Title: NH Department of Health and Human Services
1Zoonotic Diseases More Common than You Think
Jason Stull, VMD, MPVM Public Health
Veterinarian, NH DHHS Assistant Clinical
Professor, UNH
2Zoonoses
- From the Greek
- Zoon Animal
- Noson Disease
-
- Diseases and infections which are naturally
transmitted between vertebrate animals and humans - - WHO 1959
3Zoonoses Animal Species
- Dogs Cats
- Rabies
- Roundworm
- Ringworm
- Cat Scratch Disease
- Food Animals
- Salmonella
- E.coli
- Brucellosis
4Zoonoses Animal Species
- Birds
- Psittacosis
- West Nile virus
- Eastern Equine Encephalitis
- Avian Influenza
- Reptiles, Fish, Amphibians
- Salmonella
- Mycobacterium
- Wild Animals
- Hantavirus
- Plague
- Tularemia
- Lyme Disease
5Zoonoses
- Common (of 1,407 human pathogens)
- 58 are zoonotic
- 70 of emerging diseases are zoonotic
- Occur in numerous animal species
- Very diverse
- Severity
- Transmission dynamics
- Difficult to predict changes in incidence
6Zoonoses
- Risk factors should be considered in ill patients
- Animal ownership and contact
- Activities bringing humans into contact with
animals - Discuss appropriate pet species for appropriate
individuals - Animals as sentinels of disease
7Common Zoonotic Disease Question Areas
- Rabies
- Lyme Disease
- Mosquito-borne Disease
- Animals in Public Settings
- Food-borne Disease
- Avian Influenza
8Common Zoonotic Disease Question Areas
- Rabies
- Lyme Disease
- Mosquito-borne Disease
- Animals in Public Settings
- Food-borne Disease
- Avian Influenza
9Common Zoonotic Disease Question Areas
- Rabies
- Lyme Disease
- Mosquito-borne Disease
- Animals in Public Settings
- Food-borne Disease
- Avian Influenza
10Common Zoonotic Disease Question Areas
- Rabies
- Lyme Disease
- Mosquito-borne Disease
- Animals in Public Settings
- Food-borne Disease
- Avian Influenza
11Common Zoonotic Disease Question Areas
- Rabies
- Lyme Disease
- Mosquito-borne Disease
- Animals in Public Settings
- Food-borne Disease
- Avian Influenza
12Common Zoonotic Disease Question Areas
- Rabies
- Lyme Disease
- Mosquito-borne Disease
- Animals in Public Settings
- Food-borne Disease
- Avian Influenza
13Common Zoonotic Disease Question Areas
- Rabies
- Lyme Disease
- Mosquito-borne Disease
- Animals in Public Settings
- Food-borne Disease
- Avian Influenza
14Psittacosis(Chlamydophila psittaci)
15August 2006
- Family boarded birds at pet store in August 06
- Birds became ill Aug 23 (2 weeks after returned
from pet store) - Lethargy, nasal d/c
- Husband and wife ill Sept 6
- Fever, cough, headache
16September 2006
- MD visit (Sept 8)
- Dx pneumonia (chest radiographs)
- Abx started illness quickly resolved
- Titers positive for psittacosis (Chlamydophila
psittaci)
17November 2006
- Patient reported by veterinarian!
- Investigation
- Child in household ill since Nov 1 with cough
- Birds still in house..
18NH DHHS and Dept Ag Actions
- Child
- Acute and convalescent samples to CDC for testing
- pending - Abx illness resolved immediately
- Education to family and possible contacts
- No additional suspect cases identified
- Birds
- Placed in isolation
- Testing for Chlamydophila psittaci
- PCR (cloacal and oral swaps) negative
- Abx
19Psittacosis - Background
- Chlamydophila psittaci
- Intracellular bacterium
- Survive outside the host for days to weeks
- Transmission inhalation, vertical (birds)
- Zoonotic
- Reportable
20C. psittaci - Animals
- Wide host spectrum among birds and mammals
- Pet psittacine birds are most often implicated in
human infection
Macaw
Parakeet
21C. psittaci - Birds
- Not an unusual disease among pet birds
- Shed in feces and nasal ocular discharges
- Incubation 3 days to several weeks
- Latent infections - disease may appear years
after exposure
22C. psittaci - Birds
- Clinical signs variable
- Intermittent asymptomatic shedding possible
- Shedding can be activated by stress - shipping,
crowding, cold, breeding. - Birds with confirmed or probable psittacosis
should be isolated and treated under the care of
a veterinarian - Important consideration in any lethargic bird
with nonspecific illness - especially in a
recently acquired bird
23C. psittaci - Humans
- Routes of infection
- Inhalation (feather dust, resp. secretions, dried
feces) - Mouth-to-beak contact
- Handling of infected birds plumage and tissues
- Even brief exposures can lead to infection
24Psittacosis Humans
- Incubation 5-14 d
- Inapparent to systemic illness (pneumonia)
- Acute fever, chills, headache, nonproductive
cough, dyspnea - Can affect other organ systems
25Psittacosis Diagnosis Treatment
- Diagnosis
- Antibodies may cross-react, acute and
convalescent samples (at least 2 weeks apart) - Culture - rarely performed (difficult/safety
concerns) - PCR
- Treatment
- Tetracyclines
- Symptoms improve in 48-72 hours, but relapse is
common if inadequately treated - 15-20 fatality pre antibiotics, today lt1 if
properly treated
26Psittacosis Public Health
- Reportable disease
- USA 923 cases reported to CDC (1988 to 2002)
- NH 2 cases (1998, 2003)
- True incidence likely much higher
27Psittacosis Public Health
- Occupational hazard to workers in bird industry
- Pet birds
- Turkey-processing plants
- Sporadic cases associated with pet bird ownership
28Psittacosis Controlling Infection
- Prevent generation of aerosols and dust during
cleanup - Practice good bird husbandry
29Resources
http//www.nasphv.org/Documents/Psittacosis.pdf
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