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Chlamydial zoonotic diseases

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Transmission by inhalation of dry dust containing the organism shed in faeces ... Chlamydophila abortus. Sheep (EAE), goats, cattle and pigs ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chlamydial zoonotic diseases


1
Chlamydial zoonotic diseases
  • Psittacosis, ornithosis
  • Chlamydophila psittaci
  • Reservoir is birds (particularly but not
    exclusively psittacine)
  • Transmission by inhalation of dry dust containing
    the organism shed in faeces
  • Infected birds may be clinically normal
  • When sick, huddled, ruffled feathers, green
    diarrhoea, die

2
Chlamydial zoonotic diseases
  • Avoiding human infection
  • Antibiotics to decrease infection in birds
  • Treat incoming birds
  • Prevent contact between caged and wild birds
  • Wet down aviary before cleaning / wear mask

3
Other chlamydia of importance/potential
  • Chlamydophila felis
  • Limited evidence of zoonosis
  • Chlamydophila abortus
  • Sheep (EAE), goats, cattle and pigs
  • Risk to pregnant women (abortion and death)
  • C. pneumoniae
  • Repiratory disease in humans, horses
  • Conjunctivitis in koala
  • C. pecorum
  • Recently isolated from goats in NZ
  • Koala in Australia
  • No known human disease

4
Q Fever - Coxiella burnetii
  • Human disease
  • Non-specific febrile illness
  • Retro-orbital pain
  • Pneumonitis
  • Hepatitis
  • If chronic then develops cardio-vascular disease
    (case fatality 65
  • Wildlife cycle
  • Rodent, lagomorph, or marsupial
  • Tick bite (Ixodidae, Argasidae)
  • Tick transmission to other wildlife or to humans

5
Q Fever
  • Domestic cycle
  • Infected cattle, sheep, goats
  • Aerosol transmission to other susceptible
    ruminants and to humans (amniotic fluid,
    placenta, milk, dust)
  • Other hosts
  • Parturient cats and their kittens
  • The organism is highly resistant when desiccated,
    fomite transmission occurs
  • Passing herds in Switzerland
  • Straw packing material

6
Erysipeloid and erysipelas
  • Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae
  • Soil or animal source?
  • Tonsils and GIT pigs
  • Long survival in soil
  • Fish and slime on fish tanks
  • Very wide host range
  • Human infection is percutaneous
  • In NZ more commonly seen as polyarthritis of
    lambs after dipping
  • Human infections possibly underdiagnosed, respond
    well to antibiotic treatment

7
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9
Leptospirosis
  • Leptospiral serovars in NZ
  • australis (?)
  • canicola (?)
  • copenhageni
  • pomona
  • balcanica
  • hardjobovis
  • tarassovi
  • ballum
  • Maintenance hosts
  • Cattle (hardjobovis)
  • Pigs (pomoma, tarassovi)
  • Possums (balcanica)
  • Rats (ballum, copenhageni)
  • Mice (ballum)
  • Hedgehogs (ballum)

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14
Tuberculosis (Mycobacterium bovis)
  • M. tuberculosis (human pathogen)
  • M. bovis (cattle, deer, possums, other wild
    mammals, 1-2 of human cases in NZ)
  • M. avium (birds, poultry, pigs)
  • M. marinum (fish, reptiles, snails)
  • NZ bovine TB eradication complicated by infection
    of wildlife predominantly the brushtail possum

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17
Is Johnes disease of cattle, sheep and deer
(Mycobacterium avium subsp paratuberculosis) the
equivalent of Crohns disease in humans?
18
Mycobacterium marinum
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