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Soilborne and Arthropodborne Diseases. Soilborne Diseases. Arthropodborne Diseases. Plague Tularemia Lyme disease Relapsing fever Rickettsial Diseases Rocky Mountain Spotted fever Epidemic Typhus Endemic Typhus. Anthrax Tetanus Gas gangrene Leptospirosis.
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Soilborne and Arthropodborne Diseases Soilborne Diseases Arthropodborne Diseases Plague Tularemia Lyme disease Relapsing fever Rickettsial Diseases Rocky Mountain Spotted fever Epidemic Typhus Endemic Typhus • Anthrax • Tetanus • Gas gangrene • Leptospirosis
Soilborne Bacterial Diseases Anthrax • Is a zoonosis • Bacillus anthracis causes anthrax • Anthrax is primarily endemic to large, domestic herbivores, • They ingest spores during grazing • B. anthracis produce three exotoxins that work together to cause disease
Bacillus anthracis is a Gram (+) spore-forming bacillus found in the soil.“Anthrax” means “coal” in Greek
Anthrax occurs in three forms, based upon the portal of entry – All are caused by B. anthracis. • Cutaneous Anthrax – 10-20% mortality rate • GI Anthrax – 50% mortality rate • Pulmonary Anthrax – 100% mortality rate
Cutaneous Anthrax • Most common • Tissue is destroyed = necrosis • Causes formation of deep, ulcerated lesions = eschars • Bacilli may invade across the skin to circulatory system • Can be acquired from leather products, instrument strings, etc.
GI Anthrax • Caused by ingestion of contaminated meat • GI inflammation and bleeding • Note swollen cervical glands
Pulmonary Anthrax • 5% of all cases – vy rare • What you will see if used as a weapon of biological warfare • 100% fatal, even with treatment, after the development of symptoms
Pulmonary Anthrax – causes bleeding and accumulation of fluid in the lungs
Anthrax, cont: Proper burial of carcasses Anthrax as an agent of biological warfare
Tetanus • Tetanus Causes Hyperactive Muscle Contractions • Tetanus is caused by Clostridium tetani • Spores can enter the body through a wound, and produce toxins • Tetanospasmin inhibits the release of GABA by an interneuron in the antagonistic muscle’s inhibitory pathway
Trismus (lockjaw) involves spasms of the jaw muscle and clenching of the teeth • Opisthotonus involves muscle spasms that cause an arching of the back • Spasmodic inhalation and seizures in the diaphragm and rib cage • This reduces ventilation; patients will eventually suffocate • Sedatives, muscle relaxants, and penicillin are used in treatment • Inactivated tetanus toxoid is used in vaccine
Gas Gangrene Causes Massive Tissue Damage • Gangrene occurs when blood flow ceases to a part of the body • Gas gangrene (myonecrosis) is caused by Clostridium perfringens • Spores enter the body through a severe open wound
Vegetative cells ferment muscle carbohydrates and decompose muscle proteins • Large amounts of gas accumulate under the skin, causing a crackling sound • -toxin damages and lyses blood cells • Treatment involves: • Antibiotics • tissue debridement • Amputation • exposure in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber Figure 11.4, page 313
Leptospirosis Is a Zoonotic Disease Found Worldwide • Leptospirosis is carried by domestic and wild animals • Leptospira interrogans colonize the kidney of infected animals • The bacteria are passed through the urine • Humans acquire it by swimming in/consuming contaminated water Figure 11.5, page 314
The first phase involves flu-like symptoms and conjunctivitis • The second phase involves: • Fever • Meningitis • lung and liver inflammation • kidney damage • vomiting of blood • Mortality rate is low
Arthropodborne Bacterial Diseases • Disease that are acquired from insect vectors • Plague • Tularemia • Lyme disease • Relapsing fever • (Rickettsial Diseases) • Rocky Mountain Spotted fever • Epidemic Typhus • Endemic Typhus
The Plague • Plague Can Be a Highly Fatal Disease • The bubonic plague has resulted in widespread epidemics throughout history • It is endemic in the Southwestern states of the U.S., where it is carried by wild rodents such as prairie dogs • Two forms:bubonic form and pneumonic form
Plague is caused by Yersinia pestis • It is transmitted between hosts by the oriental rat flea Figure 11.6, page 316
Bacteria localize in the lymph nodes, in which hemorrhaging can occur • This is how buboes form • Bacilli can spread to the bloodstream from the lymph nodes, causing: • septicemic plague • plague meningitis • Septicemic cases can progress to the lungs (pneumonic plague) • This allows human-human transmission through respiratory droplets to occur
When plague is detected early, antibiotics can be used • A vaccine is available to high-risk groups • Note bipolar staining of cells
Tularemia Has More Than One Disease Presentation • Francisella tularensis, an extremely virulent bacillus, causes tularemia • It is common in rabbits, other rodents and animals • Humans can acquire it via: • arthropods from animal fur (particularly ticks) • inhaling or consuming bacilli • splashing in the eye • Note bipolar staining of cells
Transmission via arthropod bite leads to: • swollen lymph glands • flu-like symptoms • skin ulceration • Inhalation tularemia leads to: • respiratory disease • swollen lymph nodes • Coughing • pain under the breastbone Figure 11.7, page 319
Lyme Disease Can Be Divided into Three Stages • Lyme disease is one of the major emerging infectious diseases in the U.S. • It is caused by Borrelia burgdorferi Figure 11.8a, page 319
It is usually transmitted by ticks • Ticks defecate into the wound they create during feeding Figure 11.8b, page 319 Figure 11.9, page 320
The early localized stage involves a slowly expanding red rash (erythema migrans) at the bite site • The rash resembles a bull’s-eye • The rash is usually accompanied by flu-like symptoms Figure 11.10, page 321
The early disseminated stage of Lyme disease begins weeks to months later • Bacteria disseminate to the: • Skin • Heart • nervous system • Joints • Various symptoms • If left untreated, the late stage occurs months to years later • This involves chronic arthritis • Late stage may be caused by an autoimmune response – molecular mimicry?
Relapsing Fever is Carried by Ticks and Lice • Infected individuals go through periods of fever and chills interspersed with recovery Figure 11.11, page 321
Endemic relapsing fever is caused by Borrelia hermsii and B. turicatae • It is transmitted by tick bites • Epidemic relapsing fever is caused by Borrelia recurrentis • It is carried by the body louse • Infection occurs when the louse is crushed into its bite wound Textbook Case 11, page 323
Rickettsial and Ehrlichial Arthropodborne Diseases • Obligate intracellular parasites • Can not be cultured on “typical” media such as NA or TSA • Smaller cells than many bacteria • Rickettsial and Ehrlichial infections are transmitted by arthropods
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever • Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) is caused by Rickettsia rickettsii • It is transmitted by hard ticks • Mortality rate is ~ 75% Figure 11.12a, page 324
Symptoms include: • high fever • Headaches • skin rash reflecting damage to small blood vessels • The rash progresses to a maculopapular rash • It begins on the palms and soles of the feet and spreads to the trunk Figure 11.13, page 324
Used to be Called the “Black Measles” • CNS symptoms • Headache/delirium/coma • High fever • Swollen joints • Maculopapular rash
Epidemic typhus (typhus fever) is a deadly disease caused by Rickettsia prowazekii • It is transmitted by feces of body lice (not head lice) that flourish when sanitation and hygiene is poor • The macropapular rash starts on the trunk and progresses to the extremities • High fever, hallucinations, and delirium can occur Figure 11.12b, page 324
Endemic typhus (Mexican typhus, murine typhus) is caused by Rickettsia typhi • R. typhi are carried by oriental rat fleas • Symptoms are: • mild fever • Headaches • maculopapular rash spreading from trunk to limbs • Called “Tabardillo” in Mexico • Low mortality Figure 11.12c, page 324
Ehrlichial Infections Are Emerging Diseases in the United States • Symptoms are similar to Lyme disease but come and go more quickly • They cause a lowering of white blood cell count
Human monocytic ehrlichiosis (HME) is caused by Ehrlichia chaffeensis • It is transmitted by the Lone Star tick • Human granulocytic ehrlichiosis is caused by Ehrlichia phagocytophila • It is transmitted by the dog tick and deer tick Figure 11.14, page 326