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Animals and Allergens

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Animals and Allergens Risk Assessment for Work with Research Animals Risks associated with the research agent used in the animal chemical, physical, biological Risks ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Animals and Allergens


1
Animals and Allergens
2
Risk 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

3
Risks Associated with the Agent Used
  • Chemical agents
  • carcinogens, mutagens
  • toxic chemicals
  • anesthetics
  • Physical agents
  • radiation
  • heat
  • sound

4
Risks 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

5
Transmission 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

6
Transmission of Biohazards During Work with
Animals
  • Direct Inoculation
  • Needlesticks during injection/inoculation process
  • Bites and scratches from infected animal

7
Transmission of Biohazards During Work with
Animals
  • Direct exposure of mucous membranes
  • (by splash or splatter)
  • During surgical procedures
  • During injection
  • During necropsy

8
Transmission 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

9
Risk 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

10
Containment Caging Systems
  • No Containment
  • Open (standard) cage
  • Some Containment
  • Filter top cage
  • (microisolator cage)
  • Full Containment
  • Fully enclosed in
  • ventilated rack

11
Containment 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

12
Containment 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

13
Containment 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

14
Containment 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

15
Special 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!)

16
Zoonoses
  • 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

17
Some 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

18
Rodent 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)

19
Transmission 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

20
Control 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

21
Laboratory 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

22
Sources of Exposure to LAA
  • Hair and dander shed from animal
  • Urine and feces dried in bedding
  • Particulates shed from bedding material
  • Animal saliva

23
Routes 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)

24
Risk Factors for Development of LAA
  • Exposure to allergens
  • duration
  • frequency
  • intensity
  • Previous allergic conditions
  • Other predisposing conditions
  • illness
  • Immunocompromised
  • pets

25
LAA 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
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