Title: Epidemiology of Infectious Disease
1Chapter 33
- Epidemiology of Infectious Disease
2Epidemiology
- science that evaluates occurrence, determinants,
distribution, and control of health and disease
in a defined human population - health
- condition in which organism (and all its parts)
performs its vital functions normally - disease
- impairment of the normal state of an organism or
any of its components that hinders the
performance of vital functions - epidemiologist
- one who practices epidemiology
3Figure 33.1
4Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
- located in Atlanta, GA
- functions as national focus for
- developing and applying disease prevention and
control - environmental health
- health promotion and health education activities
designed to improve the health of the people - worldwide counterpart is the World Health
Organization (WHO) located in Geneva, Switzerland
5Epidemiology Terminology
- sporadic disease
- occurs occasionally and at irregular intervals
- endemic disease
- maintains a relatively steady low-level frequency
at a moderately regular interval - hyperendemic diseases
- gradually increase in occurrence frequency above
endemic level but not to epidemic level
6More Terms
- outbreak
- sudden, unexpected occurrence of disease
- usually focal or in a limited segment of
population - epidemic
- sudden increase in frequency above expected
number - index case first case in an epidemic
- pandemic
- increase in disease occurrence within large
population over wide region (usually worldwide)
7Morbidity Rate
- an incidence rate
- number of new cases in a specific time period per
unit of population - new cases during a specific time
- individuals in population
8Prevalence Rate
- total number of individuals infected at any one
time - depends both on incidence rate and duration of
illness
9Mortality Rate
- number of deaths from a disease per number of
cases of the disease - deaths due to given disease
- size of total population with disease
10Correlation with a Single Causative Agent
- after recognition of infectious disease in a
population, outbreak correlated with specific
pathogen - clinical microbiologists help in isolation and
identification of pathogen
11Figure 33.4
12Human Sources/Reservoirs
- carrier
- infected hosts who are potential sources of
infection for others - types of carriers
- active carrier has overt clinical case of disease
- convalescent carrier has recovered but continues
to harbor large numbers of pathogen - healthy carrier harbors the pathogen but is not
ill - incubatory carrier is incubating the pathogen in
large numbers but is not yet ill
13Animal Reservoirs
- transmission to human can be direct or indirect
- vectors
- organisms that spread disease from one host to
another
14More Types of Carriers
- casual, acute, or transient carriers
- convalescent, healthy, and incubatory carriers
that harbor pathogen for brief time - chronic carriers
- convalescent, healthy, and incubatory carriers
that harbor pathogen for long time
15How Was the Pathogen Transmitted?
- Four main routes
- airborne
- contact
- vehicle
- vector-borne
16Airborne Transmission
- pathogen suspended in air and travels ? 1 meter
- droplet nuclei
- small particles (1-4 ?m diameter)
- can remain airborne for long time
- can travel long distances
- usually propelled from respiratory tract of
source organisms by sneezing, coughing, or
vocalization - dust particles also important route of airborne
transmission
17Figure 33.9
18Contact Transmission
- coming together or touching of source/reservoir
and host - direct contact (person-to-person)
- physical interaction between source/reservoir and
host - e.g., kissing, touching, and sexual contact
- indirect contact
- involves an intermediate (usually inanimate)
- e.g., eating utensils, bedding
- droplet spread
- large particles (gt5 ?m) that travel lt 1 meter
19Figure 33.8
20Vehicle Transmission
- vehicles
- inanimate materials or objects involved in
pathogen transmission - common vehicle transmission
- single vehicle spreads pathogen to multiple hosts
- e.g., water and food
- fomites
- common vehicles such as surgical instruments,
bedding, and eating utensils
21Vector-Borne Transmission
- External (mechanical) transmission
- passive carriage of pathogen on body of vector
- no growth of pathogen during transmission
- Internal transmission
- carried within vector
- harborage transmission pathogen does not
undergo changes within vector - biologic transmission pathogen undergoes
changes within vector
22Virulence and the Mode of Transmission
- Evidence suggests correlation between mode of
transmission and degree of virulence - direct contact ? less virulent
- vector-borne ? highly virulent in human host
relatively benign in vector - greater ability to survive outside host ? more
virulent - e.g., Mycobacterium tuberculosis and
Corynebacterium - diphtheriae can survive weeks to months outside
human hosts
23Reasons for Increases in Emerging and Reemerging
Infectious Diseases
- crowding
- habitat disruption
- shift in distribution of nosocomial pathogens
24More Reasons
- excessive or inappropriate use of antimicrobial
therapy - medical practices that lead to immunosuppression
- rapid global transportation systems
25Control of Epidemics
- Three types of control measures
- reduce or eliminate source or reservoir of
infection - break connection between source and susceptible
individual - reduce number of susceptible individuals
26Reduce or Eliminate Source or Reservoir
- quarantine and isolation of cases and carriers
- destruction of animal reservoir
- treatment of sewage
- therapy that reduces or eliminates infectivity of
cases
27Break Connection between Source and Susceptible
Individuals
- chlorination of water supplies
- pasteurization of milk
- supervision and inspection of food and food
handlers - destruction of insect vectors with pesticides
28Reduce Number of Susceptible Individuals
- raise level of herd immunity by
- passive immunity following exposure
- active immunity for protection
29Vaccines and Immunization
- Vaccine
- preparation of one or more microbial antigens
used to induce protective immunity - may consist of killed, living, weakened
(attenuated) microbes or inactivated bacterial
toxins (toxoids), purified cell material,
recombinant vectors or DNA
30More on Vaccines and Immunization
- Immunization
- result obtained when vaccine stimulates immunity
- vaccines attempt to induce antibodies and
activated T cells to protect host from future
infection - Vaccinomics is the application of genomics and
bioinformatics to vaccine development
31Table 33.3
32Recombinant-Vector Vaccines
- pathogen genes that encode major antigens
inserted into nonvirulent viruses or bacteria
which serve as vectors and express the inserted
gene - released gene products (antigens) can elicit
cellular and humoral immunity
33DNA Vaccines
- DNA directly introduced into host cell via air
pressure or gene gun - when injected into muscle cells, DNA taken into
nucleus and pathogens DNA fragment is expressed - host immune system responds to foreign proteins
produced - many DNA vaccine trials are currently being run
34Table 33.5
35Bioterrorism Preparedness
- Bioterrorism
- intentional or threatened use of viruses,
bacteria, fungi, or toxins from living organisms
to produce death or disease in humans, animals,
and plants
36Examples of Intentional Uses of Biological Agents
for Criminal or Terror Intent
- 1984 in The Dalles, OR
- Salmonella typhimurium in 10 restaurant salad
bars - 1996 in Texas
- intentional release of Shigella dysentariae in a
hospital lab break room - 2001 in seven eastern U.S. states
- use of weaponized Bacillus anthracis spores
delivered through U.S. postal systems - all of above caused hospitalizations, the anthrax
episode resulted in five deaths
37Table 33.6
38Choosing Biological Agents as Weapons
- biocrime when chosen as a means for a localized
attack vs. bioterrorism when chosen for mass
casualties - characteristics that favor their use
- invisible, odorless, and tasteless
- difficult to detect
- take hours or days before awareness that they
have been used - fear and panic associated with the anticipation
that they were used
39Nosocomial Infections
- result from pathogens that develop within a
hospital or other clinical care facility and are
acquired by patients while they are in the
facility - 5-10 of all hospital patients acquire a
nosocomial infection - usually caused by bacteria that are members of
normal microbiota
40Source
- Endogenous pathogen
- brought into hospital by patient or acquired when
patient is colonized after admission - Exogenous pathogen
- microbiota other than the patients
- Autogenous infection
- caused by an agent derived from microbiota of
patient despite whether it became part of
patients microbiota following admission
41Control, Prevention, and Surveillance
- proper training of personnel in basic infection
control measures - e.g., handling of surgical wounds and hand
washing - monitoring of patient for signs and symptoms of
nosocomial infection
42The Hospital Epidemiologist
- individual responsible for developing and
implementing policies to monitor and control
infections and communicable diseases - reports to infection control committee or similar
group
43Bibliography
- Lecture PowerPoints Prescotts Principles of
Microbiology-Mc Graw Hill Co. - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_method
- https//files.kennesaw.edu/faculty/jhendrix/bio334
0/home.html