Zoonosis 2 Flashcards
List examples of parasitic, viral, bacterial, and vector borne zoonotic disease
zoonotic diseases
Parasitic
- tenia solium- pigs to humans and back
- giardiasis- water to animals to humans
viral
- rabies- animals to humans
- hantavirus-rodents to humans
bacterial
- anthrax- soil to cow to human
- brucellosis- animals to human
vector borne
- boreliosis- rodent to tick to human
- west nile- bird to mosquito to human
Tenia Solium (3)
discuss reservoirs, transmission and prevention
Ternia Solium= parasite transmitted by pigs
Reservoirs:
- people- primary host
- pigs- intermediate host
Pigs get it from eating human feces (eggs).
-
porcine cysticercosis
- pigs eat eggs (feces) = get cycts in muscle
- prevent by human sewage managment
Humans get it through a few different routes
-
human taeniasis- eat undercooked meat
- human eats cysts in pork = get worms in gut
- prevent by meat inspection and cooking well
-
human cysticercosis (neurocysticercosis)- self infection (feces)
- humans eat eggs = cysts in brain
- prevent by hygine, sewage managment, treatment of reservoir (humans with tapeworms)
Giardiasis
discuss reservoirs, transmission and prevention
Giardiasis= protozoal parasite transmitted through water
Reservoir: many animals transmit the disease
Transmission:consume cysts
- mainly water
- surface contamination of food
Prevention: filter water
Rabies
discuss reservoirs, transmission and prevention
Rabies= viral zoonotic disease
the virus is an acute, progressive encephyalomyelitis
Reservoir: most mammals
- “all reservoirs are vectors but not all vectors are reservoirs”
Transmission: bite infects human and virus replicates and travels to CNS where it causes encephalitis
Prevention:
- VACCINATION is our major line of defense
- reduce animal reservoir and human risk through vaccination and control of population/exposure
NOTE: major significance of rabies virus
- highest case fatality of any infections disease
- leading viral zoonosis
- lots of deaths per year (majority in developing countrys)
- some islands are free of the virus
Hantavirus
discuss reservoirs, transmission and prevention
Hantavirus= virus transmitted by rodents
Reservoir: rodents (are asymptomatic)
Transmission:
- aerosol- direct or indirect
- inhalation from urine, saliva or feces
- bite- direct
Prevention: reduce human exposure
- rodent population control
- proper protective gear when humans work with/near rodents
Note: human symptoms
- hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS): fever and chills
- new world strain
- hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS): hemorage
- old world strain
Anthrax
discuss reservoirs, transmission and prevention
Anthrax= bacterial zoonotic disease
Reservoir: soil
Transmission: affects most mamalian species
- herbivores- ingest spores in soil
- carnivores- ingest infected herbivores
- all species- inhalation of spores or contact with fomites
- veterinarians- aerosol or exposure to bloof of infected animals
Prevention:
- Vets
- no necropsy of suspected cases and burn body
- vaccinate animals
- communicate with health officials
- Public health
- monitor exposed individuals/ possible exposures
- communicate with vet professionals
NOTE: Cattle anthrax is common! symptoms are…
- bleeding from all orifices
- swelling
- sudden death
Brucellosis
discuss reservoirs, transmission and prevention
Brucellosis= bacterial zoonitic disease
Reservoir: lots of species
Transmission: ingestion, mucous membrane exposure or through skin
- most common exposure is unpasteurized milk
Prevention:
- eliminate animal reservoirs
- pasteurize milk and milk products
NOTE: different strains and reservoirs
- brucella melitensis: most pathogenic for people
- goats!
- mostly in mediteranean / other goaty regions
- brucella abortus *
- cattle
- everywhere/ lots of animals but most common is cattle and unpasteurized milk
Borreliosis
discuss reservoirs, transmission and prevention
Borreliosis= vector borne disease. spirochetes transmitted by tick
Reservoir: rodents (NOT DEER)
Transmission: ticks are the vector. bite rodents and then transmit to humans
- lyme disease= hard ticks
- relapsing fever= soft ticks
Prevention:
- avoid direct contact with ticks
- remove ticks from body pets and clothes
- tick medicine
* bulls eye rash is key diagnostic feature
West Nile
discuss reservoirs, transmission and prevention
West Nile= not a virus! vector borne disease
Reservoir: birds
Transmission: mosquitos bite humans
- transmitted by mosquito bird mosquito life cycle
- bite humans. often doesnt develope into symptomatic infection
Prevention:
- reservoir control (birds)
- vector control (mosquitos)
- prevent exposure (repellent and nets)