Title: Animals and Allergens
1Animals and Allergens
2Risk Assessment for Work with Research Animals
- Risks associated with the research agent used in
the animal - chemical, physical, biological
- Risks associated with the species of animal used
- zoonotic agents
- Risks associated with animal maintenance
- ergonomic factors, bites, scratches, allergens
3Risks Associated with the Agent Used
- Chemical agents
- carcinogens, mutagens
- toxic chemicals
- anesthetics
- Physical agents
- radiation
- heat
- sound
4Risks Associated with the Agent Used
- Potentially biohazardous agents
- deliberate use of an infectious agent in animals
for research purposes - maintenance of infected animal for duration of
experiment - sacrifice, necropsy and harvesting of
- agent or infected tissue
5Transmission of Biohazards During Work with
Animals
- Airborne
- Release of infectious aerosols by animal by
sneezing, coughing - Release during nasal infection or aerosol
challenge - Aerosolization from bedding and excreta
- During surgical procedures
- During birthing
6Transmission of Biohazards During Work with
Animals
- Direct Inoculation
- Needlesticks during injection/inoculation process
- Bites and scratches from infected animal
7Transmission of Biohazards During Work with
Animals
- Direct exposure of mucous membranes
- (by splash or splatter)
- During surgical procedures
- During injection
- During necropsy
8Transmission of Biohazards During Work with
Animals
- Indirect transmission and ingestion
- From contaminated hands or gloves to mouth
- Facial contamination directly from animal
- Transfer of parasites by animal handling
- Indirect transmission with eye or mucous
- membrane exposure
- Dust from bedding
- Splash during cage washing
- Dirty environment
9Risk Reduction Containment of Infectious Agent
- Containment must include
- Primary containment
- Enclosed filtered caging system
- Biosafety cabinets
- Safety equipment
- PPE
- Secondary containment
- The containment facility
- Negative pressurization
- Nonrecirculated air supply
- Ventilation must consider wellbeing of animal
-
10Containment Caging Systems
- No Containment
- Open (standard) cage
- Some Containment
- Filter top cage
- (microisolator cage)
- Full Containment
- Fully enclosed in
- ventilated rack
11Containment Caging Systems
- Microisolator Cage
- works like a Petri dish
- open gaps around lid edge allow limited air
exchange - may lead to more labor intensive husbandry due to
moisture and ammonia buildup
12Containment Caging Systems
- Individual cages sealed into rack with supplied
air under negative pressure - Both supply and exhaust usually HEPA filtered
- Ventilation must control humidity and buildup of
ammonia
13Containment Caging Systems
- Can install cages in class III biosafety cabinet
- Cages are completely contained with glove port
access - Very motion-limiting
- Transfer in and out may be an issue
14Containment Caging Systems
- BioBubble (Ft. Collins, CO) makes soft-wall
ventilated enclosures - Can be containment or barrier style
- Large equipment can be surface-mounted in wall
15Special Animal Housing Situations
- Barrier colonies
- Special breeds - often immunocompromised,
fragile, expensive (SCID-Hu, nude athymics) - Transgenics - often even more fragile and
expensive (knockouts, microinjected, combos) - Specific pathogen-free (SPF) - bred and raised to
be missing certain specific microorganisms - Isolation colonies
- Extensive SPFs and defined flora animals
- Gnotobiotes (an entirely different animal!)
16Zoonoses
- Zoonotic disease A disease of animals that can
be transmitted under natural conditions and cause
disease in humans - Wild caught animals most hazardous
- Random source animals (e.g., from a pound) are
also a risk - Purpose bred animals pose least risk
17Some Animals and Their Zoonoses
- Disease
- Herpes B virus
- Q fever
- Hantavirus
- Rabies
-
- Tuberculosis
- Toxoplasmosis
- Psittacosis
- Avian influenza
- Animal
- Macaque monkeys
- Sheep
- White mouse
- Dogs, cats, skunks, raccoons, bats
- Cattle, NHP
- Cats
- Parrots, macaws
- Chickens
18Rodent Zoonoses
- Rat bite fever (Streptobacillus moniliformis,
Spirillum minus) - transmission direct contact (bites)
- Lymphocytic choriomeningitis (LCM, a virus)
- transmission inhalation
- Leptospirosis (Leptospira spp.)
- transmission inhalation
- Others include ringworm (fungal), scabies (mites,
an ectoparasite)
19Transmission of Zoonoses
- Enteric route (fecal/oral)
- Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter,
- Giardia, Toxoplasma, Cryptosporidium,
- Entamoeba, Hepatitis A
- Respiratory route
- Q fever, Chlamydia, Measles
- Skin contact
- Ringworm (Tinea), Measles, Monkeypox
20Control of Zoonoses
- Get information on species and agent
- Quarantine animals prior to use
- Use Engineering controls
- facility construction and
- secondary barriers
- Consider the need for containment caging
- Use Administrative controls
- written SOPs and
- manuals
- Use PPE
- additional protection for
- worker
- Practice good facility and personal hygiene
- Provide staff training
21Laboratory Acquired Allergies (LAA)
- Significant occupational disease
- Affects gt30 of all personnel working with
animals - No minimum safe exposure levels to allergens have
been established - Animal allergens found in hair, dander, urine,
saliva, serum - fel-d-l cat allergen (in saliva and thus on skin)
is one of the strongest allergens known for humans
22Sources of Exposure to LAA
- Hair and dander shed from animal
- Urine and feces dried in bedding
- Particulates shed from bedding material
- Animal saliva
23Routes of Exposure to LAA
- Inhalation of airborne allergens
- during cage changing
- during animal handling
- Skin or eye contact
- usually indirect by touching skin, eyes
- Percutaneous exposure
- animal bites (saliva)
24Risk Factors for Development of LAA
- Exposure to allergens
- duration
- frequency
- intensity
- Previous allergic conditions
- Other predisposing conditions
- illness
- Immunocompromised
- pets
25LAA Exposure Control
- Engineering Controls
- enclosure
- dilution ventilation
- Administrative Controls
- reduce time with animals
- reduce density of animals
- housekeeping practices
- Personal Protective Equipment
- respirators and clothing
- Medical Surveillance