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Zoonosis Muhammad Aamir Farooq
38

Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

May 10, 2015

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Health & Medicine

Aamir Farooq

Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis
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Page 1: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

ZoonosisMuhammad Aamir Farooq

Page 2: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

DEFINITIONS

• ZOO-NOSON

• Concepts

• DDX=Differential definition LOLx

• Anthroponosis/reverse zoonosis

• Xenozoonosis

• Epizootic and epidemic

• Endemic

Page 3: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Etiological classification

• VIRAL ZOONOSIS: avian influenza ,BSE

• PARASITIC ZOONOSIS: -

Protozoal infections :toxoplasmosis, sarcocystiosis ,

Worms:trematode(F. and C), Nematodes(trichinella), cestodes(taeniosis).

• MYCOTIC ZOONOSIS: ringworm

• BACTERIAL ZOONOSIS

Page 4: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Bacterial cont..

• high incidence rate

• Campylobacter

• Salmonella

• Yersinia

• Verotoxigenic

• Escherichia coli and

• Others Brucella,Tubercullosis

Page 5: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Cont..

• highest severity

• Listeria monocytogenes, Clostridium botulinum and Mycobacterium spp.

• 3 main high risk harzards

• Y. enterocolitica, S. enterica and Campylobacter spp

Page 6: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

People at risk

• Vets

• Abattoir workers

• Poultry workers

• Livestock workers

• consumers

Type of contacts

• Direct and indirect

Page 7: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

• LINK between farms and abattoirs

Page 8: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Types

• Direct

• Indirect

• Vector borne

Page 9: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Direct Transmission

• Direct Contact by bite or scratch.

• Direct contact by handling of animal.

• Direct infection by ingestion of animal product.

Page 10: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Indirect Transmission

• Ingestion in contaminated water and food

• Indirect infection by contaminated fluids such as feces, milk.

• Indirect infection by the contaminated soil or water.

Page 11: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Vector borne Transmission

• Mosquito-borne infection

• Tick borne infection

• Fleas

• Flies

• Lice

Page 12: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Foodborne outbreaks 1996 - 2006

▼ ▼

▼ Cryptosporidiosis, Leptospirosis, Lyme borreliosis

● Brucellosis, E. coli 0157, Salmonellosis

BSE

● ● ●

● ● ● ●

● ●

●●●

●●

●●●

Reference: WHO

Page 13: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Foodborne bacteria

• Salmonella (multidrug resistant strain)

• Campylobacter jejuni

• E. coli O157:H7

• S. aureus MRSA

• Yersinia enterocolitica

• Bacillus anthracis

• Clostridium (C.) perfringens

• C. botulinum

Page 14: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

SALMONELLA

• Commonly found in all reptile species

• – Human infections from poultry, cattle, sheep and pigs

• – 5 million cases of food poisoning every year

• –In humans, symptoms develop within 6-72 hours

• Diarrhea, fever, cramping, bloating, vomiting

• Symptoms last about a week

Page 15: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Campylobacter

• Campylobacter coli & Campylobacter fetus

• Present in milk, meat of beef animal

• Also present in eggs of poultry.

• Undercooked food is the problem

• Incubation period 1-10 days

• Fever, Gastroenteritis, abdominal pain, cramps, diarrhea, vomiting

• Can last up to 10 days

• Complications; septicemia, arthritis.

Page 16: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Campylobacter jejuni

Page 17: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

E. coli

• most strains are harmless and live in the intestines of healthy humans and animals.

• this strain produces a powerful toxin and can cause severe illness.

• It was first recognized as a cause of illness in 1982 during an outbreak of severe bloody diarrhea; the outbreak was traced to contaminated hamburgers.

• eating undercooked ground beef.

• Meat can become contaminated during slaughter, and organisms can be thoroughly mixed into beef when itis ground. Bacteria present on the cow's udders or on equipment may get into raw milk.

Page 18: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Cont…………

• 0157:H7 strain is basically responsible

• Complication may be ‘Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome’

Page 19: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Staph. Areus

• Multiplies in cooked meat

• Produce Toxins

• Gastroentritis

• Incubation period 3-4 days

• Heat Resistant toxins

• Symptoms disappear in 24 hrs

Page 20: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Yersinia spp.

• Acute painful Gastroenteritis, mesenteric adenitis, arthritis, acute appendicitis.

• Fish and Poultry

• Fecal oral transmission

• Incubation period 2-6 days.

• Ingestion of contaminated meat.

Page 21: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Anthrax

• 95% in human are cutaneous anthrax infection cases

• Incubation period 1-5 days

• Small, pruritic non-painful papules, septicimia

• 20% mortality

Page 22: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Gastrointestinal Anthrax

• Also called ingestion anthrax

• 100 % fatal

• Hemorrhagic ascites, abdominal pain

• Transmitted by ingestion of contaminated meat.

Page 23: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis
Page 24: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis
Page 25: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

C. perfringens

• Spores affect meat

• Toxins are produced.

• Incubation period 8-24 hrs

• Fever, gastroenteritis

Page 26: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

C. botulinum

• Saprophytic, can’t produce disease.

• Heat resistant toxins are produced

• Sever constipation, neurological signs, paralysis, muscular weakness.

• Undercooked food.

• 10 μg toxin can kill an adult person

Page 27: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis
Page 28: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Antibiotic resistance

• It’s a global concern of the antibiotic resistance of major foodborne pathogens such as;

Salmonella Typhimurium DT 104

Campylobacter spp.

Listeria monocytogenes

E. coli O157:H7

Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)

Enterococcus (VRE)

Page 29: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Giardiasis

• Protozoan disease

• Cattle, buffalo, Horse, Pig

• Transmission by ingestion

• Incubation period 3 days- 6 weeks

• Nausea, headache, anorexia, fever, diarrhea, constipation, weight loss.

Page 30: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Echinoccosis (E.)

• Herbivores are intermediate hosts.

• Human may be intermediate or final host.

• Signs intermediate host:

Cysts in liver, enlarged liver, abdominal pain, fever, anemia, jaundice.

• Signs in final host:

Weakness, anorexia, enlarged abdomen, may be death.

Page 31: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Avian Influenza

• H5N1 highly pathogenic strain of this virus.

• poultry

• Raw and undercooked poultry and poultry products.

• In human fever, sour throat, cough, muscle aches, eye infection, and pneumonia.

Page 32: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis
Page 33: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Newcastle Disease

• Avian paramyxovirus-1

• Birds

• Ingestion of contaminated meat.

• Conjunctivitis, mild flu.

Page 34: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Hantavirus

• Black creek canal virus

• Deer

• Transmission by ingestion of contaminated meat.

• Incubation period 1-5 weeks

• Fever, fatigue, muscle pain, headache, vomiting, severe respiratory problems and possibly death.

Page 35: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Farm to table; main contamination points

Page 36: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Control of Foodborne Disease• From farm to table approach

• Implementation of HACCP

Page 37: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Public Health Approach

• Epidemiology for earlier diagnosis

• Early response to outbreaks

• Provide to disease patterns changing

• Public health lab. support for rapid and accurate diagnosis

• Rapid communication links

• Communication to public

• Education on prevention and/or detection

Page 38: Zoonosis, its types and food borne zoonosis

Thank you