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Chapter 22 Animal Disease and the Health of Humans

Chapter 22 Animal Disease and the Health of Humans. Importance of Animal Health. Production of wholesome animal products for human consumption Zoonotic concerns (public health) Aesthetics and pleasure Sports (e.g. horse racing)

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Chapter 22 Animal Disease and the Health of Humans

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  1. Chapter 22Animal Disease and the Health of Humans

  2. Importance of Animal Health • Production of wholesome animal products for human consumption • Zoonotic concerns (public health) • Aesthetics and pleasure • Sports (e.g. horse racing) • Economics (loss of production, cost of prevention and treatment)

  3. Definitions • Health: state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being (WHO Definition) • Health: state in which all parts of the body are functioning normally • Disease: disturbance in function or structure of any organ or body part • Public Health: health of human populations (e.g. on a community basis)

  4. Losses Due to Disease in USA • 10% of pigs die before weaning • 10-15% of calves and lambs die • 10% of chickens and turkeys die • Morbidity losses may exceed mortality loss • Estimated losses due to disease exceed $6.9 billion annually in the United States (>10% of total income of livestock industry)

  5. Food-Related Illnesses • > 200 diseases transmitted via foods • United States has 6-81 million cases of food-borne disease and 9000 deaths/yr • ~ 90% are bacterial • Campylobacter -Listeria monocytogenes • Salmonella -Yersinia enterocolitica • Escherichia coli O157:H7

  6. Methods Used to Reduce Food-Borne Illnesses • Reduce infections in animals • Modify processing procedures • Improve storage refrigeration • Educate food preparers • Carcass decontamination • Food irradiation

  7. Types of Disease • Infectious Diseases • Produced by pathogens (germs) • Non-Infectious Diseases • Mechanical injuries • Digestive disturbances • Poisoning or intoxifications • Nutritional deficiencies • Abnormal cell growth (e.g. cancer) • Genetic Disorders • Metabolic Disorders

  8. Disease Spread • Contact with infected animals • Polluted water • Contaminated vehicles, chutes, crates, etc. • Carrier animals • Carrion feeders • Insects and ticks • Airborne particles

  9. Pathogen Entry • Respiratory tract • Digestive tract • Wound contamination • Mucous membranes of eye • Genital tract • Teat canal • Naval cord • Contaminated instruments • Insect bites

  10. Body Defenses Against Disease • Body coverings (hair, skin, mucous) • Body secretions (lysozyme, other enzymes, gastric acid) • Phagocytic system (leukocytes, liver, lymph nodes) • Immune system (antibodies, “killer T cells”) • Inflammation

  11. Inflammation • Reaction to injury with goal of destroying injurious agent • Five cardinal signs: • Redness (rubor), increased blood supply • Heat (calor) • Swelling (edema, “tumor”) • Pain, tenderness (dolor) • Loss of function (functico laesa)

  12. Immunity • Ability to resist and/or overcome infection • May be natural (inherent, innate) or acquired (following infection or immunization) • May be active or passive • See Table 22.1

  13. Definitions • Antigen = substance (usually proteins foreign to the animal) that stimulates the formation of specific antibodies • Antibodies = specific proteins (serum globulins) that react against a specific antigen (may destroy, neutralize, render insoluble, or promote phagocytosis of the antigen)

  14. Natural (Inherent) Resistance • Mechanical • Skin, hair • Mucous • Physiological • Body temperature • Acidity of body secretions • Species differences (only people get measles)

  15. Acquired Resistance • Passive • Antibodies produced by another animal and transferred via injection of antiserum or ingestion of colostrum • Active • Antibodies produced following infection or artificial exposure via immunization (vaccines) • See Table 22.1

  16. Types of Vaccines • Toxoid (contains a toxin from the bacteria) • Bacterin (suspension of killed bacteria) • Modified live (organisms have been treated to reduce virulence, attenuated) • Polyvalent (contain more than one subtype)

  17. Vaccines to Control Cancer • Marek’s Disease is a form of cancer in chickens • Can be prevented through use of fowlpox vaccine • Basis was Jenner’s observation that milkmaids exposed to cowpox virus were protected from developing smallpox

  18. New Vaccine Technologies • Monoclonal production (e.g. using hybridoma cells) • Oral rabies vaccine for wildlife • Genetically engineered (use of selected antigens rather than whole organisms)

  19. Genetic Resistance to Disease • Ability to prevent entrance of the infectious agent • Ability to effectively destroy the infectious agent • Differing susceptibility to nutritional diseases (differences in absorption or metabolism of nutrients)

  20. Antigen-Antibody Reactions • Agglutination (clumping, interlocking) • Precipitation (precipitation of molecules from a solution) • Complement-Fixation Reaction • See Figure 22.2 • Toxin-Antitoxin Reaction

  21. Testing for Disease • Physical examination • Diagnostic tests • Based on antigen-antibody reactions • Skin testing (hypersensitivity reactions) • Microscopic examinations of blood or tissues • Skin scrapings • Bacterial or fungal cultures • Fecal examinations • Chemical tests of blood or urine

  22. Selected Viral Diseases Transmissible to Humans • Rabies----see Figures 22.3 and 22.4 • All mammals are susceptible • Transmitted via saliva (rarely aerosolized) • Leading species to be affected in the USA are raccoons, skunks, bats, foxes and cats • Virus causes degeneration of CNS with convulsions, drooling, madness, paralysis and death

  23. Rabies (continued) • Vaccines for wildlife control • Chicken heads or fish laced with a live gentically engineered vaccine that utilizes vaccinia (pox) virus as a vector • Diagnosed via examination of brain or other tissues with a specific fluorescent-labeled antibody • Vaccines available for use in dogs and cats and at-risk people, horses and cattle

  24. Newcastle Disease • In humans see conjunctivitis, fever, chills, headache, general malaise • Poultry and many wild birds are susceptible • Signs include respiratory and neurological disturbances • Killed and modified live vaccines available • The velogenic form is reportable and requires slaughter of all exposed birds (in the USA)

  25. Encephalitis • Many forms---see table 22.2---primarily affect humans and horses with birds as the primary reservoir and transmission via mosquitoes • Vaccines available for use in horses • Types include: Western encephalitis, Eastern encephalitis, St. Louis encephalitis, Venzuelan encephalitis and Western Nile Virus

  26. Bluetongue • Affects sheep, cattle, goats, and wild ruminants (not humans) • Transmitted by insects (Culicoides) • Symptoms are most severe in sheep • Symptoms include swollen and cyanotic tongue, oral ulcers, lameness, wool loss, pneumonia, congenital defects in offspring • No vaccine, concern regarding reservoirs in cattle have resulted in bans on exporting cattle and semen from the USA to many other countries

  27. Smallpox (Variola) • In 1798 Edward Jenner noted that milkmaids exposed to cowpox survived epidemics of smallpox • Vaccines developed by growing cowpox (vaccinia) on skin of calves and using it to inoculate people • Declared eradicated by WHO in 1979

  28. Foot-and-Mouth Disease • Filterable virus affects cloven hooved animals • Humans rarely affected with oral lesions • Can be carried on fomites and by birds and animals, survives 3-4 months on fomites • Devastated cattle industry of Great Britain in 2001, also losses in Netherlands and South America • 7 major viral types and over 50 subtypes make vaccination difficult • Strict requirements for importation of animals

  29. Vesicular Stomatitis • Causes blisters in cattle, horses, sheep, swine and humans (plus flu-like symptoms) • Mortality is low and lesions heal • Most common in swamp areas in 10-15 yr cycles (spread by mosquitoes & gnats) • Vaccines are available for use in outbreaks

  30. Contagious Ecthyma • Also called “sore mouth”or “scabby mouth” • Highly contagious in sheep and goats • Caused by a filterable pox virus • Affected people have vesicles on hands and face (contact areas) • Lesions usually resolve in 3 weeks • Vaccines are available

  31. Rickettsial Infections • Intracellular parasites transmitted by infected arthropods (included their feces) • Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever • Transmitted by wood and dog ticks • 500-600 human cases annually in USA • Q Fever (Coxiella burnetii) • Ticks and tick feces transmit, rarely from consumption of milk of an infected animal • Affects sheep, cattle, people (endemic in 35 states)

  32. Chlamydial Infections • Chlamydia are infectious agents with structure intermediate between viruses and bacteria • Psittacosis (Ornithosis) • Common in parakeets, pigeons, parrots, can infect poultry and wild birds • Transmitted to people by inhalation or contact with contaminated dust, feathers or urine. • Causes influenza-like symptoms

  33. Bacterial Infections Causing Disease in Animals and Humans • Tuberculosis • Mycobacterium bovis infects cattle, dogs, people • Mycobacterium tuberculosis infects humans and can be transmitted to primates and dogs • Mycobacterium avium readily infects birds and pigs • These organisms can infect most homeotherms and also poikilotherms (fish and reptiles)

  34. Control of Bovine Tuberculosis • Highly successful program has reduced incidence in USA from 5% in 1917 to < 0.01% today • USDA meat inspection program • Tuberculin skin testing of animals prior to movement from states lacking tuberculosis-free accreditation • Concern over presence of tuberculosis in wildlife (deer, elk, bison)

  35. Federal Accreditation and Tuberculosis Surveillance • See weblink http://www.aphis.usda.gov/vs/pdf_files/tb-status_levels.pdf

  36. Tuberculosis in Other Species • Swine are most susceptible to Mycobacterium avium, number of cases has decreased as swine rarely raised with poultry and swine no longer fed raw garbage • Primates are highly susceptible • Chicken are highly susceptible but rarely infected under current management practices • Feral deer in Michigan are infected

  37. Brucellosis • Brucella abortus (cattle) • Brucella melitensis (goats and sheep) • Brucella suis (swine) • Organisms can infect cattle, reindeer, caribou, bison, elk, camels, yak, people, chickens, guinea pigs, hamsters, mice, monkeys, rabbits and rats

  38. Brucellosis • Organisms can infect cattle, reindeer, caribou, bison, elk, camels, yak, people, chickens, guinea pigs, hamsters, mice, monkeys, rabbits and rats

  39. Brucellosis in Farm Animals • Infects placenta causing abortion • Secreted into milk • While relatively species-specific cross infection can occur • Sheep and goats are susceptible to B. melitensis and sometimes B. abortus • Non-pasteurized sheep and goat milk and cheese are sources for human infections

  40. Brucellosis in People • “Malta Fever” or Mediterranean Fever (goat herdsmen on Island of Malta) • Undulant fever (symptoms includes an undulating fever) • “Bang’s Disease (Bernard Bang established the organism as a cause of abortion in cattle)

  41. Sources of Human Infection • Unpasteurized milk • Inhalation • Handling infected animals • Laboratory cultures • See Figure 22.6

  42. Surveillance for Brucellosis • Brucellosis Card Test • An agglutination test using serum or plasma • Brucellosis Milk Ring Test • Screens dairy herds, in USA at least 4 times annually on bulk tank milk • See Figure 22.5

  43. Classification of Brucellosis Status • See Figure 22.7 • USDA classifies States • Free (no infections in > 12 months) • Class A (infection rate below 0.25%) • Class B (infection rate 0.26-1.5%) • Class C (infection rate > 1.5%) • Currently NO class B or C States • Weblink: http://www.aphis.usda.gov/vs/nahps/brucellosis/

  44. Prophylaxis and Control of Brucellosis • Slaughter of infected animals (no effective therapy) • Vaccination with B. abortus strain 19 or RB51 (the latter preferred as does not interfere with diagnostic tests) • Current concern centers on presence of brucellosis in wild cervids………especially free ranging bison in Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons National Parks

  45. Leptospirosis • Many domestic and wild animals are susceptible • Many strains (vaccines are available) • Cattle L. hardjo and others • Swine L. pomona and others • Leptospira bacteria thrive in moist environments • Produce anemia, kidney disease, liver disease, abortions • Influenza-like symptoms in people

  46. Anthrax • Bacillus anthracis is the causative bacteria • First disease traced to a microbial source and first one to have a preventative vaccine • Spores can be viable and virulent > 50 yrs • Herbivores are the most susceptible however many species including humans can be infected

  47. Anthrax • Sources of infection • Ingesting contaminated feed or carcasses • Insect or other mechanical vectors • Direct contact (e.g. infected skin, hide, hair) • Inhalation (bioterriorism risk) • Prevention: cremate/bury carcasses, irradiation, vaccination • Treatment (humans): ciprofloxacin, doxycycline

  48. Salmonellosis • More than 2300 serotypes • S. typhimurium causes 30% of human cases • S. enteriditis of poultry can be transmitted to people through undercooked eggs • Other sources of human infection include raw milk, undercooked meat, and mechanical spread by rodents,cockroaches and houseflies • Approximately 2 million people infected in United States annually (primarily GI signs)

  49. Salmonellosis • S. dublin • Produces diarrhea and death in calves • Swine can be infected and transmit to people through undercooked meat, prevention in swine includes not feeding raw garbage to swine

  50. Tularemia • Francisella tularensis • Chief vectors are ticks and flies • Dog tick, wood tick • Deerfly, horsefly • Direct contact with infected animals or inhalation of organism can also transmit • Affects mammals, birds, and reptiles • Signs in humans: fever, may last for weeks

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