Title: Epidemiology
1Epidemiology
Molecular epidemiology, Microbial Ecology,
Vector Ecology and Population Biology
2Tracking microorganisms through space
- Spatial distribution of organisms may depend on
- Geographic range
- Habitat specificity
- Host specificity
- Ecosystem specificity
- Site or tissue specificity
3Microbes are everywhere
- Microbes are found all over the world in
virtually every habitat and in/on most organisms
as symbionts - Free living microbes may sometimes become
opportunistic parasites - Humans non-specific defenses help to protect
from these opportunists - Some microbes are specialized pathogens and have
specific abilities and requirements to cause
infections
4Transport and Transmission of microbes
- Abiotic routes, vehicles and fomites (indirect
contact) - Water
- Wind/thermal currents
- Food
- Other
- Biotic routes
- Host to host (Direct contact)
- Human to human
- Animal reservoir to human
- Vector
- Biological (blood or feces of vector)
- Mechanical (vector transports on body)
- Combination of biotic and abiotic
5Microbes in Water
6Microbes in Water
7Contamination of Water affects drinking and
recreational water
8Food Borne Illnesses
- Fecal contamination of food
- From animals (E. coli, Salmonella etc)
- From humans (hepatitis A etc)
- Parasites in tissue of meat (helminthes etc)
- Food spoilage or intoxication (Botulism,
aflatoxins etc..)
9Direct Contact Transmission
- Types of contact Bites, scratches, sneezes,
coughs, sexual contact, physical contact,
exposure to blood or body fluids - Direct contact with
- With humans-examples include VDs (STDs), MRSA
- With animals examples include rabies, ringworm
- With vehicles (blood, feces, body fluids etc)
brucellosis, Q fever, Tularemia
10Vector Transmission
- Vectors are usually arthropods
- Biological transmission by haematophagous vectors
(blood feeding vectors) - Through saliva of vector
- dirty needle transmission by vectors proboscis
(rarely occurs) - Through blood or feces of vector
- Accidental ingestion of vector
- Mechanical vectors (non blood feeding)
- On body of vector
- In feces of vector
- Accidental ingestions
11Insects
- Siphonaptera-fleas
- Diptera-flies
- Nematocera
- Ceratopogonidae-no-see-ums, sand gnats
- Culicidae-mosquitoes
- Psychodidae-sand flies
- Simuliidae-blackflies
- Brachycera
- Tabanidae-horse and deer flies
- Cyclorrhapha
- Muscidae-houseflies
- Glossinidae-tetse flies
-
- Hemiptera-bugs
- Reduviidae-conenose (kissing) bugs
- Cimicidae-bed bugs
- Dictyoptera
- Blattidae-roaches
- Anoplura-sucking lice
12Some Insect Vectors
Cone nose bug
Mosquito
Flea
Tsetse fly
13Mites (including ticks)
- Arachnida
- Acari
- Ixodidae-hard ticks
- Argasidae-soft ticks
- Laelapidae-hematophagous mites
- Dermanyssidae-hematophagous mites
- Demodicidae-follicle mites
- Trombiculidae-chiggers
- Sarcoptidae-scabies mites
-
-
Ticks
14Ticks
- Ticks are important vectors
- Some species also cause tick paralysis
American dog tick
Lone star tick
Black legged tick (deer tick)
15Examples of vector-borne diseases
Mosquitoes- malaria, hemorrhagic fevers, viral
encephalitis, filariasis Black flies- river
blindness Sand flies- leishmaniasis, Oroya
fever Fleas-plague, maybe bartonellosis, some
tapeworms Lice- trench fever, epidemic typhus,
relapsing fever Deer flies- loaiasis Conenose
(kissing) bugs- Chagas disease Tsetse flies-
African sleeping sickness Ticks- Lyme disease,
ehrlichiosis, RMSF, hemorrhagic fevers Chiggers-
scrub typhus Copepods and other crustaceans-
cholera, dracunculiasis
16Reservoirs
- Reservoirs maintain the disease agent in nature
- Animals
- Vertebrates- deer, rodents, monkeys etc..
- Invertebrates- clams, crustaceans, insects
(remember, sometimes a vector can also be a
reservoir) - Protists- some amoebas
- Water or soil- some free-living, infectious
organisms can reproduce outside of the host in
water or soil (otherwise water and soil are just
vehicles)
17Natural factors that affect distribution and
abundance of disease-causing organisms
- Environmental changes
- Individual host, vector or reservoir
- Population of hosts, vectors or reservoirs
- Microbial antagonism, competitive exclusion
- Genetic changes in disease agent
- Natural selection
- Stochastic effects (e.g. drift, bottlenecks etc)
- Host health and immunity (e.g. stress)
18Environment and Disease
Host availability and abundance (including
vectors and reservoirs)
E
Ecosystem balance
Abiotic factors (Weather)
19Anthropogenic and societal factors that influence
disease
- Environmental degradation
Pollution
Poverty
Education
Hygiene
Overcrowding
20Studying Temporal Variation
- The distribution and abundance of microorganisms
may vary with time - Outbreaks of disease may occur periodically in
relation to changes in the environment, changes
in hosts, genetic change in the microbe itself,
or a combination of factors - For example, each year, outbreaks of influenza
result in about 30,000 deaths. However, the
severity may differ over time as different
strains emerge
21Hospitals and the spread of disease
- Nosocomial infections occur in hospitals
- Hospitals may contain more immunocompromised
people, who are more susceptible - Invasive procedures are conducted, creating
portals of entry for pathogens - Many opportunistic pathogens
- Frequent use of antibiotics and the potential
spread of antibiotic resistance genes - Misdiagnosis of disease especially emerging or
obscure pathogens
22Pathogens frequently causing nosocomial infections
- Staphylococcus aureus and MRSA
- Streptococcus spp.
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Enterococcus spp.
- Escherichia coli
- Klebsiella spp.
- Enterobacter spp.
- Clostridium difficile
- Candida albicans
- Many others
23Epidemiology and Infection Terminology
- Acute- short-term infection with dramatic onset
and rapid recovery (or death) - Chronic- long-term infection
- Definitive host- host in which a parasite reaches
sexual maturity - Endemic-naturally occurring in a particular area
- Enzootic-presence of pathogen in particular area
maintained by local reservoirs and vectors - Epidemic-presence of disease agent above normal
infection prevalence - Epizootic-out break of enzootic pathogen
- Etiology- cause of disease
- Fomite-inanimate objects that can transmit
pathogens between hosts - Incidence-the number of new host who become
infected - Infectious dose- number of agents required to
cause disease - Intensity- the number of parasites in a single
host - Intermediate host- host in which parasite
develops to some extent but not to sexual
maturity - Microbial antagonism- competition between
microbes which can lead to suppression of a
particular type of disease agent
24- Opportunistic Pathogen/parasite (phoront or
commensal becomes parasitic) - Obligate Parasite (cannot live without host)
- Pathogen- organism that causes disease
- Pathogenicity- organisms ability to cause disease
- Prevalence-the rate or frequency of an organism
as a proportion or percent - Reservoir-host that maintains disease agent in
nature - Resident- symbiont that remains in a host for a
significant period of time - Sylvatic-exist normally in the wild, not in the
human population - Transient- symbiont that is in a host temporarily
- Transovarial transmission-vertical
transmission-vector to offspring - Transstadial transmission-transmission of agent
across life stages of vector - Vector- Organism that carries an agent from one
host to another - Vehicle- inanimate source of pathogens
- Virulence-degree of pathogenicity of an organism
- Zoonosis-disease of animals that can be
transmitted to humans - Suffixes -emia presence of, -osis, -iasis, -itis
- referring to disease state or condition of
infection