Principles of Zoonotic Transmission

Principles of Zoonotic Transmission

Principles of Zoonotic Transmission

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Zoonoses: Definitions & Scope - Animal Kingdom's Perils

  • Zoonosis: Disease/infection naturally transmissible between vertebrate animals & humans (WHO).
  • Direction of Transmission:
    • Anthropozoonosis: Animal → Human (e.g., Rabies, Brucellosis).
    • Zooanthroponosis (Reverse): Human → Animal (e.g., S. aureus).
    • Amphixenosis: Bidirectional (e.g., Salmonellosis).
  • Reservoir: Vertebrate animal host where agent normally lives/multiplies.
  • Scope: Major global health concern. Approx. 60% of all human pathogens & 75% of emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic.

⭐ India has a high burden of endemic zoonotic diseases like Rabies, Brucellosis, Leptospirosis, and Japanese Encephalitis.

Zoonotic transmission pathways and factors

Transmission Dynamics: Reservoirs & Routes - Pathogen Pathways

  • Reservoirs: Primary source where pathogen persists & multiplies.

    • Animal: Wild (bats: Nipah), Domestic (cattle: Brucellosis). Key for zoonoses.
    • Environmental: Soil (Anthrax), Water (Leptospirosis).
  • Routes of Transmission (Animal to Human):

    • Direct Contact: Touch, bites, body fluids (e.g., Rabies via bite, Cutaneous Anthrax).
    • Indirect Contact: Contaminated objects (fomites), environment (e.g., Q fever via dust).
    • Aerosol/Airborne: Inhalation of droplets/particles (e.g., Hantavirus, Psittacosis).
    • Vector-borne: Via arthropods (e.g., Plague by fleas, Kyasanur Forest Disease by ticks).
    • Ingestion: Contaminated food (meat, milk) or water (e.g., Salmonellosis, Brucellosis via raw milk).

Zoonotic disease transmission and prevention

⭐ Many zoonotic agents can be transmitted by multiple routes. For example, Coxiella burnetii (Q fever) can be transmitted via aerosol, direct contact, ingestion, and ticks.

Influencing Factors: Agent, Host, Environment - Zoonotic Triangle

Zoonotic Transmission Triangle

  • Agent (Pathogen Factors):
    • Type: Virus, bacteria, parasite, fungus, prion.
    • Intrinsic properties: Virulence, infectivity, pathogenicity, infective dose.
    • Adaptability: Mutation rate, antigenic variation, host range.
    • Environmental survival & vector competence.
  • Host Factors (Animal Reservoir & Human):
    • Species & breed susceptibility, genetic predisposition.
    • Immune status: Age, nutrition, stress, co-infections, vaccination status.
    • Behavioral & occupational risks: Farming, veterinary work, butchering, food habits (raw/undercooked products), hygiene.
    • Population dynamics: Density, movement, mixing.
  • Environmental Factors:
    • Climatic conditions: Temperature, humidity, rainfall (affect pathogen/vector viability & distribution).
    • Ecological changes: Deforestation, agriculture intensification, urbanization, habitat encroachment.
    • Sanitation & biosecurity levels.
    • Presence & density of vectors/intermediate hosts.
    • Socio-economic influences: Poverty, trade.

⭐ The "One Health" approach recognizes the interconnectedness of human, animal, and environmental health in preventing and controlling zoonoses.

Control Strategies: Prevention & One Health - One Health Fortress

  • Prevention Strategies:

    • Animal Reservoir: Vaccination, culling, vector control (e.g., ticks, mosquitoes), improved animal husbandry.
    • Transmission Route: Food safety (pasteurization, cooking), water purification, personal hygiene (handwashing), PPE for high-risk occupations.
    • Human Host: Vaccination (e.g., Rabies, JE), chemoprophylaxis (e.g., Doxycycline for Leptospirosis), health education.
  • One Health Approach:

    • Definition: Collaborative, multisectoral approach; recognizes interconnected human, animal, environmental health.
    • Pillars: Intersectoral collaboration (medical, vet, enviro), integrated surveillance, joint response, data sharing.
    • Goal: Achieve optimal health outcomes, build a "One Health Fortress" against zoonoses.

⭐ Globally, about 75% of new or emerging infectious diseases in people come from animals.

One Health concept diagram

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Zoonoses: Diseases naturally transmitted from vertebrate animals to humans.
  • Animals are primary reservoirs where zoonotic pathogens multiply and persist.
  • Transmission: Direct contact, indirect contact (fomites), vector-borne (e.g., ticks), foodborne, aerosol.
  • One Health approach is crucial: integrates human, animal, environmental health for control.
  • Most Emerging Infectious Diseases (EIDs) are of zoonotic origin, posing ongoing threats.
  • Key prevention: Vaccination (animal/human), vector control, food safety practices, hygiene.
  • Occupational exposure (vets, farmers) and immunocompromised status ↑ risk significantly.

Practice Questions: Principles of Zoonotic Transmission

Test your understanding with these related questions

Which of the following is the most common vector of zoonotic diseases?

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Flashcards: Principles of Zoonotic Transmission

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_____ is a zoonotic bacteria that grows on 5% sheep blood agar

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_____ is a zoonotic bacteria that grows on 5% sheep blood agar

Pasteurella multocida

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