03/09e Zoonoses Flashcards

1
Q

What is a zoonosis?

A

A disease transmitted from vertebrate animals to humans

Can be any pathogenic agent

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2
Q

What is NOT a zoonosis?

A

Fish and reptile toxins
Allergies to vertebrates
Diseases in which animal-derived food serves as a vehicle (e.g. contaminated meat)
Experimentally-transmitted diseases

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3
Q

What is the definitive life cycle of a pathogen?

A

Ecologic system transit by an organism from reservoir, vector, and host
The normal life cycle of a pathogen in animals

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4
Q

What is an incidental host?

A

An organism susceptible to infection but not part of the definitive life cycle

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5
Q

What is an epizootic?

A

A disease that appears at a rate higher than expected in a given animal population (epidemic)

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6
Q

What is an enzootic?

A

A disease that is maintained in a population without need for external inputs (endemic)

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7
Q

What are six examples of possible bioterrorism agents that are also zoonoses?

A
Bacillus anthracis
C. botulinum
Yersinia pestis
Francisella tularensis
Hemorrhagic fever viruses
Brucella sp.
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8
Q

What are orthozoonoses?

A

Zoonoses that can be perpetuated by a single vertebrate species
Examples - rabies, brucellosis

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9
Q

What are cyclozoonoses?

A

Require more than one vertebrate species, but no invertebrate species to be perpetuated
Example - tapeworms

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10
Q

What are metazoonoses?

A

Require vertebrate and invertebrate species to be perpetuated
Examples - all arboviral infections, plague, rickettsial diseases, schistosomiasis

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11
Q

What are some examples of routes of transmission for zoonoses?

A
Direct contact - tularemia
Contact with animal products such as skins - anthrax
Contact with urine - hanta virus
Fecal-oral route - salmonella
Bites and scratches - rabies
Via ectoparasites - Lyme disease
Eating undercooked meat and fish
Ingestion of milk - mycobacterium
Respiratory route - histoplasmosis
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12
Q

What are some factors that contribute to the emergence of zoonoses? Name seven

A

1) Microbial adaptation and change - influenza, rabies
2) Breakdown of public health measures - brucella, anthrax
3) Climate change - dengue and yellow fevers
4) Human demography and behavior - HIV
5) Agrobusiness - E. coli
6) Land use - yellow fever, Lyme disease
7) International travel - SARS

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13
Q

What are six ways that you might be exposed to animals, and thus zoonoses?

A

1) Pet ownership
2) Leisure pursuits (hunting, fishing, camping)
3) Occupations (veterinarian, farmer, etc.)
4) Medical research
5) Travel
6) Immigration

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14
Q

What are some factors that influence risk of infection from an animal bite? Name five

A

1) Type of animal
2) Location of bite
3) Type of wound (puncture vs. crush)
4) Treatment delay
5) Nature of the patient (age, preexisting conditions, immunosuppression)

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15
Q

What are some common bite wound pathogens obtained from dog bites?

A

Viruses - rabies
Bacteria - Pasturella, Capnocytophaga canimorsus, tularemia
Normal skin flora

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16
Q

What are some common bite wound pathogens obtained from cat bites?

A

Viruses - rabies
Bacteria - Pasturella, plague, tularemia
Normal skin flora

17
Q

What human behaviors particularly contribute to the emergence and transmission of zoonoses?

A

Consumption of bush meat and wildlife
Hunting on wild animal game ranches
Owning exotic wildlife as pets
Translocation of wildlife

18
Q

What is leptospirosis?

A

Protean disease
Asymptomatic in most cases
Symptoms are usually mild - fever, myalgia, suffusion, headache
Severe disease - Weil’s disease in 5-10% of symptomatic patients

19
Q

How is leptospirosis transmitted?

A

Excreted in animal urine or placentas
Established in soil and water
Can infect humans and other animals through direct contact with animals, through soil/water, or through mucous membranes

20
Q

What is Q fever?

A

Infection caused by Coxiella burnetii
Spread by livestock, but is very rare
Causes fever, chills, weight loss, anemia, and endocarditis

21
Q

What diseases are caused by Bartonella species?

A

Cat scratch disease
Carrion’s disease
Trench fever

22
Q

What traditionally human-only infection is now becoming a concern in animals?

A

MRSA!