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Nonhuman Reservoirs Chapter 27

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Lyme disease. Malaria. West Nile. Plague. Rickettsias ... Chronic Lyme disease: arthritis, neurological involvement, cardiac damage, seizures ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nonhuman Reservoirs Chapter 27


1
Nonhuman ReservoirsChapter 27
2
Nonhuman Reservoirs
  • Zoonoses
  • Vector-borne
  • Soil-borne

3
Zoonoses
  • Direct contact, aerosols or bites
  • Immunization veterinary care preventative
  • Not feasible for feral animals
  • Ex.
  • Rabies
  • Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome

4
Rabies
  • Reservoir primarily in saliva of feral animals,
    i.e. raccoons, skunks, coyotes, foxes, bats and
    stray cats and dogs
  • 52,000 fatal cases per year worldwide
  • 1 million receive treatment for bites
  • Rhabdoviridae RNA virus that infects CNS cells
  • Incubation time variable 9 month avg.
  • Virus proliferates in thalamus and hypothalamus
    leading to onset of fever, excitation, dilation
    of pupils, excessive salivation, anxiety,
    uncontrollable spasms of throat muscles leading
    to respiratory paralysis and death
  • Diagnosis
  • tissue samples screened using monoclonal Ab
  • Viral inclusion bodies i.e. Negri bodies in nerve
    cells
  • Suspected cases can be immunized with Abs 100
    effective

5
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6
Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome
  • Bunyaviridae
  • Enveloped single stranded RNA virus
  • Reservoir
  • Rodents
  • Virus contaminated excreta
  • Aerosol
  • Symptoms
  • fever, myalgia, thrombocytopenia, leukocytosis
    and pulmonary capillary leakage
  • Death due to asphyxiation
  • Virulence and symptoms differ based on viral
    strain
  • No specific treatment or vaccine available

7
Vector-borne Illnesses
  • Arthropod-borne
  • Rickettsial diseases
  • Lyme disease
  • Malaria
  • West Nile
  • Plague

8
Rickettsias
  • Strictly intracellular bacteria that inhabit
    fleas, ticks, lice
  • Typhus group
  • Spotted fever group
  • Ehrlichiosis group

9
i. Typhus Rickettesia prowazekii
  • Transmitted via bite of head louse
  • Cells of R.prowazekii are introduced into skin
    via bite contaminated with louse feces
  • Incubation 1-3 weeks
  • Multiplies in lining of RBCs
  • Symptoms
  • fever, headache, malaise, characteristic rash
  • Can cause damage to CNS, lungs, kidneys and heart
  • Tetracycline and Chloramphenicol

10
ii. The Spotted Fever group Rickettsia rickettsii
  • Prevalent in southeastern states
  • Transmitted via dog and wood tick fecal matter
  • R.rickettsii grows within host cell cytoplasm and
    nucleus
  • Incubation 3-12 days
  • Symptoms
  • fever and severe headache, rash all over body,
    vomiting and diarrhea
  • Tetracyline and Chloramphenicol

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iii.Ehrlichiosis Group Ehrlichia
  • Emerging tick borne diseases in US
  • Deer and humans also serve as reservoirs
  • Human monocytic ehrlichiosis (HME)
  • Human granulocyte ehrlichiosis (HGE)
  • Symptoms
  • Fever, headache, malaise, leukocytopenia and
    thrombocytopenia, changes in liver function
  • Blood leukocytes have visible inclusions of
    Ehrlichia cells
  • Golfers and hikers prone
  • Prevention protective clothing, DEET
  • Treatment Doxycycline

13
Lyme Disease
  • Emerging tick borne disease
  • Spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi
  • Deer tick Ixodes scapularis
  • Symptoms
  • fever, headache, backache, chills, fatigue
  • Additionally, in 75 of cases large rash erythema
    migrans appears at site of tick bite
  • Tetracycline and penicillin
  • Chronic Lyme disease arthritis, neurological
    involvement, cardiac damage, seizures
  • Latent symptoms resemble Syphilis
  • ELISA and PCR

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15
Malaria
  • Protozoan P.vivax, P.falciparum
  • Part of life cycle carried out in humans and
    mosquito vector (female Anopheles)
  • Dramatic impact on human genetics and evolution
  • Anopheles found in warmer climates i.e. tropics
  • Symptoms chills and fever (104F)
  • Loss of RBCs leads to anemia and enlargement of
    spleen
  • Chloroquine can be used to treat intracellular
    stage
  • Primaquine
  • Survive in liver and reinitiate infection
  • Drug-resistance expensive
  • Control of mosquito population

16
Malaria (Contd.)
  • Dramatic impact on human genetics and evolution
  • Endemic in Africa for several thousand years
  • West Africans developed resistance to malaria
    cause by P.falciparum
  • Altered RBC protein hemoglobin S instead of A
    (single amino acid)
  • Hemoglobin S binds oxygen less efficiently
  • Low oxygen concentrations change shape of cell
    from biconcave to elongated C shape i.e. sickle
    cell
  • Homozygous for this trait sickle cell anemia
  • Heterozygous resistance to malaria (P.falciparum
    cannot grow in low-potassium environment)
  • Mediterranean regions resistance related to
    deficiency of RBCs in enzyme G6PD reducing
    compound
  • Higher levels of oxidants such as hydrogen
    peroxide due to growth of P.falciparum normally
    removed by G6PD causes damage to parasite
    membranes

17
West Nile Virus
  • WNV member of Flavivirus
  • Invades nervous system of warm-blooded hosts
  • Horses, humans and birds
  • 1999 U.S
  • Several mosquito species
  • Symptoms fever, headache, nausea,
    lymphadenopathy
  • Rarely fatal
  • Life-long immunity
  • Antiviral drugs currently unavailable

18
Soil-Borne
  • Fungi, bacteria
  • Fungi opportunistic pathogens
  • Trigger allergic reactions Ex. Aspergillus causes
    asthma
  • Fungal exotoxins
  • Infections mycoses Ex. Atheletes foot
    Histoplasmosis (spores)
  • Control of infections is challenging
  • Tetanus Clostridium tetani
  • Tetanus toxin paralysis and respiratory failure
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