Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Emerging Zoonotic Diseases

Emerging Zoonotic Diseases

Emerging Zoonotic Diseases

On this page

Intro & Drivers - Rising Tide Alert

  • Emerging Zoonotic Diseases (EZDs): Infections newly identified in a population, or previously existing but rapidly ↑ in incidence or geographic range.
  • Key Definitions:
    • Zoonosis: Disease naturally transmissible from vertebrate animals to humans.
    • Emerging: New, or rapidly ↑ incidence/range.
    • Re-emerging: Previously controlled, now ↑ again.
  • Core Drivers (Multifactorial - "One Health" Perspective):
    • Ecological Changes: Deforestation, climate change, agricultural intensification, habitat encroachment.
    • Human Demographics & Behavior: ↑Population density, urbanization, global travel & trade, changing food habits.
    • Pathogen Adaptation: Genetic mutation/reassortment (e.g., antigenic drift/shift), antimicrobial resistance.
    • Public Health Infrastructure: Weak surveillance systems, inadequate vector control, breakdown in sanitation. image

⭐ Approximately 75% of recently emerging infectious diseases affecting humans are of animal origin (zoonotic).

Viral Zoonoses - Nipah & KFD Spotlight

  • Nipah Virus (NiV)
    • Paramyxoviridae; Reservoir: Fruit bats (Pteropus).
    • Transmission: Contaminated date palm sap, animal contact (pigs), human-to-human.
    • Clinical: Acute respiratory distress, severe encephalitis. Incubation: 4-14 days. Mortality: 40-75%.
    • Diagnosis: RT-PCR (throat/nasal swab, CSF, urine), IgM/IgG ELISA.
    • Outbreaks: Kerala, West Bengal.
  • Kyasanur Forest Disease (KFD) - "Monkey Fever"
    • Flaviviridae; Vector: Haemaphysalis spinigera ticks.
    • Reservoirs: Rodents, shrews. Monkeys: sentinels & amplifying hosts.
    • Clinical: Biphasic. Phase 1: Fever, headache, myalgia, GI symptoms, hemorrhagic signs. Phase 2: Meningoencephalitis. Case fatality: 3-10%.
    • Diagnosis: RT-PCR (blood), virus isolation, serology (ELISA IgM/IgG).
    • Endemic: Karnataka (Western Ghats).

⭐ A formalin-inactivated KFD vaccine is available and recommended for individuals in endemic areas of India. Factors influencing zoonotic disease emergence

Bacterial Zoonoses - Typhus & Lepto Lowdown

  • Typhus Group (Rickettsial)
    • Scrub Typhus: Orientia tsutsugamushi. Vector: Chiggers. Eschar common, fever, rash. Weil-Felix (OX-K+). Rx: Doxycycline. Scrub Typhus Eschar
    • Murine (Endemic) Typhus: Rickettsia typhi. Vector: Rat flea. Reservoir: Rodents. Fever, rash.
    • Epidemic Typhus: Rickettsia prowazekii. Vector: Louse. High fever, rash. Brill-Zinsser (recrudescence).
  • Leptospirosis
    • Leptospira interrogans (spirochete).
    • Source: Animal urine (rodents); contaminated water/soil.
    • Clinical:
      • Phase 1 (Anicteric): Fever, headache, myalgia (calf), conjunctival suffusion.
      • Phase 2 (Icteric/Weil’s Disease): Jaundice, AKI, hemorrhage, myocarditis. High mortality.
    • Dx: MAT (gold standard).
    • Rx: Doxycycline; Penicillin/Ceftriaxone (severe).

⭐ Weil's Disease: Classic triad of jaundice, hemorrhage, and acute kidney injury (AKI).

Prevention & One Health - United Front Shield

  • Core Preventive Measures:
    • Surveillance: Robust, integrated (human-animal) systems for early warning.
    • Vaccination: Strategic for at-risk human & animal populations.
    • Vector Control: Targeted interventions (e.g., mosquitoes, ticks).
    • Food Safety: From farm-to-fork; hygienic processing, thorough cooking.
    • Biosecurity: Strict protocols on farms, in markets, and laboratories.
    • Public Education: Promoting awareness and responsible practices.
  • One Health: The Unified Strategy 📌 ACE for One Health
    • Animal Health 🐕
    • Community (Human) Health 🧑‍⚕️
    • Environmental Health 🌳
    • Principle: Interdependence of these three pillars.
    • Action: Collaborative, multi-sectoral (health, veterinary, agriculture, environment) approach.
    • Goal: Coordinated surveillance, rapid response, effective control measures.

    ⭐ The "One Health" approach is critical for tackling antimicrobial resistance (AMR) linked to zoonotic pathogens.

One Health Triad for Disease Prevention

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Nipah virus: Reservoir fruit bats (Pteropus); causes severe encephalitis; human-to-human transmission documented.
  • Kyasanur Forest Disease (KFD): Tick-borne (Haemaphysalis); monkeys are amplifying hosts; causes hemorrhagic fever.
  • Avian Influenza (e.g., H5N1, H7N9): Contact with infected poultry; high mortality; severe respiratory illness.
  • MERS-CoV: Reservoir dromedary camels; causes severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).
  • Zika Virus: Aedes mosquito vector; linked to microcephaly in newborns & Guillain-Barré syndrome.
  • Ebola Virus Disease: Reservoir likely fruit bats; transmission via direct contact with bodily fluids; high fatality rate.
  • SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19): Suspected bat origin; causes acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS); pandemic potential demonstrated globally.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE