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East Tennessee Region. 9-28-06 – Pet cockatiel (Frankie) diagnosed with Chlamydophila psittaci What is C. psittaci and why do I need to do follow up on a bird?. Birds “Avian chlamydiosis” best term to specify infection with C. psittaci in birds. Humans
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East Tennessee Region • 9-28-06 – Pet cockatiel (Frankie) diagnosed with Chlamydophila psittaci • What is C. psittaci and why do I need to do follow up on a bird?
Birds “Avian chlamydiosis” best term to specify infection with C. psittaci in birds Humans “Psittacosis” originating from parrots or psittacine birds (parrot fever) Chlamydia or Chlamydophila Genus
What is Psittacosis? • Psittacosis is an infectious disease transmitted to humans from birds in the parrot family, turkeys and pigeons • Caused by bacteria - Chlamydophila psittaci
Reservoir & Hosts • 130 species of birds worldwide and variety of mammals and humans • Most common source of human infection: exposure to recently acquired parrot type birds (macaw, cockatoo, parakeet, cockatiel, lovebird)
Life Cycle • Enters the host via inhalation or ingestion and replicates • Released to the environment via feces, nasal secretions, sputum, blood or infected tissues • May survive in soil 3 months or in bird droppings 1 month • Humans acquire by fecal/oral, mouth to beak contact, or handling plumage or tissues • Inhalation of aerosolized organism
Clinical Signs and Symptoms – Human • Incubation 5-14 days • Abrupt onset of fever, chills, headache, malaise, and myalgia • Occasional severe pneumonia and non respiratory health problems
Psittacosis Case Definition (CDC) Clinical description • Illness characterized by fever, chills, headache, photophobia, cough, and myalgia Laboratory • Isolation of organism from respiratory secretions or • Fourfold or greater increase in antibody titer or • High antibody titer by MIF (micro-immunofluorescence)
Opening Scenario • Local veterinarian notified Tennessee Department of Health of positive c. psittaci for “Frankie” cockatiel • Time for us to go to work!!! • Investigation begins….
Compendium of Measures toControl Chlamydophilia psittaci Infection Among Humans and Pet Birds, 2006 National Association of State Public Health Veterinarians, Inc. http://www.nasphv.org
Psittacosis Compendium • Prevention and control • Testing methods • Treatment options • Responsibilities of owners, physicians, and veterinarians • Epi investigations • Bird quarantine • Bird importation
Psittacosis Compendium • Prevention and control • Testing methods • Treatment options • Responsibilities of owners, physicians, and veterinarians • Epi investigations • Bird quarantine • Bird importation
When to conduct an epidemiological investigation? • Bird chlamydiosis (confirmed or probable) obtained from a pet store, breeder, or purchased w/in 60 days of onset of illness • Person with confirmed or probable psittacosis • Several avian chlamydiosis cases from same source
Diagnosis of C. Psittaci • “Frankie” lab confirmed illness • PCR + Blood • PCR + Fecal • IFA + Serum • Frankie was exposed to two recently purchased birds that died • Veterinarian noticed that Frankie's owner had “classical symptoms of psittacosis”
Investigation • Bird owner – owned Frankie for several years • Newly purchased cockatiels • First one died two days after purchase • Second bird was purchased then died 5 days later • From same pet store
Human Patient #1, Bird Owner • Headache, fever, myalgia, cough for 3 weeks • PCP confirmed: • “Acute URI” • Serology test for psittacosis • Rx: Doxycycline 100 mg bid x 10 days
Human Patient # 2, Store Owner • Out of work ill; visiting doctor • Headache, cough, chills, fever 101.3, for 2-3 weeks • CXR: “consistent with psittacosis” • Serology for psittacosis • Rx: Doxycycline x 21 days
Human These two were treated with Doxycycline. Other treatment choices include: Erythromycin or Azithromycin “Z-pack” Bird Oral doxycycline is the treatment of choice Treatment
Human Case Confirmation • Both patients improved with treatment • Convalescent serum collected after 10-14 days • Acute and convalescent serum sent to state lab then CDC – results pending
Pet Store Visit • Questionnaire developed; 26 employees and the distributor interviewed for illness • Provide: education and fact sheet • One employee reported “tiredness” • Another employee reported headache, cough, tiredness; referred to physician but refused
Veterinary Visit to Store • State Veterinarian notified (Dept. of Agriculture) • Local Veterinarian visited Pet Store; 60 birds examined – no other illnesses Isolate and treat 3 birds caged with the 2 birds that died • Store employees educated on illness in birds, cleaning procedures, and preventive measures
Distributor • Sick birds traced to an individual distributor • Raised birds and had a few domestic breeders • Housed at facility for short time • Sales records and dates not kept • Likely delivered the cockatiels one month prior
Results • Illness in the 2 people resolved with treatment • “Frankie” well and at home • No other illnesses among staff or animals at store
Clinical Signs - Birds • Respiratory signs: nasal or ocular discharge, difficulty breathing • Signs of liver disease: green urates in droppings, inappetance • Common: spleen & liver enlarged • Pigeons & passerines exhibit little or no symptoms: “asymptomatic carriers”
Notifiable Disease? • Human psittaci is a nationally notifiable disease • Many states, not Tennessee, require avian chlamydiosis be reported to State Veterinarian • Imported birds not routinely tested for psittaci
Lessons Learned • First step: Consult the Psittacosis Compendium (NASPHV) • Importance of Communication & Teamwork • Store Owner • Healthcare Providers • Health Department (Local, Region, State, & State Lab) • All of the Above
Thank you! Rhonda C. Campbell East Tennessee Regional Health Office P.O. Box 59019 Knoxville, TN 37920-9019 (865) 549-5287 Rhonda.C.Campbell@state.tn.us QUESTIONS? QUESTIONS?