Title: Last Smallpox Victim on Earth
1Last Smallpox Victim on Earth
2Little Nasty Things
Prions
Protozoa
Viruses
Bacteria
Amebae (dysentary) Plasmodium (malaria)
Mad Cow Disease Variant CJD
3Little Nasty Things
Prions
Protozoa
Viruses
Bacteria
E. coli B. anthracis (Anthrax) Y. pestis
(Plague)
Influenza Varicella (Chickenpox) Variola
(Smallpox)
Amebae (dysentary) Plasmodium (malaria)
Mad Cow Disease Variant CJD
4Little Nasty Things
Prions
Protozoa
Viruses
Bacteria
RNA Viruses
DNA Viruses
5Little Nasty Things
Prions
Protozoa
Viruses
Bacteria
RNA Viruses
DNA Viruses
(ortho)Pox Viruses
Other Pox Viruses
Many Other Viruses
- Variola (smallpox)
- Major Minor
- Vaccinia/Cowpox
- Monkeypox
- Molluscum
- ORF (parapox)
- Milkers nodules
- Tanapox, others
6An Orthopox Virus
- Variola (smallpox)
- major
- minor
- Vaccinia
7Variola minor, early 1900s
8Variola minor, early 1900s
9Variola minor, early 1900s
10Epidemiology
- Winter Early spring
- Like measles and chickenpox
- Virus killed by heat and humidity
- Age Distribution
- Historically affected younger children and
unvaccinated persons - Outbreak now would match age distribution of
population since there is little immunity
11Transmission
- Person ? Person
- Primarily droplet, or aerosol
- No animal reservoir or vector
- Very contagious, but less than measles or
chickenpox - Less transmissible (lower 2 attack rates)
- Persons are very sick before contagious
1218th Century Native American Blankets
13Time Course of Infection
- Entry through Oropharynx or Lungs
- Virus Multiplies in Lymph Nodes
- Spreads through Bloodstream (1 viremia)
- Multiplies again in Lymph nodes, Spleen, Bone
Marrow - Spreads through Bloodstream (2 viremia)
- Prodrome Fever, Headache, Backache, SICK!
- Multiplies in mouth and Dermis (deep layer of
skin) ? Rash
NOT Infectious (12-14 d )
NOT Infectious (2-4 d)
VERY Infectious
14Fever Curve of Typical Smallpox Case
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19Last case of smallpox in Bengledesh (now
healthy)
20Early Chickenpox
21Chickenpox Varicella-Zoster Virus (VZV)
22Chickenpox Superficial Vesicles
23Chickenpox
24Smallpox 1 week into rash
25Chickenpox
26ChickenpoxDifferent sizes stages
27Smallpox
28Coxsackie A16Virus
29Smallpox
30Molluscum Contagiosum
31Molluscum Contagiosum
32Man Severely Ill with Smallpox
33- Smallpox Lesions
- Start on Face, (fore)Arms, Mouth
- Palms and Soles
- Deeply Embedded into Skin
- Similar Stage of Development
- Occur in Very Sick Persons
34Smallpox Complications
- Hemorrhagic-type Smallpox 1 in 20 cases
- More common in pregnant women
- Flat-type Smallpox 1 in 20 cases
- Encephalitis
- Variola major 1 in 500 cases
- Variola minor 1 in 2000 cases
- Ocular Infection
- Blindness in 1 of cases
- Infection transmitted to child in late pregnancy
35Case Presentation
- 20 y/o woman with Fever, Misery X 2 days
- Today, rash appeared on face arms
- Temp 103oF Blood Pressure106/78
- Pulse 116/minute Breathing Rate 18/minute
- Mentally sound, Lungs clear
- Scattered macules (spots) and vesicles noted
- Diagnosis Chicken pox (Varicella Zoster virus)
- Treatment oral Acyclovir, recheck in 2 days
36What if this wasnt Chickenpox?
- Patient had history of chickenpox as a child
- Unusually severe for atypical or second infection
- Need to Diagnose Smallpox ASAP
- Needle in a haystack
37What if this wasnt Chickenpox?
- Patient had history of chickenpox as a child
- Unusually severe for atypical or second infection
- Need to Diagnose Smallpox ASAP
- Match in a haystack
38Infection Control Nightmare(Yugoslavia 1972)
- 1 case ? Vaccination of 20,000,000
39Hospital Infection Control
- Respiratory Isolation Critical
- NOTIFY IMMEDIATELY
- Hospital Infection Control
- Local Health Department
40CDCs Interim Smallpox Response Plan
- Self-declared Work in Progress
41Smallpox Response Plan
- Surveillance
- Outbreak Investigation
- Outbreak Containment
- Vaccination
- Quarantine/Isolation
- Public/Media Communication
42Smallpox Response Plan
- Surveillance
- Outbreak Investigation
- Outbreak Containment
- Vaccination
- Quarantine/Isolation
- Public/Media Communication
43Smallpox Response Plan
- Surveillance
- Outbreak Investigation
- Outbreak Containment
- Vaccination
- Quarantine/Isolation
- Public/Media Communication
44Smallpox Response Plan
- Surveillance
- Outbreak Investigation
- Outbreak Containment
- Vaccination
- Isolation/Quarantine
- Public/Media Communication
45Smallpox Response Plan
- Surveillance
- Outbreak Investigation
- Outbreak Containment
- Vaccination
- Quarantine/Isolation
- Public/Media Communication
46Surveillance
- Pre-event (baseline) Rash Surveillance
- Notification for suspected smallpox case,
outbreak, contamination or distribution - Local Health Department
- State Health Department ? CDC
- Emergency Preparedness and Response Branch
- Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Program
- Poxvirus Section, Division of Viral and
Rickettsial Diseases - Case Definitions and Clinical Appearance
47Surveillance Case Definition
- Major Criteria
- Fever 102F before rash onset
- Classical smallpox lesions
- Lesions at same stage of development
- Minor Criteria
- Patient is toxic or moribund
- Rash began on forarms, face, or mouth
- Rash includes palms and soles
- Centrifugal distribution (extremities trunk)
- Slow evolution of rash
48SurveillanceSmallpox Case Categories
- Low Probability
- No Fever
- Fever and no other major and
- Moderate Probability Fever
- 1 other major, or
- 4minor criteria
- High Probability all 3 major criteria
49Outbreak Investigation
- Active Surveillance for Smallpox
- Local, state, national, international
- Surveillance for Adverse Vaccine Reactions
- Epi Investigation of Cases
- Contact Tracing
- Specimen Collection Transportation
- Laboratory Confirmation (at CDC )
- Detecting Smallpox Directly in Tissues
- Viral Culture
- Molecular Fingerprinting using PCR
50Outbreak ContainmentVaccination Activities
- CDC vaccine deployment strategy
- Set up vaccination clinics
- Educate a pool of vaccinators
- Recognize vaccine take
- Recognize and treat adverse events
- Safe handling of vaccine
- MASS VS. TARGETED VACCINATION?
51Outbreak ContainmentRing Vaccination
- Strategy used for smallpox elimination
- Avoids recurring cost of mass vaccination
- Avoids unacceptably high, recurring risk of mass
vaccination - Strengthen public health surveillance
infrastructure for ALL infectious diseases - Smallpox vaccine prevents only smallpox
52Isolation of Smallpox Victim in Australia
53Outbreak ContainmentIsolation Categories
- Isolation Units (smallpox hospitals) contagious
persons - Observation Units (for persons with fever but no
rash after smallpox contact) possibly contagious
persons awaiting triage - Home Fever Surveillance with travel restriction
for exposed or vaccinated persons
54Outbreak ContainmentLevels of Quarantine
- Education/Notification
- Suspension of Gatherings
- Restriction on Travel
- Blockade (cordon sanitaire) and community-wide
interventions
55Communication
- Training for Local/State Health Departments
- Webcasts
- Workshops
- Direct public education
- During an Event
- Contact Information
- Education of General Public
- Media Relations
56Other Critical Issues
- Infrastructure Development
- Inter-Agency Coordination
57Final Thoughts
- Smallpox can be recognized early in the course of
an outbreak, incumbent on - Provider and public awareness
- Public health surveillance capacity
- Outbreaks probably not avoidable, but could
(theoretically) be contained - Prodromal symptoms
- Rash identifiable
- Contagious persons unlikely to travel extensively
58Final Thoughts II
- Public health agencies will play a critical role
in incident command (i.e., what do we do now?) - Important but political
- Uncomfortable decisions
- Unprecedented (not yet available) public health
surge capacity is crucial to early outbreak
containment - Dual-use infrastructure may become important
method of efficiently using smallpox resources
59Questions Answers Smallpox plan available
athttp//www.bt.cdc.gov/DocumentsApp/Smallpox/
RPG/index.asp
60Summary III
Cancer
AIDS
61Summary IV
Cancer
AIDS
62Summary V
Bioterrorism
63Summary VI
Cancer
BT
AIDS
64Summary VII
Cancer
AIDS
BT
65Smallpox Vaccination Complications(a live virus
vaccine)
- Disseminated vaccinia
- Eczema vaccinatum
Pre-AIDS!
- Points
- For each 1 million vaccinated, there were 250
complications - Vaccine immune globulin (VIG) Rx is needed -
short supply
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