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ANTHRAX

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Strategy: infect livestock and feed of neutral trading partners, import into enemy ... Spores ingested by macrophages and transported to mediastinal lymph nodes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ANTHRAX


1
ANTHRAX
  • What we have Seen
  • November 14, 2001

2
Anthrax Not a New Disease
Not a New Disease Woolsorters Disease
Ragpickers Disease
3
Not a New Disease
  • Spores of
  • Bacillus anthracis
  • Clostridium botulinum
  • Clostridium tetani

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Anthrax Research In WWI
  • Strategy infect livestock and feed of neutral
    trading partners, import into enemy territory
  • Germany
  • Romanian sheep? Russian troops
  • Argentinean livestock ? Allied troops
  • U.S.
  • Animal feed and horses for export

8
The Geneva Protocol (1925)
  • Signed but continued to develop weapons
  • Canada, France, Belgium, Italy, Netherlands,
    Great Britain
  • Russia, Poland
  • U.S. signed in 1972

9
Anthrax Research in WWII
  • Japan
  • Bioweapons research in occupied China
  • POWs infected with anthrax and others, leading to
    10,000 deaths
  • Food, water contaminated
  • Pure cultures thrown into homes
  • Sprayed from aircraft
  • 5000 anthrax-filled bombs produced at Fort
    Detrick
  • Allies detonated weaponized anthrax on an island
    near the Scotland coast
  • Viable spores persisted until 1986

10
Sites of U.S. Bioweapons Effort
11
Sites of U.S. Bioweapons Effort
12
Sites of U.S. Bioweapons Effort
13
BiopreparatRussian Bioweapons Agency
  • 6 research laboratories
  • 5 production facilities
  • Employed 55,000 scientists
  • In 1995, estimated 25,000

14
Sverdlovsk Anthrax Outbreak, April-May 1979
  • 79 anthrax infections (66 deaths) occurred in
    Ukranians living south of Sverdlosk
  • Outbreak of GI anthrax attributed to eating
    contaminated meat
  • Case-fatality ratio (86) and pathology
    consistent with inhalational, not GI, anthrax
  • Boris Yeltsin chief political officer in district

15
Epidemic Curve Onset of Anthrax Cases in
Sverdlovsk
Modal time to death 10 days Median time to
death 12 days Case-fatality rate (86)
decreased as outbreak progressed
Last skin disease
Last inhalation case
16
Sverdlovsk Aerial View
17
Sverdlovsk Region Epi-map
18
Sverdlovsk Region Epi-map
19
Sverdlovsk Region Epi-map
20
Aum Shinrikyo Cult
  • Sarin gas in Tokyo Subways
  • Drone aircraft equipped with spray tanks
  • 3 unsuccessful anthrax attacks in Japan

21
Bioweapons Facilities in Iraq
22
Fermenters Used to Produce Botulism Toxin
23
Al Hakam Single-Cell Protein Production Plant
24
9/17/2001
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
25
9/22
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
26
9/25
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
27
9/26
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
28
9/28
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
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9/29
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
31
9/30
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
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10/1
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
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10/9
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
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10/13
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
Residence of a NJ case
35
10/14
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
Residence of a NJ case
36
10/16
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
Residence of a NJ case
37
10/17
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
Residence of a NJ case
38
10/19
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
Residence of a NJ case
39
10/22
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
Residence of a NJ case
40
10/23
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
Residence of a NJ case
41
10/25
Anthrax 2001 Epidemic Map
Residence of a NJ case
42
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Anthrax Dispersion
Human environmental
Human residence
Environmental only
44
Proportion of Anthrax Cases that are
Inhalational, by State
12
14
100
100
45
Anthrax Clinical Presentation, Treatment, and
Prevention
  • Ronald C. Hershow, M.D.
  • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • School of Public Health

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Features of Case
  • Non-specific flu-like prodrome
  • Biphasic course
  • Mortality (published gt85)
  • Need to recognize clusters
  • Abnormal chest x-ray

50
Chest X-Ray
-Widened mediastinum
-Pleural effusions
-Pulmonary infiltrates
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Early Diagnosis
  • Early recognition, rapid antibiotics essential
  • 6 of 10 inhalational cases have survived
  • Attention to potential environmental exposure
    (Where do you work?, Where have you been?)
  • Tachycardia disproportionate to fever, night
    sweats, elevated or normal WBC count with L
    shift, frequent GI symptoms, no rhinorrhea
  • Chest radiograph and chest CT if exposure is
    possible

53
Treatment
  • Adults IV Ciprofloxacin 400 q12h or Doxycyline
    100 q12h 2 additional antimicrobials (?
    Rifampin, Clindamycin)
  • 60 days of treatment Switch to PO agents
  • Unchanged for pregnant women- maternal
    hepato-toxicity and fetal skeletal/dental side
    effects of doxycycline
  • Children-dose adjusted

54
Cutaneous Anthrax
  • Follows deposition into skin
  • Arms, hands, face, neck most common
  • Progression from local edema--gt pruritic
    papule--gtvesicle--gtulcer with black eschar
  • Can progress to painful lymphadenopathy and
    systemic disease if untreated, mortality 20

55
Cutaneous Anthrax
DDX Insect bite Staph (painful) Rare
problems Plague Tularemia
56
Cutaneous Anthrax Treatment
  • Oral Ciprofloxacin or Doxycycline for 60 days
  • If organism susceptible, may switch to PO
    amoxicillin after improvement occurs

57
Post-exposure Prophylaxis for Anthrax
Prevention
  • PO ciprofloxacin or doxycycline for 60 days, dose
    adjustments for children
  • For susceptible strains, PO amoxicillin
    acceptable for children

58
Anthrax Vaccine
  • All active- and reserve-duty military personnel
  • Not available for civilian use
  • Dosing - 0, 2, 4 weeks 6, 12, 18 months
    periodic booster
  • ? Use in pre-exposure prevention
  • Mass vaccination unlikely
  • ? Vaccination of essential high-risk personnel

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60
Anthrax Pathogenesis
  • Spores inhaled-(2,500-55,000 spores)
  • Spores ingested by macrophages and transported to
    mediastinal lymph nodes
  • germination of spores (1-60 days)
  • bacteria replicate, anthrax toxins released
    protective antigen, lethal and, edema factor
  • hemorrhagic necrosis of lymph nodes, hematogenous
    spread , shock, death
  • 50 develop meningitis

61
Anthrax Environmental Protection and Detection
  • Lorraine M. Conroy, ScD, CIH
  • Associate Professor
  • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • School of Public Health

November 14, 2001
62
Prevention
  • What are we preventing?

63
Prevention
  • What are we preventing?
  • Injuries and Illnesses
  • Exposure

64
Prevention
  • How are we preventing injuries and Illnesses?
  • Exposure Elimination or Reduction (industrial
    hygiene)
  • Early Identification and Treatment (medical)

65
Industrial Hygiene
  • What is Industrial Hygiene?

66
Industrial Hygiene
  • What is Industrial Hygiene?
  • Anticipation
  • Recognition
  • Evaluation
  • Control

67
Industrial Hygiene
  • Anticipation
  • what are potential hazards that may be
    introduced?
  • Recognition
  • what are potential hazards that have already been
    introduced?
  • Evaluation
  • how severe are the potential hazards? Are the
    potential hazards truly hazardous?
  • Control
  • how can potential health hazards be eliminated or
    minimized?

68
Hazard Control
  • Hierarchy of Controls

69
Q A
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