Title: Botulism
1Botulism
2Overview
- Organism
- History
- Epidemiology
- Transmission
- Disease in Humans
- Disease in Animals
- Prevention and Control
3Organism
- Clostridium botulinum
- Gram positive
- Obligate anaerobic bacillus
- Spores
- Ubiquitous
- Resistant to heat, light, drying and radiation
- Specific conditions for germination
- Anaerobic conditions
- Warmth (10-50oC)
- Mild alkalinity
4Neurotoxins
- Seven different types A through G
- Different types affect different species
- All cause flaccid paralysis
- Only a few nanograms can cause illness
- Binds neuromuscular junctions
- Toxin Destroyed by boiling
- Spores Higher temperatures to be inactivated
5Neurotoxins
Neurotoxin A B C D E F G
Human X X X X
Horses X X
Cattle X X X
Sheep X
Dogs X X
Avian X X
Mink Ferret X X X
6History
7History
- 1793, Justinius Kerner
- Wurstgift
- Botulus Latin for sausage
- 1895, Emile von Ermengem
- Isolated organism during Belgium outbreak
- U.S. outbreaks led to improved industry processing
8Transmission
9Transmission
- Ingestion
- Organism
- Spores
- Neurotoxin
- Wound contamination
- Inhalation
- Person-to-person not documented
10Epidemiology
11Epidemiology
- In U.S., average 110 cases each year
- Approximately 25 food-borne
- Approximately 72 infant form
- Remainder wound form
- Case-fatality rate
- 5-10
- Infective dose- few nanograms
12Epidemiology
- 1977, Largest botulism outbreak
- Michigan - 59 people
- Poorly preserved jalapeno peppers
- Alaska
- 27 of U.S. foodborne botulism cases
- 1950-2000
- 226 cases from 114 outbreaks
13Disease in Humans
14Human Disease
- Three forms
- Foodborne
- Wound
- Infant
- All forms fatal and a medical emergency
- Incubation period 12-36 hours
15Foodborne Botulism
- Preformed toxin ingested from contaminated food
- Most common from home-canned foods
- Asparagus, green beans, beets, corn, baked
potatoes, garlic, chile peppers, tomatoes type A - Improperly fermented fish (Alaska) type E
16110 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
Reported Cases
1982 1987 1992
1997 2002
Year
MMWR
17Infant Botulism
- Most common form in U.S.
- Spore ingestion
- Germinate then toxin released and colonize large
intestine - Infants lt 1 year old
- 94 lt 6 months old
- Spores from varied sources
- Honey, food, dust, corn syrup
18110 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
Reported Cases
1982 1987
1992 1997 2002
Year
MMWR
19Wound Botulism
- Organism enters wound
- Develops under anaerobic conditions
- From ground-in dirt or gravel
- It does not penetrate intact skin
- Associated with addicts of black-tar heroin
20Adult Clinical Signs
- Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
- Double vision
- Difficulty speaking or swallowing
- Descending weakness or paralysis
- Shoulders to arms to thighs to calves
- Symmetrical flaccid paralysis
- Respiratory muscle paralysis
21Infant Clinical Signs
- Constipation
- Lethargy
- Poor feeding
- Weak cry
- Bulbar palsies
- Failure to thrive
22 Diagnosis
- Clinical signs
- Toxin in serum, stool, gastric aspirate,
suspected food - Culture of stool or gastric aspirate
- Takes 5-7 days
- Electromyography also diagnostic
- Mouse neutralization test
- Results in 48 hours
23Treatment
- Intensive care immediately
- Ventilator for respiratory failure
- Botulinum antitoxin
- Derived from equine source
- CDC distributes
- Used on a case-by-case basis
- Botulism immune globulin
- Infant cases of types A and G
24Animals andBotulism
25Animals
- Cattle and sheep
- Horses
- Birds and poultry
- Mink and ferrets
- Uncommon in dogs and pigs
- Fairly resistant
- No natural cases documented in cats
26Cattle and Sheep
- Ingestion of toxin
- Incubation
- 24 hours to 7 days
- Sources
- Spoiled stored silage or grain
- Silage using poultry litter or products
- Phosphorus deficiency in cattle
- Carcasses Baled or chopped into hay
27Ruminants Clinical Signs
- Progressive ascending ataxia
- Recumbent
- Head turned into flanks
- Cranial nerve dysfunction
- Rumen stasis bloat
- Atonic bladder - loss of urination
28Cattle and Sheep Diagnosis
- History
- Bloodwork and CSF tap Normal
- ELISA test available for type C D
- Definitive diagnosis
- Demonstration of toxin in serum, gut contents or
organs - Electromyography (EMG)
29Cattle and Sheep Treatment
- Symptomatic and supportive
- Nutritional
- Ventilatory support, if needed
- Metronidazole
- Antitoxin, in early stages
- Ineffective by the time clinical signs are
present - Can block further uptake of toxin
30Horses
- Horses, especially foals, are highly sensitive to
botulism toxin - Type B C toxins
- Incubation period
- 24 hours to 7 days
- Sources
- Contaminated feed
- Wound infections
31Adult Horses
- Forage poisoning
- Ingest preformed toxin
- Clinical Signs
- Dyspnea
- Flaccid tail
- Muscle tremors
- Severe paresis to rapid recumbency
- Unable to retract tongue, drooling
32Foals
- Shaker Foal syndrome
- Most 2 weeks to 8 months old
- On a high nutrition plane
- Spores in contaminated feed
- Usually type B
- Most common in KY and eastern seaboard
33Foals Clinical Signs
- Clinical signs
- Paresis, recumbent
- Muscle tremors
- Dysphagia
- Ptosis, mydriasis, decreased PLR
- Ileus, constipation, urine retention
- Death due to respiratory paralysis
- Mortality greater than 90
34Birds and Poultry
- Limber neck
- Types C and E
- Good sentinel species
- Sources
- Decomposed vegetation or invertebrates
- Ingest toxin or invertebrates with toxin
- Contaminated feed or water of chickens
35Birds and PoultryClinical Signs
- Occurs 12-48 hours after ingestion
- Droopy head
- Drowsy
- Wing and leg paralysis
- Unable to hold their head up
- Unable to use their wings or legs
- Eyelid paralysis
36Mink and Ferrets
- Type C
- Occasionally A and E
- Sources
- Chopped raw meat or fish
- Improper storage of meat by-products
- Vaccine available for type C
37Dogs
- Rare
- Type C few cases type D
- Source
- Ingestion of carrion
- Wetland areas with avian botulism epizootics
- Incubation period
- Few hours to 6 days
38Dogs
- Progressive symmetric ascending weakness
- Rear limbs to forelimbs
- Cranial nerve deficits
- Respiratory paralysis
- Lose ability to urinate and defecate
39Dogs
- Diagnosis
- Bloodwork and CSF Normal
- Electromyography (EMG)
- Toxin in serum, vomitus, feces, or suspect
food/carrion - Mouse neutralization test preferred
- Treatment
- Supportive
- Antitoxin
40Prevention and Control
41Human Prevention
- Do not feed honey to children lt1 yr of age
- Proper food preservation methods
- Proper time, temperature and pressure
- 80oC for 30 min or 100oC for 10 min
- Prompt refrigeration of foods
- Boil foods for gt 10 minutes
- Decontamination
- Boil suspected food before discarding
- Boil or chlorine disinfect utensils used
42Ruminants Prevention
- Good husbandry practices
- Rodent and vermin control
- Prompt disposal of carcasses
- Avoid spoiled feedstuff or poor quality silage
- Vaccination in endemic areas
43Equine Prevention
- Good husbandry
- Rodent and vermin control
- Avoid spoiled feed
- Prophylactic vaccine for pregnant mares
- Currently only type B botulinum toxoid available
for horses
44Potential Bioterrorism Threat
- Aum Shinriky cult
- Extremely potent and lethal
- Easily produced and transported
- Signs of deliberate aerosol or foodborne release
of toxin - No common source
- Large number of acute cases clustered
- Uncommon toxin type (C, D, F, G)
45Potential Bioterrorism Threat
- Point source aerosol release
- Incapacitate or kill 10 of persons within 0.5 km
downwind - CDC surveillance system
- Prompt detection of botulism related events
46Additional Resources
- CDC Division of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases
- http//www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dbmd/
diseaseinfo/botulism_g.htm - Center for Civilian Biodefense Strategies
- http//www.hopkins-biodefense.org/pages/agents/age
ntbotox.html
47Acknowledgments
Development of this presentation was funded by a
grant from the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention to the Center for Food Security and
Public Health at Iowa State University.
48Acknowledgments
Author Co-author Reviewers
Glenda Dvorak, DVM, MS, MPH Radford Davis, DVM,
MPH Danelle Bickett-Weddle, DVM, MPH Jean
Gladon, BS