
    examples
  • Fecal Oral bacterial, parasitic
  • Inhalation
  • Direct Contact
  • Vector Borne mosquitoes and ticks
  • Penetrating Wounds

3
Animal Benefits
  • Food, fiber, leather
  • Guards and hunters
  • Recreation/Entertainment
  • Companionship
  • Improve physical and mental health
  • Must weigh risks/benefits for immunocompromised,
    children, the elderly

4
Fecal-Oral Transmission
  • Organism passed in feces and then ingested
  • Human to Human
  • Animal to Human
  • Through food or water
  • May or may not cause disease in animals

5
Fecal-Oral Bacterial Diseases Common examples
Organism Salmonella spp. (gt 1000
serotypes) Campylobacter E. coli O157-H7
Prevention Good hygiene Good hygiene Good
hygiene
Other issues Eggs, reptiles Raw
milk Undercooked ground beef
6
Clinical Features
  • Incubation hours to days
  • GI signs diarrhea (can be bloody), cramps,
    vomiting
  • Fever
  • Usually self limiting days to weeks
  • Salmonella sepsis, especially old/young
  • E. coli 0157-H7 hemolytic uremic syndrome

7
Foodborne Prevention
  • Do not eat raw or undercooked eggs, poultry or
    meat
  • Do not consume raw/unpasteurized milk or other
    dairy products
  • Produce should be thoroughly washed
  • Avoided cross-contamination of foods
  • wash hands, utensils, cutting boards, counters

8
Pet Associated Prevention
  • Wash hands after handling animals and cleaning up
    feces
  • Prevent young children from exposure to pets with
    diarrhea
  • Use special care with puppies from animal
    shelters and crowded kennels
  • Make sure petting zoos and other animal exhibits
    provide handwashing facilities

9
Reptile-associated Salmonella
  • Approximately 93,000 (7) cases per year of
    Salmonella spp. infections are attributable to
    pet reptile or amphibian contact
  • increase in human isolates of rare Salmonella
    serotypes, such as Java, Marina, Stanley, Poona,
    and Chameleon
  • During 1989-1998, 516 (24) of 2150 Salmonella
    isolates with reptile-associated serotypes were
    from children aged less than 4 years

10
Case Reports
  • Infants being cared for in homes with iguanas
  • No direct contact
  • Matching S. marinum isolates from infants and
    iguanas and environmental cultures
  • Iguana was in same tub that baby bathed in
  • Aquarium and other objects washed in sink where
    baby bottles washed.

11
Prevention of Reptile Transmission
  • Pet store owners, veterinarians, and
    pediatricians should alert owners
  • Wash hands thoroughly with soap and water after
    handling reptiles or reptile cages.
  • Persons at increased risk, e.g., children aged
    less than 5 years and immunocompromised persons
    should avoid contact with reptiles and should not
    have them in same house.

12
Prevention of Reptiles Transmission
  • Pet reptiles should not be kept in child care
    centers
  • Pet reptiles should not be allowed to roam freely
    throughout the home or living area.
  • Pet reptiles should be kept out of
    food-preparation areas.

13
FECAL-ORAL - Parasites
  • Prevention
  • Good hygiene
  • Good hygiene
  • Good hygiene
  • Good hygiene
  • Treat animals
  • Cook pork
  • Conditions
  • Cryptosporidiosis
  • Giardiasis
  • Toxoplasmosis
  • Larva migrans
  • Trichinosis

Other Issues water, day care water, day
care undercooked meat raccoon roundworm wildlife
14
Protozoans Cryptosporidia, Giardia
  • Most common transmission via water (Milwaukee)
  • Less sensitive to chlorine than bacteria,
    especially Cryptosporidia
  • Contamination from wild animals, livestock
  • Person to person - giardiasis in diapered day
    care
  • Animal to person especially pound and kennel
    pups

15
Cryptosporidiosis and Giardiasis Prevention
  • Do not drink from streams, rivers or lakes
  • Surface water used for drinking should be
    filtered
  • Wash hands after changing diapers, cleaning up
    after pets, handling livestock or wild animals
  • High level of suspicion in pound/kennel pups
    treat accordingly

16
Toxoplasmosis (another protozoan)
  • Woman infected in early pregnancy severe damage
    or death of fetus
  • Immunocompromised primary or reactivated
    disease is serious and can result in death
  • Healthy individuals asymptomatic or mild
    illness
  • Reservoir cats that eat rodents, birds
  • Oocysts in cat feces only 10-20 days
  • Intermediate hosts may carry oocysts in muscle

17
Toxoplasmosis Prevention
  • Cook meat well
  • Clean litter box daily (takes 1-5 days for
    oocysts to be infective)
  • Feed cats prepared food and discourage hunting
  • Wear gloves while gardening
  • Wash hands well

18
Toxocara and Ancylostoma
  • Larva migrans visceral, ocular, etc.
  • Roundworm egg ingestion
  • Hookworm egg ingestion or larval penetration of
    skin
  • In foreign host (human) animal round worm larvae
    do not mature in GI tract, instead travel through
    tissue and cause damage
  • Baylisascaris procyonis raccoon roundworm
  • Affinity for brain children, rabbits, rodents,
    birds

19
Larva Migrans Prevention
  • Worm puppies and kittens at 2, 4, 6 and 8 weeks
    of age
  • Educate owners about good hygiene
  • Prevent soil contamination roundworm eggs can
    survive in soil for extended periods

20
INHALATION Transmission
  • Prevention
  • Treat birds
  • Wear mask/respirator
  • Avoid areas
  • Wear respirator
  • Reduce dust
  • Eliminate rodents
  • Disinfect
  • Ventilate area
  • Sources
  • Parrot-like birds
  • Bat/bird guano
  • (gt 2 years old)
  • Rodent urine/feces
  • (fresh)

Disease Psittacosis (chlamydiosis) Histoplasmosi
s Hantavirus
21
Psittacosis Issues
  • Infected birds can be asymptomatic
  • Shed intermittently in feces and respiratory
    secretions
  • Inhaled from desiccated droppings/secretions,
    dust from feathers
  • Stress initiates shedding/ illness
  • Some strains more pathogenic for birds/humans
  • Requires 45 day treatment of bird

22
Histoplasmosis
  • Mold in soil and yeast in animals and humans
  • Technically not a zoonoses not transferred from
    infected animals
  • Fungus occurs naturally in highly organic soil or
    collections of bird or bat droppings
  • Takes several years to become infective
  • Spores are inhaled when disturbed, e.g.,
    cleaning out buildings with bird or bat roosts

23
Histoplasmosis, continued
  • Most adults have been exposed and are immune,
    especially in midwest
  • Five clinical forms from asymptomatic to chronic
    disseminated or pulmonary
  • Can reactivate when immune system depressed
  • Prevent by dampening area and wearing respirator
    - best to have professional clean up, e.g.,
    asbestos

24
Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome
  • Many different hantaviruses found worldwide
  • Some pathogenic, HPS or other organs, especially
    kidneys
  • Rodent hosts Genus/species specific
  • Transmission via aerolization of rodent excreta

25
New World Hantaviruses
New York Peromyscus leucopus
Sin Nombre Peromyscus maniculatus
Prospect Hill Microtus pennsylvanicus
Muleshoe Sigmodon hispidus
Bloodland Lake Microtus ochrogaster
Isla Vista Microtus californicus
Bayou Oryzomys palustris
Black Creek Canal Sigmodon hispidus
El Moro Canyon Reithrodontomys megalotis
Rio Segundo Reithrodontomys mexicanus
Caño Delgadito Sigmodon alstoni
Laguna Negra Calomys laucha
Juquitiba Unknown Host
Rio Mamore Oligoryzomys microtis
Orán Oligoryzomys longicaudatus
Bermejo Oligoryzomys chacoensis
Andes Oligoryzomys longicaudatus
26
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27
Deer mouse
28
Prevention Rodent Control
  • Eliminate food sources and nesting sites
  • Prevent mice from entering dwellings
  • Encourage natural predators

29
Prevention - personal
  • Air buildings before cleaning
  • Dampen area with Clorox and water solution
  • Wear gloves to clean up and dispose
  • Avoid sleeping in areas inhabited by mice
  • Buildings
  • Burrows and nests at campsites

30
DIIRECT CONTACT Transmission
31
VECTOR BORNE Transmission
Reservoir Birds Ticks White footed
mice Deer (?)
32
Mosquito Borne Encephalitis
  • Group of acute inflammatory viral diseases of
    short duration involving parts of the brain,
    spinal cord and meninges.
  • Signs and symptoms similar, but vary in rate and
    progress.
  • Most infections asymptomatic.
  • Usually fever, headache and if severe, stiff
    neck, stupor, confusion, coma.

33
Arboviral Encephalitis
  • Each disease caused by a specific virus (EEE,
    SLE, LaCrosse, West Nile)
  • Virus usually maintained in animal reservoir.
  • Transmitted by vector infected mosquito.
  • Species varies with disease and geography
  • Amplification and bridge vectors

34
Human Arboviral Disease in Virginia
  • Eastern Equine Encephalitis
  • Tidewater - 1975 (2), 1998 (1) Henrico -1990 (1)
  • St. Louis Encephalitis
  • Richmond area - 1976 (4)
  • La Crosse Encephalitis
  • southwest Virginia - several cases yearly since
    1994

35
West Nile Virus Transmission Cycle
Mosquito vector
Incidental infections
West Nile virus
West Nile virus
Incidental infections
Bird reservoir hosts
36
WNV hospitalized 62 persons in 1999 and seven of
these died. WNV was detected in 194 birds and 25
horses (8 horses died).
37
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38
US WNV - 2000
  • From New Hampshire to North Carolina,
    concentrated around New York City
  • 21 humans, 2 deaths
  • 4,323 birds (87 crows)
  • 59 horses
  • Over 500 mosquito pools

39
WNV Activity Detected in Virginia in 2000
In 2000, over 600 dead birds were tested for WNV.
Starting in early October, seven birds were
found to be WNV positive. All were crows and
were found in the following jurisdictions.
Alexandria
Fairfax Co.
Spotsylvania Co.
Hanover Co.
Powhatan Co.
Pr. Edward Co.
Hampton
40
West Nile Virusin 2001
41
US WNV - 2001
  • 5,190 birds
  • 100 horses
  • 38 humans
  • 511 mosquito pools

42
VA WNV -2001
  • 195 birds
  • 4 horses
  • 1 mosquito pool

43
Testing Virginia Birds for WNV in 2001
As of mid October, a total of 1108 dead birds
had been tested for WNV in Virginia. All but 39
of the 120 local health departments had had at
least one bird tested. 180 birds have tested
positive for WNV.
44
Preventing Arbovirus Infection
  • Personal protection
  • Clothing
  • Repellents (20 30 DEET, lt 10 on children)
  • Reduce vectors
  • Eliminate standing water
  • Larvicides
  • Adulticides

45
Tick Borne Diseases
  • Lyme disease
  • Rocky Mountain spotted fever
  • Human monocytic ehrlichiosis
  • Human granulocytic ehrlichiosis

46
Lyme Disease Clinical Symptoms
  • Erythema migrans
  • 3 to 32 days after tick exposure
  • Malaise, headache, fever, stiff neck
  • Muscle aches and joint pain
  • Swollen lymph nodes
  • Chronic arthritis, heart and nervous system
    complications if not treated early

47
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48
Lyme disease continued
  • Transmission
  • usually nymph stage when tick is actively
    feeding
  • adult tick can transmit disease
  • tick must be attached for gt 24 hours
  • Tick life cycle
  • 2 years from egg to adult

49
Adult female
Adult male
Nymph
Larvae
50
White Footed Mouse
Borrelia burgdorferi
51
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52
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53
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
  • Sudden onset
  • High fever
  • Severe headache
  • Maculopapular rash starts on extremities
  • Case fatality rate 13 15 without treatment
  • American dog tick is vector and reservoir

54
Ehrlichiosis
  • Ranges from subclinical to life threatening
  • Nonspecific symptoms, often with decreased WBCs
    and thrombocytes also may be elevated liver
    enzymes
  • Human monocytic (HME) Lone Star tick
  • Human granulocytic (HGE) deer tick
  • Potential for other human and animal diseases

55
Diagnosis and Treatment
  • LD, RMSF, Ehrlichiosis all respond to antibiotics
    in tetracycline family
  • Treat on suspicion
  • Definitive diagnosis relies on acute and
    convalescent serum samples
  • LD requires confirmation with Western Blot

56
Prevention
  • Avoid areas with tall grass and dense vegetation
  • Wear light-colored clothing
  • Tuck pant legs into socks and boots, wear
    long-sleeved shirts buttoned at the wrists
  • Conduct tick checks and removal every 4-6 hours
  • Apply tick repellent containing 20-30 DEET (skin
    or clothes) lt10 on children or 0.5 permethrin
    (clothes only).

57
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58
Penetrating Wound Transmission
  • Tetanus soil with feces, especially equine
    maintain immunity
  • Cat Scratch disease
  • Rabies

59
Cat Scratch Disease - Humans
  • Bartonella henselae
  • Usually cat scratch
  • Healthy self limiting lymphadenitis does not
    respond to antibiotics
  • Complications encephalopathy, liver and spleen
    abscesses
  • Immunocompromised disseminated does respond to
    antibiotics

60
Cat Scratch Disease - Cats
  • Asymptomatic
  • Chronic bacteremia often in presence of
    antibodies
  • Fleas may play role in cat to cat transmission
  • Seroprevalence varies, but can be as high as 55
    in certain areas

61
Cat Scratch Disease - Prevention
  • Wash wounds well
  • Control fleas on cats
  • Kittens, especially strays or from shelters may
    not be appropriate for children, immunocompromised

62
Rabies Disease Transmission
  • Almost always by a bite.
  • Virus cannot enter intact skin.
  • Virus can cross mucous membrane less efficient.
  • Scratches are risk only if wet saliva gets in
    wound.
  • Secondary transmission rarely a risk.

63
Virus in body
  • Travels nerve pathways
  • To spinal cord
  • To brain
  • To salivary glands (and other organs)
  • Multiplies in
  • Brain
  • Salivary glands
  • Shed in saliva

64
Disease Transmission
  • High risk animals
  • Carnivores
  • Low risk animals
  • Small rodents
  • Rabbits and Hares
  • ??
  • Large rodents, especially groundhogs
  • Opossums
  • Exotic animals

65
Virus Variants
  • Associated with certain species
  • Associated with certain geographic areas
  • except bats
  • Spillover to other species occurs
  • Vaccines protect against all variants
  • Role of variants in disease?

66
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67
Disease signs symptoms
  • Early - vague, nonspecific.
  • Behavioral- more or less aggressive,
    vocalization.
  • Physical - appetite loss, paralysis, seizures,
    coma.
  • Abnormal, abnormal, abnormal - death

68
Diagnosis - Postmortem
  • Impression smears of 3 to 4 parts of brain
  • brain must still have good architecture
  • Immunofluorecent antibody
  • very sensitive and specific
  • false positives rare
  • unsatisfactory manage as positive

69
Human Epidemiology - US
  • From 1990 to present, 32 human cases
  • Dog exposures 2 Texas, 6 overseas
  • 24 attributed to bat exposure
  • 17 pipistrelle/silver haired bat variant
  • only 3 bites reported
  • bites probably unrecognized and unreported

70
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71
Human Epidemiology - VA
  • 1953 - unknown exposure, worked in veterinary
    hospital
  • 1998 - unknown exposure, infected with
    pipestrelle/silver haired bat variant
  • prisoner in work program
  • opportunities for exposure

72
Control - Wildlife
  • Population Control
  • Wildlife Vaccination
  • Public Education

73
Wildlife Population Control
  • Usually not cost effective
  • Not acceptable to portions of public
  • Trapping and euthanasia may be appropriate to
    remove animals posing threat, e.g. tame raccoons
    in park
  • Translocation not acceptable illegal across
    county lines

74
Wildlife Vaccination
  • Trap, vaccinate and release
  • Oral vaccine
  • Foxes - Europe, Canada
  • Raccoons - US
  • federal or state rabies program
  • Most effective as barrier

75
Oral Wildlife Vaccination
  • Vaccine?
  • Genetic recombinant with Vaccinia virus
  • Modified live virus mutant, apathogenic
  • Bait?
  • Attractant?
  • Biomarker?

76
Oral Wildlife Vaccination
  • Distribution method
  • density
  • plane, helicopter, vehicle, hand
  • Timing?
  • Time of year?
  • Frequency?
  • Duration?
  • Cost Benefit?????
  • Fairfax proposal reduce risk in endemic area

77
Fairfax Oral Vaccine Program
  • May 5-24, 2000
  • 819 parcels
  • 17,598 acres
  • 18,108 doses
  • ? person hours
  • October 9-20, 2000
  • 1,402 parcels
  • 22,690 acres
  • 20,046 doses
  • 434 person hours

78
Fairfax Results Rabies Titers
  • Baseline Fall, 1999 1/52 2
  • First baiting June/July, 2000 33/89 37
  • Second baiting November/December, 2000 30/67
    45

79
Control - Domestic Animals
  • Vaccination
  • Animal Control
  • Postexposure Management

80
Domestic Animal Vaccination
  • Code
  • Dogs and cats
  • Required by 4 months of age
  • Vaccines labeled for 3 months or 8 weeks
  • Booster 1 year after initial vaccination
  • Encourage 3 year vaccines after that

81
Blood Tests vs. Vaccinations
  • Tests on blood (serum) measure antibodies
  • Antibodies indicate body responded to vaccine (or
    virus)
  • Antibody titer does not measure protection
  • If protective titer was known, would not need
    challenge studies for vaccine approval

82
Domestic Animal Control
  • Leash laws
  • Eliminate stray animals
  • Enforcement
  • Cats

83
Domestic Animal Exposure
  • Suspected or confirmed rabid animal could have
    bitten or had mouth to mouth contact
  • A visible bite wound is not necessary.

84
Postexposure Management
  • Vaccinated dog, cat, ferret, livestock
  • Immediate booster
  • 3 months confinement and observation
  • Code vs. Compendium

85
Postexposure Management
  • Unvaccinated dog or cat
  • Euthanasia
  • Six months strict isolation
  • No opportunity for direct human or animal
  • contact
  • Vaccinate one month prior to release
  • Postexposure regimen

86
Postexposure Management
  • Unvaccinated Livestock
  • Send to slaughter immediately
  • Six months routine confinement and observation.

87
Postexposure Management
  • Dog or cat with expired vaccination
  • Euthanize OR
  • Immediate booster and six months strict isolation
  • Vaccinate again one month before release to
    comply with Code.

88
Postexposure Management
  • Recently expired vaccination
  • May be handled as currently vaccinated depending
    on
  • Severity of exposure
  • Vaccination history
  • Consult with Office of Epidemiology if unsure

89
Human Prevention
  • Education
  • Postexposure management
  • Preexposure vaccination

90
Education
  • Avoid wildlife
  • Avoid stray animals
  • Animal and bat proof home
  • Remove wildlife attractants
  • Report exposures to health department

91
Human Postexposure Management
  • Wash wound well with soap and water (10 minutes)
  • Confine animal or remember identifying marks
    (domestic animals)
  • Call health department or animal control

92
Human Postexposure Management
  • Dog, cat or ferret bite- confine and observe
    animal 10 days
  • Begin treatment within 3 days or earlier if
    animal not available
  • Euthanize and test if signs compatible with
    rabies - veterinary exam

93
Human Postexposure Management
  • Wild carnivore bite
  • Euthanize and test if available
  • Initiate postexposure treatment if not available

94
Human Postexposure Management
  • Small rodent, rabbit, squirrel bites - rarely
    require testing or treatment of bitten person
    unless animal abnormal
  • Groundhog, other large rodent bites - risk in
    raccoon rabies areas
  • Livestock observe if negative history
  • Opossum, etc. bites???

95
Human Postexposure Treatment
  • Rabies Immune Globulin (if no previous
    vaccination)
  • Rabies Vaccine
  • Day 0, 3, 7, 14, 28

96
Human Preexposure Vaccination
  • May protect against mild, inapparent exposure
  • Reduces postexposure treatment to two doses of
    vaccine and NO RIG
  • 3 doses IM or ID on day 0, 7, 21 or 28
  • Titer every 2 years booster if 15 or less

97
Resources
  • www.cdc.gov
  • www.vdh.state.va.us
  • Control of Communicable Diseases Manual, James
    Chin, Ed., American Public Health Association,
    17th edition
  • Zoonoses Updates from JAVMA
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