Title: C' Psittaci
1C. PsittaciPsittacosis
Rhonda C. Campbell East Tennessee Regional Health
Office P.O. Box 59019 Knoxville, TN
37950-9019 (865) 549-5287 Rhonda.C.Campbell_at_state.
tn.us
2East Tennessee Region
- 9-28-06 Pet cockatiel (Frankie) diagnosed with
Chlamydophila psittaci - What is C. psittaci and why do I need to do
follow up on a bird?
3Chlamydia or Chlamydophila Genus
- Birds
- Avian chlamydiosis best term to specify
infection with C. psittaci in birds
- Humans
- Psittacosis originating from parrots or
psittacine birds (parrot fever)
4What is Psittacosis?
- Psittacosis is an infectious disease transmitted
to humans from birds in the parrot family,
turkeys and pigeons - Caused by bacteria - Chlamydophila psittaci
5Reservoir Hosts
- 130 species of birds worldwide and variety of
mammals and humans - Most common source of human infection exposure
to recently acquired parrot type birds (macaw,
cockatoo, parakeet, cockatiel, lovebird)
6Life Cycle
- Enters the host via inhalation or ingestion and
replicates - Released to the environment via feces, nasal
secretions, sputum, blood or infected tissues - May survive in soil 3 months or in bird droppings
1 month - Humans acquire by fecal/oral, mouth to beak
contact, or handling plumage or tissues - Inhalation of aerosolized organism
7Clinical Signs and Symptoms Human
- Incubation 5-14 days
- Abrupt onset of fever, chills, headache, malaise,
and myalgia - Occasional severe pneumonia and non respiratory
health problems
8Psittacosis Case Definition (CDC)
- Clinical description
- Illness characterized by fever, chills, headache,
photophobia, cough, and myalgia - Laboratory
- Isolation of organism from respiratory secretions
or - Fourfold or greater increase in antibody titer or
- High antibody titer by MIF (micro-immunofluorescen
ce)
9Opening Scenario
- Local veterinarian notified Tennessee Department
of Health of positive c. psittaci for Frankie
cockatiel - Time for us to go to work!!!
- Investigation begins.
10Compendium of Measures toControl Chlamydophilia
psittaci Infection Among Humans and Pet Birds,
2006
- National Association of State Public Health
Veterinarians, Inc. - http//www.nasphv.org
11Psittacosis Compendium
- Prevention and control
- Testing methods
- Treatment options
- Responsibilities of owners, physicians, and
veterinarians - Epi investigations
- Bird quarantine
- Bird importation
12Psittacosis Compendium
- Prevention and control
- Testing methods
- Treatment options
- Responsibilities of owners, physicians, and
veterinarians - Epi investigations
- Bird quarantine
- Bird importation
13When to conduct an epidemiological investigation?
- Bird chlamydiosis (confirmed or probable)
obtained from a pet store, breeder, or purchased
w/in 60 days of onset of illness - Person with confirmed or probable psittacosis
- Several avian chlamydiosis cases from same source
14Diagnosis of C. Psittaci
- Frankie lab confirmed illness
- PCR Blood
- PCR Fecal
- IFA Serum
- Frankie was exposed to two recently purchased
birds that died - Veterinarian noticed that Frankie's owner had
classical symptoms of psittacosis
15Investigation
- Bird owner owned Frankie for several years
- Newly purchased cockatiels
- First one died two days after purchase
- Second bird was purchased then died 5 days later
- From same pet store
16Human Patient 1, Bird Owner
- Headache, fever, myalgia, cough for 3 weeks
- PCP confirmed
- Acute URI
- Serology test for psittacosis
- Rx Doxycycline 100 mg bid x 10 days
17Human Patient 2, Store Owner
- Out of work ill visiting doctor
- Headache, cough, chills, fever 101.3, for 2-3
weeks - CXR consistent with psittacosis
- Serology for psittacosis
- Rx Doxycycline x 21 days
18Treatment
- Human
- These two were treated with Doxycycline. Other
treatment choices include - Erythromycin or
- Azithromycin Z-pack
- Bird
- Oral doxycycline is the treatment of choice
19Human Case Confirmation
- Both patients improved with treatment
- Convalescent serum collected after 10-14 days
- Acute and convalescent serum sent to state lab
then CDC results pending
20Pet Store Visit
- Questionnaire developed 26
employees and the distributor interviewed for
illness - Provide education and fact sheet
- One employee reported tiredness
- Another employee reported headache, cough,
tiredness referred to physician but refused
21Veterinary Visit to Store
- State Veterinarian notified (Dept. of
Agriculture) - Local Veterinarian visited Pet Store 60 birds
examined no other illnesses Isolate and treat
3 birds caged with the 2 birds that died - Store employees educated on illness in birds,
cleaning procedures, and preventive measures
22Distributor
- Sick birds traced to an individual distributor
- Raised birds and had a few domestic breeders
- Housed at facility for short time
- Sales records and dates not kept
- Likely delivered the cockatiels one month prior
23Results
- Illness in the 2 people resolved with treatment
- Frankie well and at home
- No other illnesses among staff or animals at store
24Clinical Signs - Birds
- Respiratory signs nasal or ocular discharge,
difficulty breathing - Signs of liver disease green urates in
droppings, inappetance - Common spleen liver enlarged
- Pigeons passerines exhibit little or no
symptoms asymptomatic carriers
25Notifiable Disease?
- Human psittaci is a nationally notifiable disease
- Many states, not Tennessee, require avian
chlamydiosis be reported to State Veterinarian - Imported birds not routinely tested for psittaci
26Lessons Learned
- First step Consult the Psittacosis Compendium
(NASPHV) - Importance of Communication Teamwork
- Store Owner
- Healthcare Providers
- Health Department (Local, Region, State, State
Lab) - All of the Above
27QUESTIONS?
QUESTIONS?
- Thank you!
- Rhonda C. Campbell
- East Tennessee Regional Health Office
- P.O. Box 59019
- Knoxville, TN 37920-9019
- (865) 549-5287
- Rhonda.C.Campbell_at_state.tn.us
28The End