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Oklahoma ranked #2 in no. of horses/capita ... All dead or euthanized horses first examined for rabies at State Public Health Laboratory. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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1
On Watch for West Nile Virus in Oklahoma
  • Kristy K. Bradley, DVM, MPH, Dipl. ACVPM
  • State Public Health Veterinarian/
  • Assistant State Epidemiologist
  • Oklahoma State Department of Health
  • (405) 271-4060
  • kristyb_at_health.state.ok.us

2
West Nile Virus Background
  • Family Flaviviridae
  • Genus Flavivirus
  • Japanese Encephalitis Antigenic Complex
  • Complex includes Alfuy, Japanese encephalitis,
    Kokobera, Koutango, Kunjin, Murray Valley
    encephalitis, St. Louis encephalitis, Stratford,
    Usutu, and West Nile viruses.
  • All are transmissible by mosquitoes, many can
    cause febrile, sometimes fatal, illnesses in
    humans.

3
West Nile Virus Transmission Cycle
Mosquito vector
Incidental infections
West Nile virus
West Nile virus
Incidental infections
Bird reservoir hosts
4
West Nile Virus Background
  • First isolated in 1937 from the blood of a woman
    in Uganda
  • First recorded epidemic in Israel in 1950s.
  • Soon recognized as one of the most widespread
    Flaviviruses.
  • Distributed through Africa, West Asia, Europe and
    the Middle East.

5
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6
West Nile Virus Enters the U.S.
7
West Nile Virus in the US -Some Possible
Pathways of Introduction
  • Infected human host
  • Human-transported vertebrate host
  • Legal importation of birds
  • Illegal smuggling of infected birds
  • Human-transported vector(s)
  • Storm-transported vertebrate host (bird)
  • Intentional introduction (terrorist event)

8
Media West Nile Frenzy
9
West Nile Virus in North AmericaHuman Case
Summary 1999 - 2001
  • 1999 thru 2000
  • 83 confirmed human cases
  • All from greater NYC metro area
  • 9 deaths (11)
  • 85 of confirmed cases gt 50 yrs old
  • 2001
  • 66 confirmed human cases from 10 states
  • 9 fatalities (14) median age 69 yrs.

10
Number of WNV-Infected Crows Reported from the
North Central and South Central Regions,by Week,
2001
As of 2/1/02
11
WNV Vertebrate Health Impacts 1999-2001
  • Birds-101 species 11,640 99.9
  • Horse 673
  • Cat 1
  • Dog 0 ----
  • Dom. Rabbit 1
  • Raccoon 1
  • Gray Squirrel 1
  • Eastern Chipmunk 1
  • Striped Skunk 1
  • Big Brown Bat 1
  • Keens Bat 1

12
WNV Impact on Pets
  • Horses and pet birds of most concern
  • vaccine for horses
  • avoid mosquito exposure for pet birds
  • Dogs and Cats resistant to disease
  • no special preventative measures needed
  • Pocket pets may be vulnerable
  • more research needed

13
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14
2002 National WNV Surveillance (Final ArboNet
Report)
  • 16,739 avian infections reported from 44 states
    (439 in Oklahoma)
  • 14,571 equine infections confirmed in 40 states
    ( 965 in Oklahoma)
  • 6,604 WNV-positive mosquito pools from 36 states
    ( 18 in Oklahoma)
  • 4,156 human cases from 40 states (21 in OK)
  • 284 human deaths (2 in OK)

15
WNV Surveillance in Oklahoma
  • FUNDING AND COLLABORATION
  • Supplemental Epidemiologic and Laboratory
    Capacity Grant from CDC with activities beginning
    November 2000
  • Formation of InterAgency Zoonotic Disease
    Working Group
  • OK Dept. of Agriculture, OK Dept. of Wildlife
    Conservation, OK Animal Disease Diagnostic
    Laboratory, and USDA Veterinary Services and
    Wildlife Services

16
WNV Surveillance in Oklahoma
  • OBJECTIVES
  • 1. Early detection of WNV epizootic
  • activity so intervention is
    possible to
  • prevent human illness.
  • 2. Obtain good baseline epidemiologic
  • data on incidence of other
  • arboviral infections (SLE, WEE,
  • LaCrosse)

17
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18
Diagnosis of WNV
  • SEROLOGY
  • 1. IgM-capture ELISA (serum or CSF)
  • Diagnostic if CSF-positive IgM
    antibodies
  • usually present in serum by
    8th day of illness
  • 2. ELISA, IFA, HI
  • Need four-fold rise in
    paired titers for case
  • confirmation postive tests
    need confirmation by
  • PRNT

19
Diagnosis of WNV
  • PCR (polymerase chain reaction)
  • CSF, brain
  • Not sensitive enough to test serum or blood
  • Viral Isolation (requires BSL-3 lab)
  • blood, brain, CSF
  • Immunohistochemistry
  • brain tissue (autopsy)

20
WNV Surveillance in Oklahoma
  • Dead Wild Bird Surveillance and
  • Testing
  • Equine Encephalitides Monitoring
  • and Testing
  • Enhanced Passive Surveillance for
  • Human Meningoencephalitis
  • Mosquito Trapping Testing

21
Dead crows per square mile vs. human cases,
Staten Island 2000
Ref Eidson. Emerg. Inf. Dis. 7(4)662-4 2001
Conclusion Weekly dead crow densitiesgt 1/sq.
mi. provided an early warning for a human outbreak
First Positive Bird
11/13/00
22
WNV Surveillance in Oklahoma Avian
  • Established dead bird reporting hotline --
  • 1-800-990-CROW
  • Dept of Ag triages phone reports OSHD and
    local county health departments used as drop-off
    sites
  • Developed testing capabilities at Oklahoma
    Animal Disease Diagnostic Lab
  • Necropsy, RT-PCR test for WNV,toxicology screen
  • Success depends on many community partners
  • Animal control, zoos, bird watchers, parks
    workers

23
Instructions on Submission of Freshly Dead Birds
  • Wear gloves or cover hand with plastic bag when
    collecting bird.
  • Double bag in small garbage bag or other plastic
    bag.
  • Keep at refrigeration temperature - not
    frozen-(place in cool location, refrigerator, or
    bucket with ice) until transported to laboratory
    or pick-up point.

24
Number of Calls to 1-800-990-CROW
25
Number of Birds Tested for WNV by Week
Oklahoma-2002
26
Distribution of WNV Birds by Species,
Oklahoma-2002
Total Birds 438
27
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28
Avian WNV Positivity Rates by County Oklahoma
  • Range 2 (Canadian) - 100 (Grant)
  • Wagoner 53.3 (32/60)
  • Ottawa 39.5 (32/81) ?
  • Muskogee 38.2 (63/165) ??
  • Haskell 37.5 (3/8)
  • McCurtain 35.7 (10/28)
  • LeFlore 30 (6/20)
  • Tulsa 28.4 (151/531) ???
  • Beckham 25 (3/12) .
  • Oklahoma 15.5 (51/329) ???

29
WNV Surveillance in Oklahoma Avian
  • 3,481 dead wild birds submitted for testing
  • 438 positive (28 different species)
  • Ceased bird testing October 15 due to depletion
    of resources
  • 38 counties origin of WNV birds
  • 10/13 counties with human cases had positive
    bird as first indicator

30
2001 U.S. Avian Surveillance Data
31
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32
West Nile Disease in U.S. Horses 1999-2001
Data from USDA/APHIS
33
Symptomatology of West Nile Disease in Horses
  • Spectrum of illness
  • Ataxia, limb weakness, and muscle fasiculations
    commonly reported
  • Sometimes progression to down in rear or
    complete recumbency very rapid (hours)
  • Recovery not always complete.

34
West Nile Virus Surveillance in
OklahomaVeterinary
  • Oklahoma ranked 2 in no. of horses/capita
  • Equine owners and veterinarians urged to report
    suspect equine encephalitis cases to OSDH, ODA,
    or USDA.
  • Blood test or testing of brain tissue performed
    at OADDL.
  • All dead or euthanized horses first examined
    for rabies at State Public Health Laboratory.

35
West Nile Virus Diagnosis by IgM Capture ELISA
  • Can provide diagnosis on single specimen (serum
    or CSF)
  • IgM antibodies detectable by 8-10 days
    post-infection.
  • Sera collected prior to 8 days with equivocal
    results should be retested a few days later.
  • Cross reaction with other flaviviruses PRNT
    confirmatory.
  • IgM antibodies generally persist 2-3 months
    IgG gt 2 years.

36
WNV Equine Vaccine
  • Conditional license approved August 1, 2001 to
    Fort Dodge Laboratories, Inc.
  • Two dose series given 3 -6 weeks apart
  • Blood test (IgM capture ELISA) will distinguish
    between acute disease and vaccination antibody
    response
  • Full vaccine licensure approved February, 2003

37
WNV Equine Vaccine
  • Ft. Dodge Labs estimates 35 of nations horse
    population (6.9 million) have been vaccinated.
  • In highly enzootic areas, more than one annual
    booster may be necessary to provide protective
    immunity.
  • Very good safety and efficacy record.

38
West Nile Virus Surveillance in
OklahomaPreliminary Equine Findings
  • 964 (1 zebra) laboratory-confirmed cases
  • Majority of cases had onsets after Sept. 30
  • 13.4 mortality rate
    (grossly underreported)
  • Twenty-eight horses (2.9) had received 2 dose
    primary series within 9 months of disease onset.

39
Number of Equine West Nile Cases by State, 2002
  • THE TOP FIVE
  • Texas 1,598
  • Illinois 1,120
  • Nebraska 1,092
  • Minnesota 992
  • Oklahoma 964
  • Neighboring States
  • Kansas 792
  • Missouri 662
  • Colorado 376
  • Arkansas 73

40
Distribution of Oklahoma Equine WNV Cases, Aug. 9
- 23, 2002
41
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42
Distribution of Oklahoma Equine WNV Cases, Aug.
24 - Sept 6, 2002
43
Distribution of Oklahoma Equine WNV Cases, Sept.
7 - Sept. 19, 2002
44
Distribution of Oklahoma Equine WNV Cases, Sept.
20 - Oct 4, 2002
45
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46
2002 National Equine Surveillance Data
47
Summary of Equine Surveillance
  • Complement to avian surveillance
  • First indicator of transmission risk in western
    OK
  • Funding depleted October 15, 2002
  • Payment for equine testing in 2003 will be
    responsibility of animal owner.

48
Culex Mosquitoes as Primary WNV Vectors
  • Over 36 different types of mosquitoes have
    tested positive for WNV, but Culex species of
    mosquitoes are most involved with transmission.
  • Culex characteristics
  • prefer to feed on birds
  • most prevalent July- Oct
  • weak fliers
  • breed in small areas of standing water
  • adults live 3 weeks
  • can overwinter and harbor
  • WNV

49
Culex tarsalis
  • Most abundant in western agroecosystems and
    wetlands
  • types of habitat vary from peridomestic sources
    to pasture and other flood irrigated crops to
    wetlands.
  • Feeds most frequently on upland birds that roost
    and nest at elevated vegetative ecotones
  • house finches, house sparrows, doves, quail
  • Competent vector of SLE and WEE and WNV
  • suitable bridge vector to horses or humans

50
Other Animals Affected by West Nile Virus??
  • Dogs and cats rarely develop illness after
    infection with the virus
  • Sheep and goats may be more susceptible
  • Documented outbreaks in squirrels in several
    states
  • 25 squirrels tested in Oklahoma were positive
  • More research needed in this area.

51
Epidemic WNME, United States, 2002
  • Western hemispheres largest arboviral ME
    epidemic
  • 2,946 WNME cases
  • 1,300 WNF / unspecified
  • 284 deaths
  • 39 states D.C.
  • Largest WNME epidemic EVER
  • Spread to Pacific coast
  • New clinical syndromes
  • Acute flaccid paralysis (West Nile polio)
  • Five new transmission modes

4,156 illnesses
52
New Transmission Modes
  • Transplantation
  • Transfusion
  • Breast Milk
  • Congenital
  • Occupational

53
West Nile Fever Human Disease
  • Incubation period 3 - 15 days
  • About 20 of those infected develop a mild
    illness (West Nile Fever)
  • Acute aseptic meningitis or encephalitis develops
    in 1 out of every 150 infections.
  • Most fatal cases gt50 years old majority of
    surviving patients suffer memory loss and marked
    muscle weakness

54
West Nile Virus Mild Infection
  • Lasts 3-6 days
  • Febrile illness of sudden onset often accompanied
    by
  • Tiredness Muscles aches and pains
  • Loss of appetite Rash
  • Nausea Swollen lymph glands
  • Vomiting Headache
  • Sensitivity of eyes when looking at light

55
West Nile Virus Severe Infection
  • Less than 1 of persons bitten by an infected
    mosquito progress to severe neurologic disease.
  • Encephalitis more commonly reported than
    meningitis.
  • Hospitalized for supportive care no specific
    treatment.
  • Several patients experience severe muscle
    weakness and flaccid paralysis.

56
Arboviral Surveillance in Oklahoma Human
  • Free testing available at State Public Health
    Laboratory
  • WNV and SLE
  • Request must be made through a health care
    provider

57
Temporal Relationship of Avian, Equine, and Human
WNV Events Oklahoma-2002
58
Symptom Onset Dates of Human Cases of West Nile
disease in Oklahoma 2002
N 20 cases of probable or
confirmed WNV infection by detection of IgM
antibodies in CSF or serum.
59
OK WNV Human Case Summary
  • Sum of 21 Cases
  • Eighteen patients over 50 years of age
  • 1 exposure in D.C. 2 transfusion-related
  • Majority of cases had onset of illness during
    October
  • Counties of residence Muskogee (2), Tulsa (3),
    Oklahoma (3), Canadian (3), Washington, Rogers,
    Ottawa, Okmulgee, Pushmataha, Caddo, Kay, Beaver,
    and Osage.

60
Mosquito Life Cycle
  • Most eggs hatch within 48 hours.
  • Larvae must breathe feed on organic matter.
  • Pupae tumblers
  • Only adult female mosquitoes need a blood meal.

61
Mosquito Prevention Measures
  • Personal Protection
  • Avoid times and places where mosquitoes active.
  • Cover exposed skin.
  • Apply DEET-based repellant (10-30) to exposed
    skin and clothing.
  • Mosquito Source Reduction
  • Dispose of trash piles
  • Mow tall weeds
  • Drain rain barrels, plant containers, child
    wading pools, etc.
  • Clean roof gutters of leaves and other debris.


62
Tires as Mosquito Breeding Source
63
Mosquito Abatement Measures
  • Stock Tanks, Ornamental Water Gardens
  • Apply mosquito larvacide (BTI).
  • Stock with fish.
  • Put in aerator pump.
  • DO NOT treat with insecticides.
  • Keep window and door screens in good repair.


64
Larvicides
  • Interrupt mosquito life cycle
  • Most very environmentally safe
  • microbial (Aquabac, Vectobac)
  • Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis
  • chemicals
  • methoprene, oils,
  • mononuclear films

65
Adulticides
  • Last resort
  • Requirements for successful application
  • spray when target species active
  • low wind
  • dispersal of ultra-low volume droplet size
  • Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis,
    Bacillus sphaericus
  • chemicals
  • synthetic pyrethroids (resmethrin,
    sumethrin), inorganic phosphates (malathion)


66
Oklahoma West Nile Virus Preparedness and Response
  • Response will focus on public health messages
  • Encourage cities with adulticide applicators to
    have public health licenses
  • Costly to purchase equipment
  • (ULV foggers chemicals)
  • May need to address
  • ordinances dealing with
  • public health nuisances

67
Changes in Surveillance Procedures for 2003
  • Universal dead bird reporting hotline will not
    be used this year.
  • Bird testing will only be done in communities
    with some mosquito control capabilities, e.g.
    Tulsa, Norman, Muskogee, Wagoner, Ponca City,
    etc.

68
Changes in Surveillance Procedures for 2003
  • State Public Health Lab will expect to test
    more human specimens with broader clinical
    presentations.
  • Will try to enhance physician education.
  • Will no longer pay for equine testing.
  • Will attempt to enhance mosquito collections
    and testing.
  • State Public Health Lab will test mosquito
    pools collected at 6-7 trapping locations across
    the state.

69
What can we expect in 2003??
70
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