Title:
1On 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
2West 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.
3West Nile Virus Transmission Cycle
Mosquito vector
Incidental infections
West Nile virus
West Nile virus
Incidental infections
Bird reservoir hosts
4West 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.
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6West Nile Virus Enters the U.S.
7West 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)
8Media West Nile Frenzy
9West 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.
-
10Number of WNV-Infected Crows Reported from the
North Central and South Central Regions,by Week,
2001
As of 2/1/02
11WNV 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
12WNV 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
-
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142002 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)
15WNV 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 -
16WNV 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)
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18Diagnosis 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
-
19Diagnosis 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)
-
-
20WNV Surveillance in Oklahoma
- Dead Wild Bird Surveillance and
- Testing
- Equine Encephalitides Monitoring
- and Testing
- Enhanced Passive Surveillance for
- Human Meningoencephalitis
- Mosquito Trapping Testing
-
21Dead 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
22WNV 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
23Instructions 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.
24Number of Calls to 1-800-990-CROW
25Number of Birds Tested for WNV by Week
Oklahoma-2002
26Distribution of WNV Birds by Species,
Oklahoma-2002
Total Birds 438
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28Avian 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) ???
29WNV 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
302001 U.S. Avian Surveillance Data
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32West Nile Disease in U.S. Horses 1999-2001
Data from USDA/APHIS
33Symptomatology 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.
34West 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.
35West 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.
36WNV 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
37WNV 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.
38West 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.
39Number 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
40Distribution of Oklahoma Equine WNV Cases, Aug. 9
- 23, 2002
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42Distribution of Oklahoma Equine WNV Cases, Aug.
24 - Sept 6, 2002
43Distribution of Oklahoma Equine WNV Cases, Sept.
7 - Sept. 19, 2002
44Distribution of Oklahoma Equine WNV Cases, Sept.
20 - Oct 4, 2002
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462002 National Equine Surveillance Data
47Summary 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.
48Culex 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
49Culex 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
50Other 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.
51Epidemic 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
52New Transmission Modes
- Transplantation
- Transfusion
- Breast Milk
- Congenital
- Occupational
53West 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
54West 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
55West 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.
56Arboviral Surveillance in Oklahoma Human
- Free testing available at State Public Health
Laboratory - WNV and SLE
- Request must be made through a health care
provider
57Temporal Relationship of Avian, Equine, and Human
WNV Events Oklahoma-2002
58Symptom 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.
59OK 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.
60Mosquito 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.
61Mosquito 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.
62Tires as Mosquito Breeding Source
63Mosquito 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.
64Larvicides
- Interrupt mosquito life cycle
- Most very environmentally safe
- microbial (Aquabac, Vectobac)
- Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis
- chemicals
- methoprene, oils,
- mononuclear films
65Adulticides
- 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)
66Oklahoma 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
67Changes 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.
68Changes 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.
69What can we expect in 2003??
70RememberFight the Bite