1 / 40

Rabies and Public Health

Rabies and Public Health. History Epidemiology Pathogenesis Response. History. A recognized disease as early as 2300 BC Aristotle wrote about rabies in 322 BC Saliva of rabid dogs was recognized as “venomous” in the 1 st century AD. History. First documented case in US Virginia, 1753

cherie
Télécharger la présentation

Rabies and Public Health

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. Rabies and Public Health History Epidemiology Pathogenesis Response

  2. History • A recognized disease as early as 2300 BC • Aristotle wrote about rabies in 322 BC • Saliva of rabid dogs was recognized as “venomous” in the 1st century AD

  3. History • First documented case in US • Virginia, 1753 • Colonial times-1950s • Dogs highest vector risk • 1960s-today • Wildlife greatest reservoir

  4. Historyzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz • Raccoon rabies: • Noticed in FL in mid 50s • Spread to VA in 1970s • Seen everywhere but sw VA • Skunk rabies • Present in low levels in sw VA since 1960s

  5. Epidemiology

  6. Epidemiology

  7. Cases of Animal Rabies, Virginia, 1999-2003

  8. Rabies distribution

  9. Disease Transmission • Almost always a bite • Virus cannot enter intact skin • Virus can cross mucus membranes • Less efficient • Breaks in skin are a risk only if wet saliva gets in wound

  10. Pathogenesis • Virus enters the body • Virus enters NM junctions • Travels via peripheral nerves to spinal cord • Then to brain stem and forebrain

  11. Disease in Animals • Two major clinical types in dogs and cats • Furious • Restless, irritable, disoriented, seizures • More common in cats • Paralytic • Extremity paralysis, altered bark, salivating • More common in dogs

  12. The Disease in Man • Initial clinical symptoms include anxiety, headache, mild fever, irritation at bite site • Progresses to muscle spasms, difficulty swallowing, hydrophobia • Clinical course is typically short

  13. Rabies Timeline incubation exposure virus shed. signs death dogs 10 d-6 m 0-5d 0-8d hu 5d-6y 2-14d Other ? ? ?

  14. Laboratories • Fairfax County HD • Norfolk HD • DCLS Southwest Micro lab. • DCLS Central lab.

  15. Testing • An animal involved in significant human exposure. • An animal involved in significant domestic animal exposure. • A bat when significant human exposure can not reasonably be determined.

  16. Significant exposure • Bite • Saliva contact with mucus membrane or skin break

  17. Testing • Direct Fluorescent Antibody(DFA) • May be used on fresh or decomposed tissue. • Produces sensitive and rapid results. • Considered the most reliable of all available technologies. • Daily quality control steps assure accuracy.

  18. Principles of DFA Fluorochrome-labeled Antibody to Rabies Virus Rabies Virus infected Cell Labeled Antibody-Rabies Virus

  19. DFA Results < Positive Brain Negative Brain >

  20. Public Health Response

  21. Public Health Response • Human exposed to dog, cat or ferret • Observe animal for 10 days • Test if illness or death w/in observation period • Should be discussed with health director • IS NOT DEPENDENT ON VACCINATION STATUS

  22. Public Health Response • Human exposed to livestock • Typically 10-14 days observation • Possibly testing + Post exposure tx. (PEP)

  23. Public Health Response

  24. Public Health Response • Vaccinated dog, cat or ferret exposed • Proof of current immunization • Immediate booster • 45 days confinement • Testing if signs of rabies develop

  25. Public Health Response • Unvaccinated dog, cat, ferret exposed • Euthanize or 6 months isolation • Vaccinate one month prior to release • Test if signs of rabies develop

  26. Public Health Response • Expired vaccination • Euthanize or 6 month isolation • Vaccinate immediately and one month prior to release • Depending on the circumstances, some of these animals can be considered as currently vaccinated

  27. Public Health Response • Livestock exposed • Vaccinated • Boost and 3 months observation • Unvaccinated • Immediate slaughter or • 6 months observation

  28. Public Health Response • Wildlife exposures • No observation time • High risk species • Low risk species • Test when possible or situation warrants

  29. Public Health Response • Control/Education • Vaccinate dogs and cats • Wildlife vaccination initiatives • Animal control • Avoid direct contact with wildlife • Pre-exp. vaccination for high risk professions

  30. Public Health Response • Control/Education • Prompt attention to bites • Good communication with all parties involved in follow up • Prompt PEP when necessary

  31. Recent cases in Virginia • 1998-unknown exposure, silver haired bat variant, prison in work program • 2003-raccoon variant, no history of exposure, diagnosed 3 months after death

  32. Rabies Fun Facts • Early treatments for rabies in people included: • Total immersion in salt water • Lighting gunpowder in wounds • Blood letting

  33. Rabies Fun Facts • Famous bite victims: • Emily Bronte • Cardinal Crescence, 1532 • Rabies was eradicated from the Scandinavian countries as early as 1832 • Some MDs used to advise that if a dog drank after biting, the dog could not be rabid

  34. Interesting situations • Concerning non-bite exposures • Bat • Raccoon • Goat • Concerning low risk exposures • Monkey

  35. Post Exposure Potpourri • Peruvian PEP • Old PEP • PEP reactions

  36. Good Resources • www.vdh.virginia.gov • VDH Programs • Epidemiology Program • Zoonotic and Environmental Epi.

  37. Good Resources • www.cdc.gov/healthypets • www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/rabies • www.nasphv.org

  38. Questions?

More Related