Chapter 34 Vectorborne and Soilborne Microbial Pathogens
Feb 06, 2016
Chapter 34
Vectorborne and Soilborne Microbial
Pathogens
Animal Transmitted PathogensRabies: and Endozootic or Epizootic
Rabies – Viral Encephalopathy
ARabies virus: ss (-) RNA enveloped virus..looks like a bullet. Kills 55,000 people world wide/year.
Rabies Virus
TEM infected animal Brain Histology, Negri Bodies 75 x 180 nm ~ 2 - 10 nm
Virus infects CNS after an animal bite (virus is in the Saliva)
Classic Painting of Louis Pasteur
Holding desiccated rabbit spinal column after infection with rabies (saliva from rabid dog) virus.
Viruses were not known at this time, Pasteur injected health animals with rabid saliva disease.
Pasteur Observing Vaccination (Rabies) of Joseph Meiser who was just recently bitten by a rabid dog.
IP injection
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Le Bon Louis Pasteur Poster
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Clicker Question:
Virtually all domestic animals (dogs and cats) are vaccinated against rabies at 3 months old. Boosters every 3 years.
Animal bites in USA, 20,000 get postexposure prophylaxis. And only about 3 cases/year.
The rest of the world gets 14 million postexposure prophylaxis.
Rabies Treatment
Human patients: passively immunized with purified rabies immunglobin injected at the site of animal bite, and IM,
and Injected with Rabies Vaccine.
Only disease with 100% effective treatment.
Disease Reservoir: wild animals. Oral subunit vaccines consisting of vaccinia virus or canary pox virus with genes that encode rabies coat proteins…placed on food baits.
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
Rickettsia disease Typhus transmitted by the head or body Louse.
Rickettsias are small Gram Negative bacteria that are obligate intracellular parasites.
Rickettsia prowazekii – Typhus. Rickettsia rickettsii – Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
transmitted by ticks.
Tick hemocytes In granular hemocyte of wood Tick
Whole body RMSF rash
Spotted Fever in the USA, ~2,000 cases/yr
Spotted Fever Rickettsiosis
R. rickettssii in the salivary gland and ovaries of the dog and wood ticks.
R. rickettssii grows in the nucleus of infected cells (unlike all other rickettsias which grow in the cytoplasm.
Incubation period 3-12 days. Symptoms: fever, severe headache and then the whole body rash + intestinal upset (both ends).
Tetracycline or chloramphenicol promotes rapid recovery. Less than 1% mortality (30% mortality untreated).
Lyme Disease and Borrelia
Disease of Humans, White tailed deer, White footed Mouse.
Transmitted by Ixoides, the deer tick which can also transmit Borrelia burgdorferi to other rodents.
Male Female nymph larvae
Lyme Disease Epidemiology
Tick after blood meal Characteristic erythema migrans.
Erythema migrans after several days
Bull’s Eye – after the Tick Bite
Erythema Migrans
Your text photo of Borrelia…hard to see the spiral shape
Borreilia burgdorferi
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Tick – before and after
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Lyme Disease and the Tick Life Cycle
Ixoides tick Life Cycle of Hosts
White Tailed Deer
White Footed Mouse
Symptoms Following Erythema Migrans
1. FIRST STAGEFever, headache, chills, stiff neck, dizziness
2. SECOND STAGECardiac and CNS Crippling arthritis
Clicker Question:
Malaria: Mosquitos and Plasmodium
Infects 350 to 500 million people killing 1 million/yr
Plasmodium vivax, P. falciparum, P. ovale, P. malariae
Malaria zone = Distribution of Anopheles mosquito
Plasmodium Life Cycle
Merozoites in RBCs
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Merozoite Replication
Merozoite Schizont Many Merozoites
Malaria Symptoms
Merozoites bring about the major symptoms by consuming 25-75% hemoglobin in the RBC, and then lysing the host RBC…releasing Hb breakdown products.
Synchronized release of merozoites brings on paroxysms of chills and fever…at intervals of 48 or 72 hours.
P. falciparum can cause RBC to agglutinate leading to reduced blood flow and drop of oxygen
(ischemia).
As hemoglobin breakdown products accumulate blackwater fever.
Malaria Epidemiology in USA
Malaria Vaccine Trials – Phases
UPDATE: Live attenuated malaria vaccine designed to protect through hepatic CD8+ T-cell immunity. Epstein, et al. SCIENCE Oct, 2011 334:475-480
Vaccine: radiation attenuated P. falciparum sporozoites; ID and Subcut – humans
and IV- non-human primates,rabbits and mice. IV produced resistance = challenge + 2 rechallenges.
Humans (80 naive) injected by mosquito or needles – adverse affects in ~50% (non serious). Developed low Ab response, low CD8 T cell response.
Gates Foundation
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Bubonic Plague and Yersinia
Plague Transmission
Cycle of Hosts Expanded
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Plague: Pathology, Treatment and Control
Plaque forms: Pneumonic..rarely survive 2 days, Septicemic..rapid without buboes, and Bubonic..buboes, multiple local hemorrhages = blacking of skin as
it get to the septicemic stage.
Antibiotic Treatment works if rapidly diagnosed. Untreated death rate: 90% Treated death rate: <10%
Concern about the use of Yersina pestis as a bioterrorism agent.
Control: surveillance and control of animal reservoirs.
Soilborne Pathogen: Tetanus and Clostridium tetani
Wound infections. What is the relationship to the metabolism of Clostridium ?
Tetanospasmin = Tetanus Toxin
Wound Infection Tetanus Toxin
Tetanospasmin blocks Inhibitory Nerves, muscles can only CONTRACT
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Tetanus Spastic Paralysis
Tetanus Toxin Inhibits the Inhibitory Neural Circuits
Clicker Question:
Other Endospore Pathogens in Soil
Clostridium botulinum – Botulism
C. difficile – colon infections following antibiotic treatments.
C. Perfringens – Gas gangrene
Bacillus anthracis – Anthrax and veterinary pathogen.