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Water Pathogens in History. 1854: Cholera outbreak in London, EnglandLinked to a water pump from a polluted region of the Thames People served by pumps upstream showed low incidence of cholera. Water Pathogens in History. 1855-1856: Typhoid fever in a street in Bristol, England associated with a single water pumpPeople served by alternate pump unaffectedNote: 30 years prior to identification of the causative agent for typhoid fever.
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1. Pathogens in Water October 16 2006
2. Water Pathogens in History 1854: Cholera outbreak in London, England
Linked to a water pump from a polluted region of the Thames
People served by pumps upstream showed low incidence of cholera
3. Water Pathogens in History 1855-1856: Typhoid fever in a street in Bristol, England associated with a single water pump
People served by alternate pump unaffected
Note: 30 years prior to identification of the causative agent for typhoid fever
4. Water Pathogens in History 1860’s: Pasteur demonstrated that fermentation is caused by microorganisms, and that those microorganisms do not occur by spontaneous generation
5. Water Pathogens in History 1880’s: Pasteur’s findings led to eventual acceptance of the germ theory of disease, and appreciation of water as a carrier of disease-causing organisms
6. Water Pathogens in History Early 1900’s: Death rates due to typhoid fever in cities on the Ohio river dropped from 75 deaths to 15 per 100 000 people
Due to installation of drinking water treatment plants
7. Water Pathogens in History 1920-1960: Water-borne disease outbreaks in the US decreased steadily in direct relation to increase in chlorination systems
1960-present: Outbreaks have increased. Due to an actual trend, or due to increased identification of disease sources?
Pathogens in drinking water remains a serious problem in developing countries
8. Contamination of Water Supplies 10%: chemical contamination
40%: microorganism contamination
50%: unidentified contamination
based on surveys 1971-1978
Water supplies are used by populations
Transmission of water-borne pathogens may be expressed as epidemic or endemic
9. Time Course of an Epidemic
10. Water-Borne Epidemics Propagation via domestic effluent and re-introduction through infected waste
Examination of microorganisms in domestic waste can indicate degree and variety of infection in the population
Identification of drinking water infections can be difficult due to long incubation times
11. Controlling Epidemics Control the source (sewage effluent)
Control the vector (water supply)
Immunize the population
Relatively pathogen-free water supply in developed countries
Success breeds complacency: lowered rate of immunization, renewed incidence
12. Water-Borne Epidemics Generally viruses, bacteria or protozoa
Typically cause intestinal disease, contaminating water supply in fecal material and re-infecting by ingestion
Survival periods in water vary:
Cellular viruses < bacteria < protozoa
Survival varies with salinity, temp, etc.
14. Viruses 100+ known water-borne enteric viruses
Infectious hepatitis, poliovirus and viral gastroenteritis are of practical concern
Found in sewage and polluted rivers
Tests for presence of viral particles in water supplies are difficult and unreliable
15. Viruses Little known about survival, concentration distribution of viruses in water
Generally survive < 3 months in water
Can survive up to 5 months in sewage
Tend to be adsorbed onto surfaces
Minimum infectious dose may be a single viral particle
16. Bacteria Largest group of water-borne pathogens
Minimum infectious dose of 103-105 cells
Usually poor competitors at low substrate levels in natural waters
Eliminated by competition and predation
Survival may be prolonged by low T, sediment adsorption, anoxic conditions
17. Common Bacterial Pathogens Shigella sp.: cause of dysentery
almost strictly human affliction
shigellosis and salmonellosis epidemics in developed countries tend to be food-borne
transmission by drinking water major route in undeveloped countries
rapid die-off in sewage
25 d @ 13oC, 4 d @ 37oC
18. Common Bacterial Pathogens Salmonella spp.: causes of salmonellosis
Food poisoning
Low incidence, peaks in mid-late summer
Carried by 1-4% of the population, plus farm animals (13-17%) and wild animals
Generally cause gastrointestinal diseases; Salmonella typhi causes Typhoid fever
19. Common Bacterial Pathogens Enteropathogenic E. coli: gastroenteritis and urinary tract infections (UTI)
Carrier rates vary:
16% in mothers of newborns, 7% in food handlers, 3% in children
Carried by farm animals
E. coli in effluents to natural waters reduce to 5% within 5 days
20. Common Bacterial Pathogens Francisella tularensis: tularemia (rabbit fever; flu-like symptoms)
Vectors are ticks, rodents, direct contact with sewage, water contaminated by rodents
Disease spreads via lymphatic system and bloodstream (primarily macrophages)
Grows intracellularly, causes lesions in skin, lungs, liver, spleen and brain
21. Common Bacterial Pathogens Leptospira sp.: Leptospirosis
Begins as a wound infection
Occupational disease among workers in contact with polluted water
Carried by pigs, dogs, rodnts and humans
Excreted in urine of infected animals
22. Common Bacterial Pathogens Vibrio cholerae: Cholera
Highly contagious
V. cholerae infect small intestine
Healthy carriers make up from 1-9% to 25% of population
Causes water loss; treat with aggressive rehydration and electrolyte replacement
23. Cholera Toxin Induces the cycstic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) protein to produce watery diarrhea, leading to water and electrolyte loss
24. Protozoa Enter host body through ingestion
Generally in cyst form (encapsulated in carbohydrate shell)
Major water-borne pathogenic protozoa are Giardia intestinalis and Entamoeba histolytica
25. Giardia intestinalis Flagellated cyst
1-10 cysts required for infection
Causes serious diarrhea
Sources: Humans; beavers often implicated
26. Entamoeaba histolytica Causes amoebic dysentery: “Montezuma’s Revenge” - bloody diarrhea
Survives for long periods at low temperatures and damp conditions in clean water
Survives only a few days in fecal material
27. Recent Protozoan Outbreaks Cryptospiridium: gastrointestinal disease outbreaks in North American cities (including K-W)
Cyclospora cayetanensis: associated with imported fruit that has been in contact with feces