Title: Dangerous Critters?
1Dangerous Critters?
- WY MSHA State Grant Program
- Gillette Campus of Sheridan College
- Western Wyoming Community College, Green River
Center
2Are these critters REALLY dangerous?
3Dangerous Critters
- Venomous Spiders
- Mice Rats
- Mosquitos
4(No Transcript)
5DANGEROUSLY VENOMOUS SPIDERS
6DANGEROUSLY VENOMOUS SPIDERS
- Hobo Spider
- Widow Spider
- Recluse Spider
- Yellow Sac Spider
7Hobo/Brown Recluse Spider distribution
8Hobo Spider
- Pacific Northwest is normal range
- Enter homes July thru October
- Rarely found high on walls/ceilings
- Like mosquito bite, but turns into slow healing
blister-like lesion easily infected - Female 8-11 mm, Male 11-16 mm
- Light to Med brown, 2 dark stripes on thorax,
light strip on midline of abdomen broken by light
chevron markings
9Hobo Spider poisoning
- Male venom may be more potent than female
- Subadults venom may be more potent than adults
- Red area immediately after bite
- Fades to mosquitoe-like bump
- Incorrectly referred to as an aggressive house
spidervery fast spidervery poor eyesight
10Hobo Spider poisoning
- Within 24-48 hrs, blisters may occur
- Next 24 hrs, blisters may rupture, leaving open
ulceration - Next few days a scab forms, giving a bulls-eye
appearance - Scab sloughs, leaving a scar in /- 45 days
- Some instances, as with fatty tissue areas,
lesions can become deep and extensive (2-3 yrs to
heal)
11Hobo Spider poisoning
- Other long-term effects
- Intractable burning pain
- Damage to blood vessel valves
- Cyst formation
- Multiple lesions from gravitational drift
- 15 of cases severe enough to require
hospitalization - In severe cases, bone marrow failure can develop,
which causes death
12Black Widow Spider
- Throughout US
- Indoors year round, also outdoors
- Usually in seldom disturbed locations
- Web is approximately 12 in diameter
- Black color with red or orange hourglass marking
on underside of abdomen (female only) - Male 7-10mm, Female 12-13mm
13Black Widow Spider Bite
- Two tiny red dots, painful immediately
- Increased body temperature, sweating, nausea
- Some victims experience anxiety, profuse
sweating, hair standing on end, increased blood
pressure
14Black Widow Spider Bite
- No tissue necrosis
- Potent neurotoxin induces severe muscle cramping
spasms, beginning in large muscles of legs or
abdomen - Abdomen can exhibit board-like rigidity
- Severe cases include paralysis, stupor, and
convulsions, death in small percentage of cases
(small children, elderly)
15Brown Recluse Spider(Violin Spider)
- Midwest and southern US (may be some apparent
reports in WY) - Sticky webs under rocks, etc.
- Enter homes, cellars, barns
- Male Female 6-12mm
- Tan to dark brown
- Fiddle shape markings on top of thorax
16Brown Recluse poisoning
- Bite usually not felt, but produce immediate
stinging like bee sting - Tissue becomes swollen
- Flu-like symptoms
- Fever, nausea, chills, aches
17Brown Recluse poisoning
- Painful ulceration develops
- Skin and musscle tissue dies, leaving a deep
infected wound that enlarges, fails to heal or
heals slowly (necrosis)
18Yellow Sac Spider
- Throughout US
- Indoors year round, mostly early autumn
- Build a silken sac in upper corners of ceilings
- Bite is slight burning sensation
- Some swelling
- Male 4-8mm, Female 5-10mm
- Pale yellow to green in color, legs and abdominal
midline slightly darker
19Yellow Sac Spider bite
- Least known clinically significant spider
- Capable of causing a painful bite with necrotic
lesion - Not as severe as brown recluse or hobo
- Bites sometimes cause systemic effects
- Very prone to bite defensively (more than other
significantly venomous spiders)
20Yellow Sac Spider bite
- Some bites in unusual areas (autos, swimming
pools) - Likely that many US cases of necrotic arachnidism
ascribed to brown recluse are actually yellow sac
spider bites
21HANTAVIRUS PULMONARY SYNDROME (HPS)
22HANTAVIRUS PULMONARY SYNDROME - SOME HISTORY
- First noted during an outbreak in the Four
Corners area in May 1993 with several young
apparently otherwise healthy young people dying - Researchers discovered a previously unknown type
of hantavirus, carried primarily by the deer
mouse - Virus called Sin Nombre virus (SNV) and the
disease it caused was named Hantavirus Pulmonary
Syndrome (HPS) - Further medical research revealed that HPS was
not new and located the first case (through
records and tissue analysis) in Utah in 1959
23RODENTS KNOWN TO CARRY HANTAVIRUS PULMONARY
SYNDROME
- Deer Mouse
- White-footed Mouse
- Rice Rat
- Cotton Rat
24Deer Mouse
- Head body about 2-3 inches long-tail adds
another 2-3 inches - Gray to reddish brown
- Underbelly always white
- Tail has sharply defined white sides
- Found almost everywhere in North America
- Prefers woodlands, but found in desert areas also
25White-Footed Mouse
- Hard to distinguish from Deer Mouse
- Head body about 4 inches-tail adds 2-4 inches
- Pale brown to reddish brown
- Underside and feet are white
- Found southern New England, Mid-Atlantic,
southern, midwestern, western states Mexico - Prefers wooded brushy areas
26Rice Rat
- Head body 5-6 inches-plus a 5-7 inch tail
- Short, soft, grayish brown fur on top, gray or
tawny underneath - Feet are whitish
- Likes marshy areas and is semiaquatic
- Found in the southeastern US Central America
27Cotton Rat
- Head body 5-7 inches w/ tail 3-4 inches more
- Hair is longer and courser than deer mouse,
grayish brown to grayish black - Prefers overgrown areas w/ shrubs tall grass
- Found in southeastern US, Central South America
28SYMPTOMS OF HPS
- Early symptoms include
- Fatigue, fever, muscle aches (especially large
muscle groups thighs, hips, back, shoulders)
universal symptoms - May also have headaches, dizziness, chills,
abdominal problems (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea,
pain) experienced by /- ½ of victims - Incubation time is unclear at this time
- Limited info indicates 1 to 5 weeks
29SYMPTOMS OF HPS
- Late symptoms include
- Coughing, shortness of breath universal
symptoms - Very uncommon symptoms
- Earache, sore throat, and rash
30HANTAVIRUS PULMONARY SYNDROME
- Person to person contamination of HPS is unlikely
- Deer mice (cotton rice rats-SE US, white-footed
mice-most of US) are the most common carrier of
HPS - Rodents shed the virus in their urine,
droppings, and saliva - Mainly transmitted to humans when we breathe air
contaminated with the virus
31HANTAVIRUS PULMONARY SYNDROME
- Contamination happens when fresh rodent urine,
droppings or nesting material is stirred up into
the air we breathe this process is called
aerosolization - Rodent bites are very rare mode of infection
- May be able to contract virus if you touch
contaminated object, then touch your nose or
mouth - Suspected that you can be infected by eating food
contaminated with rodent urine, droppings, or
saliva
32HANTAVIRUS PULMONARY SYNDROME
- Disease transmission can happen any place rodents
have infested such as homes, barns, sheds,
outbuildings, warehouses, summer homes, etc. - Preventing rodents from infesting areas where you
live and work is extremely important - Disinfecting rodent-infested areas is very
important to preventing the disease
33HOW TO PREVENT HPS
- Avoid contact with rodent infested areas
- Closed up rooms, cabins, warehouses
- Housecleaning activities in rodent infested areas
- Really stirring up the dust
- Large populations of rodents
34HOW TO PREVENT HPS
- Make your home, workplace, summer home or
campsite unattractive to rodents - If you dont provide rodents with food and
nesting material - You are much less likely to come into contact
with them!
35HOW TO PREVENT HPS
- Recent research indicates that
- Many people who became ill with HPS got the
disease after frequent contact with rodents
and/or their droppings around home or work - Thereforeit makes sense to try to keep your
home, vacation place, workplace, or campsite clean
36HOW TO PREVENT HPS
- Indoor Prevention Strategies
- Keep your space clean
- Keep tight lid on garbage
- Set keep spring loaded traps
- Set EPA approved rodent bait
- Use flea killer if bubonic plague is an area
concern - Seal all entry holes ¼ inch and larger
37HOW TO PREVENT HPS
- Outdoor Prevention Strategies
- Clear brush, grass, junk from around buildings
- Use metal flashing around base of wooden,
earthen, adobe (to 12 above ground, 6 into
ground) - Elevate hay woodpiles
- Trap rodents outside
- Encourage presence of natural preditors (snakes,
owls, hawks, etc.)
38HOW TO PREVENT HPS
- Remembergetting rid of all rodents isnt
feasiblebut with ongoing effort, you can keep
populations very low
39COMMON SIGNS OF RODENT INFESTATION
- You see rodent droppings
- You see signs of rodent nesting
- You find food containers that appear to be
nibbled - You find signs of feeding stations
- You find evidence of gnawing
- You notice an odd, stale smell
- You see a mouse in your area
40How to clean up infested areas
- Open buildings or closed areas and air them out
before cleaning - Wear personal protective equipment
- Latex or nitrile gloves and P100 respirator
- Dont stir up dust by sweeping or vacuuming
- Thoroughly wet contaminated areaslet stand 5
minutes - Most general purpose disinfectants, household
detergents are effective - Hypochlorate solution (mix 1 ½ cups bleach in 1
gallon of water) may be used in place of
commercial disinfectant
41How to clean up infested areas
- Once contaminated area is wet, take up
contaminated materials with damp towel, then mop
or sponge area with disinfectant - Spray dead rodents with disinfectantdouble bag
with all cleaning materials and bury or burn - Disinfect gloves before taking them off
- After taking off the gloves, thoroughly wash
hands with soap and warm water
42WEST NILE VIRUS
43WEST NILE VIRUS
- No documented cases in Western Hemisphere until
1999 - In 1999 2000 WNV encephalitis reported in New
York City Metro area, New Jersey, and Connecticut
83 cases, 9 deaths - In 2001 WNV occurred in 10 states w/ 66 cases, 9
deaths - In 2002 WNV spread to 44 states w/4,156 cases,
284 deaths
44Overview of West Nile Virus (WNV)
- WNV is a mosquito-borne disease that can cause
encephalitis or meningitis - Encephalitis is an inflammation of the brain
tissue - Meningitis is an inflammation of the membranes
that envelop the brain or spinal cord
45WEST NILE VIRUS
- Transmitted to humans via mosquito bites
- Mosquitoes are infected by feeding on infected
birds that have high level of WNV in their blood - WNV is NOT transmitted from person to person
- No evidence that people get WNV from handling
live or dead infected birds (use barriers as a
precaution anyway)
46WEST NILE VIRUS
- Most WNV infected humans have no symptoms
- Small proportion develop mild symptoms including
fever, headache, body aches, skin rash, swollen
lymph glands West Nile fever - More serious infections include high fever,
headache, neck stiffness, stupor, disorientation,
coma, tremors, convulsions, paralysis West Nile
encephalitis
47WEST NILE VIRUS
- Less than 1 develop more severe symptoms
including meningitis or encephalitis - Estimated 1 in 1000 (0.1) developing
encephalitis die - No specific treatment or vaccination
48WEST NILE VIRUS
- Prevention is your best course of action!
- Avoid mosquito bites-use DEET
- Clean out mosquitoes where you work and play
49WEST NILE VIRUS US Distribution (from USGS)
- West Nile was first isolated in 1937known to
cause infection and fever in humans in Africa,
West Asia, and Middle East
50WEST NILE VIRUS US Distribution (From CDC)
51WEST NILE VIRUS WY Distribution
- Avian (Bird) cases by county
52WEST NILE VIRUS WY Distribution
53WEST NILE VIRUS WY Distribution
54WEST NILE VIRUS Prevention
- When outdoors, wear clothing that covers the skin
- Apply effective insect repellent to clothing
exposed skin (DEET, etc.) - Curb activity during dawn dusk
- Apply screens to doors windows regularly
maintain them - Reduce the amount of standing water around home
or work
55PLEASE REMEMBER!
- Safety and Health IS NOT just a 9 to 5 job!
You should be safe AT HOME as well as AT WORK!