1 / 26

Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Charles H. Bronson, Commissioner

Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Charles H. Bronson, Commissioner. Rift Valley Fever - A Florida Animal Health Perspective. Dr. Thomas J. Holt, State Veterinarian FDACS, Division of Animal Industry October 4, 2008. Rift Valley Fever (RVF).

garth
Download Presentation

Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Charles H. Bronson, Commissioner

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Charles H. Bronson, Commissioner Rift Valley Fever - A Florida Animal Health Perspective Dr. Thomas J. Holt, State Veterinarian FDACS, Division of Animal Industry October 4, 2008

  2. Rift Valley Fever (RVF) • Epidemic hepatitis of ruminants • High mortality in neonates and abortion • RNA virus vectored by mosquitoes • Zoonotic with acute influenza-like illness with some blindness, encephalitis and death • Endemic to east Africa – Rift Valley region with outbreaks in north Africa and Middle East • Viewed as significant threat to the United States

  3. 1. RVF Ecology/Epidemiology • Disease caused by virus in Family Bunyaviridae, Genus Phebovirus • First described in Kenya 1931 after epizootic in sheep on a farm north of Lake Naivasha • Viral zoonosis that affects livestock and humans in Africa • affects primarily domestic livestock • horses, pigs, poultry and wild birds non-susceptible? • Human symptoms - a flu-like illness with fever, weakness, back pain, dizziness, and weight loss – leading to hemorrhage (severe bleeding), encephalitis (inflammation of the brain), or severe eye complications • Treatment – None, experimental use of antiviral ribavirin • No U.S. licensed animal or human vaccine • Mortality – 1-25% in humans, 80-100% in livestock Lake Naivasha, Kenya

  4. Clinical RVF in Cattle

  5. Clinical features in Sheep and Goats

  6. Short Duration Viremia Examples: RVF, CHIK, CCHF Fever Virus/Ag Nt/ELISA Antibody IgM Antibody 3-5 days 3-5 days Time

  7. SummaryPatterns of RVF Infection • Incubation period for RVF is relatively short (3-5 days in adult humans, 12 hours in young animals) • Fever coincides with short viremia • Viremia 3-10 days in humans • Viremia 2-5 days in cattle • Amplitude of viremia high (>108 PFU/ml)) • Long-lasting immune response • Lifelong IgG and neutralization antibodies in humans

  8. RVF Transmission Biological – Mosquitoes Mechanical – Flies, midges, other arthropods Aerosol – Direct contact with infected tissues

  9. Aedesmcintoshi infected with RVF virus transovarially

  10. Culex species - important secondary vectors of RVF

  11. Possible Sources of Introduction Infected Vectors Viremic Animals Viremic People Contaminated Viscera and Tissues Contaminated Raw Milk

  12. Potential Impacts of a Zoonotic Disease Like RVF • Direct and hidden costs • Costs due to potential loss • Effect on agricultural and public health industry • Effects on economy at large (livestock feed suppliers, health care insurance, and food-service industry) • Loss of confidence in food source • BSE (1986) in UK cost EU > $100 billion • OIE imposes 4-year trade ban on country with RVF • OIE lifts ban after 6 months disease free • U.S. had $5.7 billion beef-related exports in 2003

  13. Epidemiology Considerations in U.S. • Zoonotic agent • Wide variety of mammals (deer, rodents, birds?) • Mosquito species • Vertical transmission in mosquitoes • Few U.S. veterinarians have experience with controlling vector-borne disease

  14. Implications of RVF Outbreak For U.S. and other Countries • National – the U.S. is a major hub of global travel, a major hub of immigration and commerce, large civilian and military presence all over the world and specifically Horn Africa – govt., military, business, aid – so the disease could impact U.S. national interests directly • Importation/introduction of RVF in the U.S. directly • Risk not determined but even more serious than above • Decimation of the domestic beef cattle industry • No exports • Loss of confidence in the beef industry, also will happen with the sheep and goat industries, affect dairy cattle because of safety concerns, abortions of pregnant animals and death in young animals • Disease in people – • There is no U.S. approved animal or human vaccine • Only way to control it is through mosquito control • Rivabirin – anti-viral drug – interferes with the replication of the virus genome, can reduce human severity of the disease but is in short supply and may not be used on a large scale • Could be introduced into U.S. wildlife population • Deer population and other wild ungulates at high risk • Could become endemic in deer population in some or all regions of U.S./North America • Could serve as a reservoir of the virus for humans and domestic animals

  15. Implications of RVF Outbreak For U.S. and other Countries (continued) • Could be introduced into U.S. mosquitoes • Various Culex and some Aedes species of mosquitoes are susceptible to the virus and will transmit virus efficiently • Transmission by mosquitoes would be widespread in all regions of continental U.S. • Virus might become established transovarially in Aedes mosquito • Virus transmitted to eggs of mosquito and then passed from larvae, pupae to adult • Known to occur in Africa • Virus would be virtually impossible to eradicate/eliminate

  16. Potential Mechanisms of RVF Introduction into the U.S. • International travel by people • Many people travel back and forth between U.S. and RVF endemic countries • Many FNs travel from endemic countries to the U.S. • Travelers/visitors on commercial flights from RVF endemic areas can reach virtually any U.S. city in 36 hrs. (shorter than the incubation period of RVF) • Immigrants - many people immigrate to the U.S. from RVF endemic areas • Returning U.S. military forces previously deployed in RVF endemic areas • By mosquitoes • On an airplane where there is a direct flight between an endemic region and the U.S. – not common, but can happen – also by military flights • Maritime containers/ships: Increased where you have plants-water with rodents • may take weeks, but you have the life cycle going on, including virus transmission • there are maritime container ports near JKI - Kenya • Example: • Containers are sealed and may contain mosquitoes: • in a day or two, the container is put on a truck and driven to Mombasa • put on a ship • ship could go to multiple U.S. ports • e.g.. New Orleans, may be opened there or remain closed and be transported to thousands of inland ports via truck rail or ship and open virtually at any city in the U.S.

  17. Potential Mechanisms of RVF Introduction into the U.S. (cont.) • Movement of infected animals into the U.S. • Rare from Africa but could enter easily via Mexico • Intentional introduction • Somebody in EA knows an outbreak is going on • Does not have to be sophisticated • Could bring infected animal tissue • If more sophisticated, could bring the virus in a container • Infect domestic animal by inoculation

  18. Rift Valley Fever Tabletop Exercise hosted by the: Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services/Division of Animal Industry prepared by the: University of Florida/College of Veterinary Medicine Dr. Paul Gibbs

  19. State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC) November 18-20, 2008

  20. Exercise Purpose • The purpose of this exercise will be to give participants an opportunity to plan, initiate, and evaluate current response concepts, and capabilities in a simulated introduction and outbreak of Rift Valley Fever in Florida

  21. Exercise Focus • This exercise will focus on multiagency coordination and the critical decisions of key state regulatory/emergency response agencies in the first days of the simulated disease outbreak

  22. SEOC War Room State Warning Point

  23. Scheduled Participating Agencies • Florida Division of Emergency Management • Florida Department of Health • Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission • FDACS/Office of Agricultural Law Enforcement • FDACS/Agricultural Environmental Services • FDACS/Division of Animal Industry • FDACS/Division of Dairy • FDACS/Commissioner’s Office • USDA/APHIS

  24. University of Florida, College of Veterinary Medicine

  25. The Florida Veterinary Corps (The Corps) has been established to enlist veterinarians and veterinary technicians who are willing to volunteer their services in responding to animal emergencies in the state of Florida.

  26. Role of Private Veterinarians in Emergency Response • Local Expert Consultations • Disease Management for Specific Clients coordinated with ICS • Serve as ICS Responder – Paid or Unpaid • Industry Outreach • Planning/Operations

More Related