1 / 18

West Nile Virus

West Nile Virus. What’s New in the Wildlife Arena? November 2003. 1. Emi Kate Saito. Background: Born/raised Pittsburgh PA BS, 1993: U. of WI – Madison Zoology, Biological Aspects of Conservation VMD, 1997: U. of PA MSPH, 2001: Emory U. Epidemiology WNV-related work:

cyrah
Download Presentation

West Nile Virus

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. West Nile Virus What’s New in the Wildlife Arena? November 2003

  2. 1 Emi Kate Saito • Background: • Born/raised Pittsburgh PA • BS, 1993: U. of WI – Madison • Zoology, Biological Aspects of Conservation • VMD, 1997: U. of PA • MSPH, 2001: Emory U. • Epidemiology • WNV-related work: • Dekalb Co. Board of Health, Atlanta GA (2001) • NWHC, Madison WI (since 2002) (I’m the one on the far left – INCDNCM 2003, AZ)

  3. 2 Famous last words in Emi’s life: • From a guidance counselor in high school: • “Why don’t you become a veterinarian? They work a nice M-F, 9-5 job.” • Ha. • Upon graduating from college: • “I want to be a field biologist. I’ll get my veterinary degree so I can treat my subjects if they get sick/injured.” • =little sleep & little pay • Upon graduating from vet school: • “My head hurts. I think my brain is full.”

  4. 3 Basic Virus Review • Family:Flaviviridae • Genus:Flavivirus Japanese Encephalitis Antigenic Complex • Complex includes: Japanese Encephalitis St. Louis Encephalitis Usutu - Austria 2002, 2003 West Nile

  5. Virus Virus 4 Transmission

  6. 5 Role of Wildlife in Maintenance of WNV

  7. 6 Clinical Signs • Found Dead • General weakness, lethargy • Emaciation • Sedentary • Difficulty maintaining balance, trembling • Inability to walk, perch, stand, or fly • Do not respond normally to danger

  8. 7 Dead bird mortality, 2003 • As of 11/3/2003: • approximately 13,000 dead birds found positive • 44 states + DC • Although state of MD not testing birds, positive birds found from military installations in MD • ID, NV, OR, WA • 7 Canadian Provinces • Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, Saskatchewan, Alberta, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia

  9. 8 Also in the Western Hemisphere… • Resident/non-migratory birds • Mexico • Dominican Republic • Jamaica • El Salvador?

  10. 9 # Species Affected • at least 171 dead avian species • another 35 antibody-positive • 23 mammals (including equids) • another 6 antibody-positive • prairie dogs? unconfirmed • 1 reptile • another antibody-positive

  11. 10 2003 WNV-Related Wildlife Mortality Events • American White Pelicans • Raptors • Black Vultures • Squirrels Captive/Farmed: • Alligators

  12. 11 Other Wildlife Mortality • Cotton-tail rabbits -- WY • Crows- WA

  13. 12 Testing Methods • Specimens • Organs • Oropharyngeal/cloacal swabs • Immature feathers (blood quills) • Tests • Virus Isolation • RT-PCR • VecTest

  14. 13 Utility of Continuing Dead Bird Testing and Reporting • Dead (positive) birds continue to serve as early indicator of human risk of infection • Arboviral panel/Diagnostic evaluation of dead wildlife can lead to discovery of other agents of concern • Dead bird reporting (or lack of) may indicate higher risk areas, as well as indicate areas where need to target more education campaigns • Further understanding of epidemiology and ecology of virus in North America

  15. 14 Why to stop testing… • Cost of shipping, testing, staff to collect • Inconvenience – lots of phone calls, particularly after the 1st positive • If it’s known to be in the area, could solely focus on mosquito testing… • VecTest useful – designed for mosquito testing, cheaper, considered to have acceptable sensitivity/specificity for surveillance purposes

  16. 15 Research Update…

  17. 16 Some studies to mention: • Crows in IL • Crows in OK • Blue Jays in OH • Herps • Bird Counts • Bird vaccination studies

  18. 17 Thank you for your attention! Any questions? esaito@usgs.gov 608-270-2456

More Related