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Zoonotic bacterial infections

Zoonotic bacterial infections

Zoonotic bacterial infections

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Zoonotic Infections - Animal Kingdom's Revenge

  • Direct contact / Ingestion
    • Brucella spp.: Unpasteurized dairy → Undulant fever. 📌 Bruce Roads Units Carrying Extra Large Loads of Ammunition.
    • Leptospira: Animal urine → Weil's disease (jaundice, azotemia).
    • Pasteurella multocida: Animal bites (cats/dogs) → Cellulitis.
  • Arthropod Vectors
    • Yersinia pestis: Fleas → Plague (buboes).
    • Francisella tularensis: Ticks, deer flies → Tularemia.
    • Rickettsia rickettsii: Tick → Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever.
    • Borrelia burgdorferi: Tick → Lyme disease.

Pathogenesis of Bacterial Zoonotic Diseases

Q fever (Coxiella burnetii) is a classic zoonosis without an arthropod vector. It is often acquired via inhalation of aerosols from infected animal placentas and birth fluids (cattle, sheep, goats).

Gram-Positive Zoonoses - Farm & Field Foes

Anthrax life cycle and transmission to humans

  • Bacillus anthracis (Anthrax)

    • Source: Spores from soil, animal hides, wool (sheep, cattle).
    • Virulence: Poly-D-glutamate capsule, Edema Toxin (↑cAMP), and Lethal Toxin (protease).
    • Forms:
      • Cutaneous: Painless papule evolves into a black eschar with significant surrounding edema.
      • Inhalational: Flu-like start, progressing to hemorrhagic mediastinitis (widened mediastinum on CXR).
  • Listeria monocytogenes

    • Source: Contaminated food (deli meats, soft cheeses); survives cold temperatures.
    • Features: Tumbling motility; uses "actin rockets" for intracellular spread.
    • High-Risk: Pregnant women, neonates, elderly, and immunocompromised.
  • Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae

    • Source: Occupational exposure from handling fish, swine, or poultry.
    • Clinical: Erysipeloid-a well-demarcated, violaceous, non-suppurative cellulitis, typically on the hands.

⭐ In suspected meningitis in neonates (<3 months), the elderly (>60), or the immunocompromised, ampicillin is added to empiric therapy specifically to cover Listeria.

Gram-Negative Zoonoses - Plague & Pestilence

  • Yersinia pestis (Plague)

    • Reservoir: Rodents (prairie dogs); Vector: Fleas.
    • Presents as bubonic (painful buboes), pneumonic, or septicemic plague.
    • Gram-negative coccobacillus with bipolar "safety pin" staining.
    • Tx: Streptomycin or Gentamicin. Yersinia pestis (Plague bacteria) in blood smear
  • Francisella tularensis (Tularemia)

    • Reservoir: Rabbits; Vector: Ticks, deerflies.
    • Ulceroglandular is the most common form (skin ulcer + regional lymphadenopathy).
    • Facultative intracellular organism.
    • Tx: Aminoglycosides.
  • Brucella spp. (Brucellosis)

    • Reservoir: Farm animals (cattle, goats).
    • Transmission via unpasteurized dairy.
    • Presents with undulant fever, sweats, and arthralgia.
    • Tx: Doxycycline + Rifampin.

High-Yield: Brucella is a common cause of fever of unknown origin (FUO), especially in individuals with exposure to farm animals or unpasteurized dairy products.

Spirochetal Zoonoses - Twists and Turns

  • Leptospirosis (Leptospira interrogans)

    • Source: Contaminated water with animal (rodent, dog) urine.
    • Presentation: Biphasic illness. Initial flu-like symptoms & conjunctival suffusion (red eyes, no pus).
    • Severe form (Weil's Disease): Jaundice, azotemia, hemorrhagic complications, anemia.
  • Borreliosis (Lyme Disease - Borrelia burgdorferi)

    • Vector: Ixodes ticks (deer tick).
    • Stages:
      • 1 (Early Localized): Erythema migrans (bull's-eye rash).
      • 2 (Early Disseminated): Bilateral Bell’s palsy, AV block.
      • 3 (Late): Migratory arthritis, encephalopathy.

⭐ A key cardiac manifestation of Lyme disease is fluctuating, high-degree AV block.

Lyme disease: Erythema migrans rash

📌 Mnemonic (Lyme): Use "FACE" for key findings: Facial nerve palsy, Arthritis, Carditis, Erythema migrans.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Brucellosis presents with undulant fever, myalgias, and arthralgias, often linked to unpasteurized dairy.
  • Q fever (Coxiella burnetii) causes atypical pneumonia and hepatitis from aerosolized animal birth products.
  • Tularemia (Francisella tularensis) classically presents with ulceroglandular lesions after contact with rabbits or ticks.
  • Pasteurellosis (Pasteurella multocida) causes rapid-onset cellulitis following cat or dog bites.
  • Leptospirosis causes fever, myalgias, and conjunctival suffusion from animal urine-contaminated water.
  • Anthrax (Bacillus anthracis) is characterized by a painless black eschar in its cutaneous form.

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