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Epidemiology of Plague in the US Skin Zoonotic Diseases. VM 544 Veterinary Preventive Medicine Dr. Paul Bartlett, MPH., DVM., Ph.D. Yersinia pestis ( Pasteurella pestis ). Remarkable history, called the “Black Death” and “Peste.”
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Epidemiology of Plague in the USSkin Zoonotic Diseases VM 544 Veterinary Preventive Medicine Dr. Paul Bartlett, MPH., DVM., Ph.D.
Yersinia pestis (Pasteurella pestis) • Remarkable history, called the “Black Death” and “Peste.” • First Pandemic - 542 AD to 602 AD - during the rule of Byzantine Emperor Justinian - the black death killed about 100 million people - destroying the Byzantine Empire. • Second Pandemic - 14th to 16th Centuries - in central Asia to Europe - it killed hundreds of millions and eventually reached all of Africa and Asia.
Mode of Transmission • There are domestic and sylvatic cycles of disease. • Domestic: • This reservoir is maintained by transmission among domestic rodents through fleas and direct contact. • This does not occur in the USA at this time, but the domestic cycle could become established at any time. • This cycle/reservoir is important in many developing countries. • Sylvatic: • This cycle involves transmission of the agent among numerous species of wildlife rodents by fleas, cutaneous direct contact, aerosol, and ingestion.
Transmission to Humans • direct contact with infected animals. • hunters can be exposed through sores or cuts on their hands when they clean game. • direct respiratory spread from wild rodents is possible. • ingestion. • through fleas of wild rodents which harbor the bacterium. • most common mode in U.S.
Clinical Syndrome • The classic form of the disease is called “Bubonic Plague” • The incubation period is 2 to 6 days. • A primary lesion occurs at the site of exposure (most usually from a flea) but could also occur through direct contact with a wound or maybe intact skin. • The infection then spreads to regional lymph nodes draining the area of the primary lesion.
Clinical Syndrome • The bubonic plague can spread to the lungs. • Once it spreads to the lungs, the resulting syndrome is called the “secondary pneumonic plague” • About 22% of bubonic cases develop secondary pneumonic plague. • Once this occurs, respiratory transmission is possible to other animals (or people) - who then develop “primary pneumonic plague”. • The overall case fatality rate for pneumonic plague is 18% in the USA.
A veterinarian in the Southwest with bubonic plague. Swollen lymph nodes called “buboes”.
Incidence and Disease Surveillance • Children are more likely to be infected, but older people have a higher case fatality rate. • Males are at higher risk. • The disease is cyclic and is now in a down-swing.
Usage of dogs as sentinels of infection: • Dogs become seropositive, but rarely develop clinical signs. • Serosurveys of dogs are helpful in identifying areas of high plague prevalence in wildlife rodents.
Pets and the Black Death • Our unassuming dogs and cats can serve as a bridge for infection between rodents and humans. • Dogs and cats bring infective fleas into the home environment. • By direct-contact contamination from a severely ill cat. • Cats get sick. Can infect people by direct contact or they can get bubonic plague that becomes pneumonic. Can spread via respiratory route to people. • Dogs usually don’t get sick or transmit.
Prevention and Control • Eliminate rodent habitats. • Do not feed or encourage rodents to live nearby (squirrels are rodents too.) • Leash dogs and cats in endemic areas. • Flea control for dogs and cats (very important fro veterinarians.) • Insect repellent for people, pets. • Reporting of rodent die-offs. • Client education not to handle sick or dead rodents. • Vaccine available fro high risk people., but it is only effective for less than 6 months. • Early antibiotic therapy is the key to clinical treatment.
Plague case report # 1 • Evergreen Colorado Veterinarian – 49 yrs old • April 15 - Vertigo, fever, chills, malaise, L. node swelling in rt. Axilla. • April 16 – Saw physician (Tylenol) • April 18 4 x 500 mg tetracycline (self) • April 19 Hospitalized (recovered)
Plague Case Report # 1 (continoud) • Epi investigation • April 10 - Dead rodent contact while jogging • April 13 – Bite from cat • Bled cat May 5 (>8192 titer for plague) • Cat’s neighborhood • 3/13 dots had low plague titers • Evidence of recent rodent die-off
Plague Case Report # 2 • California 47-years old female. Fatality. • Primary plague pneumonia from house cat that also caught birds and rodents. • Sept 26 – cat ill • Sept 28 – Cat acutely ill, coughing, hemoptysis, vet consulted on phone, no action or exam. • Sept 29 – cat dies
Plague Case Report # 2 (continued) • Oct 2 – Lady ill with cough, fever, malaise. • Oct 3 – Saw physician Dx = urinary tract infection. • Oct 4 Hospitalized, died in 5 hours. • Aftermath – 180 contacts treated with antibiotics for exposure to the ill lady.
Plague Case Report # 2 (continued) • Cat exhumed – cervicle buboes and plague pneumonia. • Neighborhood • Recent rodent die-off • 1/9 dogs positive for plague • Dead rodent found across street – culture positive for plague.