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Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist
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Page 1: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Zoonoses and You

Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM

Epidemiologist

Page 2: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Zoonosis

An infection or infestation shared in nature by humans and other animalsStedman’s Medical Dictionary,

27th Edition

Page 3: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Zoonotic Skew

1709 Human Pathogens 49% zoonotic

156 emerging human pathogens 73% zoonotic

Emerging pathogens 3 times more likely to be zoonotic. Taylor & Woodhouse, ICEID 2000

Page 4: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Zoonotic Agents of Concern

CDC has categorized biological agents of concern

All but one Class A agent is zoonotic:Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers

Plague Tularemia AnthraxSmallpox Botulism

Page 5: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Zoonotic transmission

Possible routes: Fecal Oral – bacterial, parasiticInhalationDirect ContactVector Borne – mosquitoes and ticksPenetrating Wounds

Page 6: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Fecal-oral transmission

Salmonella Ancylostoma Campylobacter Toxoplasma E. coli O157:H7 Listeria Giardia Trichinella Cryptosporidia Toxocara

Page 7: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Salmonella

Bacteria Frequently reported in Virginia

(>1000 cases/year) ~30,000 reported to CDC/year Over 1 million cases suspected ~2000 serotypes cause disease

Page 8: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Salmonella

Commonly associated w/meat, poultry, and dairy

Wide reservoir in animals and environment

Page 9: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Salmonella

Incubation 6-72 hours Vomiting, stomach cramps,

diarrhea 15-20 bacteria to infect Mostly self limiting

Page 10: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Salmonella-Prevention

o Avoid temperature abuse and cross contamination

Avoid consumption of raw meats and raw dairy

Wash produce thoroughly Hand washing

Page 11: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

E. Coli O157:H7

Reportable in VA since 1999 ~70 cases reported/year in VA CDC estimates 73,000 cases/year

Page 12: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

E. Coli O157:H7

E. coli found in intestines of all animals and humans

O157:H7 found in cattle and maybe deer

produces a toxin

Page 13: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

E. Coli O157:H7

Thought that 10 bacteria can infect

Incubation 3-4 days Bloody diarrhea, stomach cramps Potential kidney failure

Page 14: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

E. Coli-Prevention

Avoid cross contamination Thoroughly cooking all foods Avoid consumption of raw meats

and raw dairy Wash produce thoroughly Hand washing

Page 15: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Giardia

Protozoan parasite ~400 cases reported in VA/year ~20,000 cases reported in US/year most common intestinal parasite

IDed by PH labs in the US

Page 16: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Giardia

Found in soil, food, water, or surfaces that have been contaminated with infected feces

1 organism can cause disease Can be found in a wide variety of

animals

Page 17: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Giardia

7-10 day incubation Variety of symptoms or may be

asymptomaticFrequent episodes of diarrheaBloatingCramps

Page 18: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Giardia-Prevention

Carefully dispose of sewage wastes so as not to contaminate surface or groundwater

Avoid drinking improperly treated water

Hand washing

Page 19: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Cryptosporidium

Protozoan parasite ~40 cases reported in VA/year ~3000 cases reported in US/year

Page 20: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Cryptosporidium

Young cattle, pigs, horses and sheep can manifest clinical signs

Immunosuppressed animals Hardy in the environment Not species specific

Page 21: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Cryptosporidium

Incubation about 7 days Clinical symptoms:

DiarrheaAbdominal cramps

Asymptomatic carriers are common

Page 22: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Cryptosporidium-Prevention

Persons with diarrhea should not use public swimming facilities

Avoid water or food that may be contaminated

Hand washing

Page 23: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Inhalation Transmission

Psittacosis Histoplasmosis Hantavirus Coxiella burnetii (Q Fever) Tuberculosis

Page 24: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Psittacosis

Caused by Chlamydophila psittaci

Rarely reported in VA

<50 cases reported/year in US

Page 25: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Psittacosis

Birds shed intermittently in feces and respiratory secretions

Often no signs in infected birds Stress initiates shedding/illness

Page 26: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Psittacosis

Inhaled from desiccated droppings/secretions, dust from feathers

Incubation 1-4 weeks Fever, headache, rash, chills Only rare instances of person to

person spread

Page 27: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Psittacosis-Prevention

Diagnose and treat sick birds Clean bird cages regularly Use of protective clothing and

equipment when working with birds

Page 28: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Hantavirus

A total of 396 cases of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome have been reported in the United States

Over 50% of cases from the Four Corners area

VA has reported 2 cases

Page 29: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Hantavirus

Infect rodents worldwide Deer mouse is 1° reservoir in US Aerosol transmission from rodent

excreta Person to person

spread not beenseen in US

Page 30: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Hantavirus

Early symptoms usually nonspecific:Fever, chills, muscle aches

Within 24 hours most cases develop hypotension and pulmonary edema

36% of reported cases have died

Page 31: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Hantavirus-Prevention

Rodent control in and around the home remains the primary strategy

Cleaning using a bleach solution or household disinfectant when cleaning rodent infestations

Page 32: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Direct Contact Transmission

Leptospirosis Tularemia Brucellosis Monkeypox

Page 33: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Brucella

Bacteria that affects various species including sheep, goats, cattle, deer, elk, pigs, dogs

100-200 cases per year in US ~1 case/year in VA

Page 34: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Brucella

Incubation variable (1-2 mo. common)

Irregular fever, headache, sweats, chills

No evidence of person to person spread

Page 35: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Brucella

People become infected via direct contact with infected tissues, blood, urine, vaginal discharges, aborted material

Can cause infection if inhaled Can cause infection if consumed

Page 36: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Brucella

Higher risk occupations for exposureVeterinariansAbattoir workersLaboratory workers

Page 37: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Brucella-Prevention

Avoid raw dairy products, especially in foreign countries

Vaccinate livestock; test and slaughter

Use gloves and other personal protective equipment around afterbirth, aborted fetuses

Page 38: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Monkeypox

Virus related to smallpox Mostly in west and central Africa Isolated from monkeys and other

species Introduced into US and eliminated

in 2003

Page 39: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Monkeypox

Introduced into US by prairie dogs infected by imported African rodents, most likely African Gambian rats.

Page 40: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Monkeypox

Transmitted by the bite of or contact with infected animal

Possible person to person transmission

Incubation period 7-14 days

Page 41: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Monkeypox

Rash, fever, chills/sweats, headache, back ache, swollen lymph nodes, sore throat, cough, shortness of breath.

Page 42: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Monkeypox

Importation rules and interstate transport and sale/trading of such animals not very stringent

79 humans in 6 states infected by prairie dogs

Page 43: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Monkeypox-Prevention

In 6/2003, the CDC and FDA issued a legal order to stop the import of all rodents from Africa into the United States

In 10/2003, the order was replaced by an interim final rule which continues to enforce the order

Page 44: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Vector Borne Transmission

Arboviral encephalitisExamples: West Nile virus

(WNV) Eastern equine encephalitis (EEE)

Rocky Mountain spotted fever Lyme disease Ehrlichiosis

Page 45: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

West Nile Virus

Mosquito borne 1999- First identified in US 2002- First identified in VA Number of cases in US have

ranged from 62-~3800/year Number of cases in VA have

ranged from 0-29

Page 46: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

West Nile Virus

West Nilevirus

West Nilevirus

Mosquito vectorIncidental infections

Bird reservoir hosts

Incidental infections

Page 47: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

West Nile Virus

Non-Neuroinvasive DiseaseMild, flu-like, self limitingResolves in ~1 week

Neuroinvasive Disease~1/150 peopleMeningitis, encephalitis

Page 48: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

West Nile Virus “Iceberg”

<1%CNSDisease

~20%“West Nile Fever”

~80%Asymptomatic

Page 49: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

WNV-Prevention

Long, loose, light clothing Repellants - DEET (<50% adults;

<30% children) Screens on windows Avoid environments/times of day

when mosquitoes biting

Page 50: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

WNV-Prevention

Mosquito ControlEliminate breeding sites

proper drainageremove or turn over water containerschange bird baths weekly

LarvicideAdulticide – aerial spraying after

Hurricane Isabel

Page 51: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Lyme disease

First discovered in 1975Lyme, Connecticut

Tick borne disease ~20,000 cases/year in US ~200 cases/year in VA Dogs considered good sentinels

Page 52: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.
Page 53: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Lyme disease

Erythema migrans (EM)3 to 32 days after tick exposure

Headache, fever, stiff neck Muscle aches and joint pain Swollen lymph nodes Chronic complications if not treated

early

Page 54: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

EM Lesion

Page 55: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Adult female

Adult male Nymph Larvae

Page 56: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Lyme disease-Prevention

Avoid tick-infested areas such as tall grass and dense vegetation.

Keep grass cut and underbrush thinned in yards.

Wear light-colored clothing. Tuck pant legs into socks and

boots. Wear long sleeved shirts buttoned at the wrist.

Page 57: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Lyme disease-Prevention

Conduct tick checks on yourself, your children and your pets every four to six hours.

Apply tick repellent to areas of the body and clothing that may come in contact with grass and brush.

Tick control for pets.

Page 58: Zoonoses and You Julia M. Murphy, DVM, MS, DACVPM Epidemiologist.

Wound Transmission

Tetanus

Cat Scratch disease

Rabies