viral zoonoses zoonotic viruses transmissible from animals

67
1 VIRAL ZOONOSES • ZOONOTIC VIRUSES – TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS • ARTHROPODS – often via a blood sucking arthropod • VERTEBRATES – bites, body fluids, inhalation etc

Upload: many87

Post on 07-May-2015

1.124 views

Category:

Health & Medicine


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

1

VIRAL ZOONOSES

• ZOONOTIC VIRUSES– TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

• ARTHROPODS– often via a blood sucking arthropod

• VERTEBRATES– bites, body fluids, inhalation etc

Page 2: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

2

VIRAL ZOONOSES

PART I

ARTHROPOD BORNE

Page 3: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

3

transmission

• arthropod vectors (blood sucking)

• Many arboviral diseases world wide (hundreds)

Page 4: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

4

VIGILANCE

Page 5: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

5

• ARBOVIRUSES– FEBRILE DISEASES– ENCEPHALITIS– HEMORRHAGIC FEVERS

Page 6: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

6

ARBOVIRUSES

FAMILY ENVELOPE

yes

yes

no

SYMMETRY

icosahedral

helical

icosahedral

GENOME

ssRNA (+ve)

ssRNA (-ve)segmented

dsRNA, segmented

Page 7: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

7

BirdsMammalsHumans

Page 8: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

8

ARTHROPOD• Habitat• Diurnal activity• Preferred host• Annual activity• Overwintering ability• Transovarial

transmission

VERTEBRATE• Migratory activity• Persistence of

viremia• Clinical

consequences• Reservoir ?• Dead end host?

Page 9: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

9

PREVENTION

• SURVEILLANCE

• VECTOR CONTROL

• REPELLENTS

• CLOTHING

• TIMING OF ACTIVITY (OR CANCELLATION)

• VACCINE

Page 10: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

10

SYLVATIC (JUNGLE) CYCLE

arthropod arthropod

vertebrate human

vertebrate

Page 11: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

11

URBAN CYCLE

arthropod arthropod

human

human

human cycle

note: viruses which have a human cycle may also have a sylvatic/jungle cycle

Page 12: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

12

OUTBREAKS

• TEND TO BE SUMMER/EARLY FALL

• SPORADIC

• UNPREDICTABLE

Page 13: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

13

ARBOVIRAL DISEASE

• MANY DIFFERENT ARBOVIRUSES CAUSE DISEASE

• OFTEN SUB-CLINICAL

Page 14: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

14

ARBOVIRAL DISEASE

• INITIAL VIRAL REPLICATION– endothelial cells– macrophages/monocyte lineage

• INTERFERON (RNA VIRUSES)– headache, fever, myalgia

• VIREMIA– spread to target tissues, depending on

tropism of virus

Page 15: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

15

RECOVERY

• INTERFERON

• CELL-MEDIATED IMMUNITY

• ANTIBODY MAY PLAY A ROLE IN PREVENTING SPREAD DURING VIREMIC PHASE

Page 16: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

16

DIAGNOSIS

– Immunological techniques

– RT-PCR for viral RNA

Page 17: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

17

RESISTANCE

• IgG

Page 18: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

18

ARBOVIRUSES – ENCEPHALITIS

FAMILY DISTRIBUTION

FLAVIVIRIDAE  

West Nile virus encephalitis North America, parts of Europe, parts of Africa

St Louis encephalitis North America

TOGAVIRIDAE  

Eastern equine encephalitis East US, Canada

Western equine encephalitis West US, Canada, Mexico, Brazil

BUNYAVIRIDAE  

California serogroup (La Crosse etc) North America

Page 19: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

19

ARBOVIRUS ENCEPHALITIS

• SPORADIC

• LOW % INFECTIONS -> CLINICAL CASES

• NOT ALL CASES -> MAJOR DISEASE

• PROBABLY UNDERDIAGNOSED

Page 20: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

20

WEST NILE VIRUS

http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/westnile/cycle.htm

• Reservoir: birds

• Vector: mosquito

• human, horse– dead end hosts

flavivirus

Page 21: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

21

51

2000

52

2001

53

2002

51

2000

52

2001

53

2002

50

1999

51

2000

52

2001

53

2002

54

2003

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

50

1999

51

2000

52

2001

53

2002

54

2003

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

51

2000

52

2001

53

2002

51

2000

52

2001

53

2002

51

2000

52

2001

53

2002

51

2000

52

2001

53

2002

51

2000

52

2001

53

2002

51

2000

52

2001

53

2002

flavivirusWest Nile virus

Page 22: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

22flavivirusWest Nile virus

Final 2008 West Nile Virus activity in the United States

Page 23: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

23

WEST NILE VIRUS

http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/westnile/cycle.htm

• Symptoms:– Fever– Meningitis– Encephalitis

More rarely:– Acute flaccid paralysis

• West Nile polio-like paralysis– poliomyelitis - inflammation spinal cord

flavivirus

Page 24: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

24

West Nile Virus

For every ~150 people infected

– ~30 mild symptoms• mild fever, headache, body ache, maybe rash

– may never see physician, even if do, may not be diagnosed

– ~1 severe illness • e.g. encephalitis, meningitis, high fever, stiff neck,

stupor, disorientation, coma, tremors, convulsions, muscle weakness

– frequency of flaccid paralysis unknown, but much less than frequency of encephalitis

flavivirus

Page 25: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

25

Case fatality ratio:

• Seen in all age groups but higher in the elderly– the majority of cases of neuroinvasive

diseases and fatalities are over 50 yrs age

• Transplant recipients may be at higher risk– increased incidence of clinical disease– increased risk of severe disease

WEST NILE VIRUS

flavivirus

Page 26: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

26

http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/westnile/resources/wnv_transplant%20brochure6_12_07.pdf

Page 27: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

27

WEST NILE VIRUS

flavivirus

transmission:

• Mosquito (vast majority of cases)

• Blood transfusion (blood supply is now screened)

• Organ donation

Page 28: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

28

Reported Human WNV Disease Cases, US

1999 62

2000 21

2001 66

2002 4156

2003 9862

2004 2539

2005 3000

2006 4269

2007 3630

2008 1338

2009 515 (as of 10-20-09)

2008 Case Fatality Rate = 44/1356 = 3.2%

flavivirus

Page 29: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

29

ST. LOUIS ENCEPHALITIS

• Second commonest mosquito borne disease in US

• Reservoir: birds– Man is usually a dead end

host

• Vector: mosquito• <1% infections clinical• Elderly at higher risk• CFR 3-25%• ~100 cases/year av.

flavivirus

Page 30: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

30

EASTERN EQUINE ENCEPHALITIS

• Reservoir: birds• Vector: mosquito• Sentinels

– horse,quail, turkey

• Under 15yrs, over 50yrs at higher risk

• CFR ~35%• ~5 cases/year av.• horses and humans

dead end hosts

CDC

togavirus

Page 31: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

31

EASTERN EQUINE ENCEPHALITIS

CDC

togavirus

Page 32: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

32

WESTERN EQUINE ENCEPALITIS

• Reservoir: birds• Vector: mosquito• Sentinels

– horse,quail, turkey

• Children at higher risk

• CFR 3-5%• humans and horses

dead end hoststogavirus

USA: last confirmed human case 1999

Page 33: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

33

CALIFORNIA SEROGROUP ENCEPHALITIS(includes La Crosse virus)

• Recently commoner in eastern US

• Reservoir: small mammals

• Vector: mosquitos• Children at higher risk• Low CFR• ~80 cases/year av.

bunyavirus

Page 34: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

34La Crosse life cycle

2000 - 2 cases in SC, Charleston area

bunyavirus

Page 35: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

35

ARBOVIRUSES – FEVER AND HEMORRHAGIC FEVER

FAMILY

FLAVIVIRIDAE

Dengue

Yellow fever

REOVIRIDAEColorado tick fever

DISTRIBUTION

World wide, especially tropics

Africa, S. and C. America

North America

MAIN DISEASES

fever, hemorrhagic fever

hemorrhagic fever

fever

Page 36: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

36

COLORADO TICK FEVER- coltivirus

Vector: tick

• Mild disease in man

• Fever, rash, arthralgia

• RMSF important consideration in differential diagnosis

• Probably common, rarely reported Reovirus family

Page 37: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

37

flavivirus

Page 38: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

38

DENGUE FEVER

• jungle cycle (monkeys-mosquitoes)• urban cycle (man-mosquitoes)• rapidly increasing disease in tropics• approx. 100-200 cases/yr in US due to import

– occasional indigenous transmission

• 50-100 million cases per year worldwide– ~900,000 cases in Central and S. America in 2007

flavivirus

Page 39: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

39

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6422319.stm

patients being treated for Dengue fever in a Paraguayan hospital

flavivirus

Page 40: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

40

DENGUE FEVER

• Fever (overlaps with viremic phase)• headache• retro-orbital pain• myalgia, arthralgia• severe joint and muscle pain

‘breakbone fever’• sometimes rash• may look like flu, measles, rubella• more rarely encephalitis

flavivirus

Page 41: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

41

DENGUE HEMORRHAGIC FEVER/DENGUE SHOCK

SYNDROME • hemorrhages

• plasma leakage

• hemoconcentration

• hypotension

• circulatory failure

• shock

flavivirus

Page 42: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

42DHF - petechiae

CDC

flavivirus

Page 43: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

43Dengue hemorrhagic fever - pleural effusion

CDCVaughn DW et al. J Infect Dis 1997; 176:322-30.

Page 44: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

44

DENGUE HEMORRHAGIC FEVER

• immunopathological

• 4 serotypes (1, 2, 3, 4)– increase in areas in which all 4 circulate has led to more

cases DHF fever in South and Central America– Entomologic, serologic and virologic conditions are now

such that locally acquired DHF can occur in South Texas

• maternal antibody flavivirus

Page 45: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

45

DENGUE HEMORRHAGIC FEVER

• Immune enhancement hypothesis– more mononuclear cells infected– infected monocytes release

vasoactive mediators– increased vascular permeability– hemorrhagic symptoms

flavivirus

Page 46: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

46

DENGUE HEMORRHAGIC FEVER

• do not give aspirin, ibuprofen – because of anticoagulant affects– (acetaminophen OK)

• children more severe disease

• CFR depends on rapid response– can be as low as 1%

flavivirus

Page 47: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

47flavivirus

Page 48: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

48

CDC

YELLOW FEVER

• jungle and urban cycles• hemorrhages• degeneration liver, kidney,

heart• CFR 50%• Vaccine (live attenuated)

– important to consider in travel to areas with yellow fever

– egg grown– contraindicated in immune

suppression

flaviviruslast yellow fever epidemic in US - 1905

Page 49: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

49

The end

Page 50: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

50

(Time Dec 2007)

Page 51: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

51

Page 52: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

52

Aedes albopictus is a species of mosquito which is a good vector for Dengue

Page 53: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

53

Page 54: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

55

WEST NILE VIRUS

flavivirus

Page 55: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

56

WEST NILE VIRUS

flavivirus

Case fatality ratio:

• Higher in elderly• The 1 fatality in SC in

2005 was over 65 years old

• Peaks about Aug-Sept

SC

SC - 2005

http://westnilemaps.usgs.gov/sc_human.html

Page 56: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

57

1999

West Nile virus

Page 57: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

58

2000

West Nile virus

Page 58: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

59

2001

West Nile virus

Page 59: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

60

2002

West Nile virus

Page 60: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

61

2003

West Nile virus

Page 61: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

62

2004

West Nile virus

Page 62: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

63

2005

West Nile virus

Page 63: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

64

2006

West Nile virus

Page 64: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

65

Page 65: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

66

Page 66: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

67

Page 67: VIRAL ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC VIRUSES TRANSMISSIBLE FROM ANIMALS

68