|
How people get infected: transmission, risk factors
|
Routes of transmission
Microbes and parasites can be transmitted from animals to humans
and vice versa in many different ways:
1 Via direct contact between man and animal
2 Indirectly via food of animal origin
3 Indirectly via water and soil
4 Indirectly via insects, ticks, or rats/mice
1 Via direct contact between man and animal
2 Indirectly via food of animal origin
3 Indirectly via water and soil
4 Indirectly via insects, ticks, or rats/mice
Transmission via direct contact between humans and animals
Direct contact occurs when human skin comes into contact with the
skin of the animal. This happens, for example, when you wash or milk
an animal or when you vaccinate animals.
An example is ringworm, which is a fungus (not a worm) that can be
present in the skin of humans and animals. If you lay your cheek
against the cow when you are milking, it will give the fungus the opportunity
to invade your skin via this direct contact. If infected, red
circles caused by the ringworm will appear on the area of contact (skin
of cheek) a few days later. See Table 1 for other examples of zoonoses
that can be transmitted by direct contact.
Direct contact may also occur through touching dung or droppings of
animals (faeces), as well as urine and saliva. If a dog has rabies, for
example, the rabies-virus is present in the saliva of the dog. When a
rabid dog bites or licks a person, this person gets infected with the virus
in the saliva of the dog. See also chapter Rabies.
Another example of a zoonosis through direct contact is brucellosis,
which can cause abortion* or stillbirth in animals. The microbes are
often present in birth fluids, so a person coming into contact with it
when assisting the animal, for instance, can get the microbes on their
hands, face or mouth and can become infected with brucellosis. Pregnant
women may abort when infected with brucellosis. Men infected
with brucellosis can develop Malta fever. See also chapter Brucellosis.
Type of direct contact | Disease | Extra information |
Biting / scratching | Rabies | Causes paralysis in all animals and in humans. Can also be transmitted when saliva drips on the skin of someone. |
Petting*, handling or brushing | Ecthyma/orf Ringworm Scabies |
Causes blisters in sheep/goats/humans Causes red circles on the skin of animals and humans Causes severe itching in animals and humans. Animal scabies does not survive for long on humans. |
Touching birth fluids | Brucellosis | May cause abortion |
Touching sick or dead birds | Avian influenza | Is often deadly in poultry (but not in other birds) and is sometimes deadly in humans |
Table 1: Some major zoonotic diseases and ways of transmission
via direct contact.
Indirect transmission via food of animal origin
Zoonoses that are transmitted via food of animal origin (milk, cheese,
meat, eggs, honey) are called food-borne zoonoses. They can be
transmitted to humans via consumption or by touching the meat, organs,
milk, blood, wool or eggs of
animals carrying the diseases.
People working with animals to
make these products have a
greater risk of contracting a
zoonosis.
|
Honey
Honey is good for energy and
general resistance. If applied very
thinly on wounds it can improve
healing. Because of certain microbes
(clostridia) sometimes present
in honey, it is safest not to
give it to babies under one year of
age and very young children that
are ill.
|
Salmonellosis
Another example of a food-borne disease is salmonellosis, caused by
salmonella bacteria. These bacteria are found naturally in the intestines
of some humans and some animals (especially poultry and
swine). When animals, for example poultry, are slaughtered, the content
of the intestines may contaminate the meat with salmonella microbes.
Eggs from an infected chicken can also become contaminated.
Humans eating these eggs or meat may become infected with salmonella
and they get salmonellosis, which causes diarrhoea and can be
fatal for young, old or weak people. Heating can kill the bacteria, so
there is no danger of infection provided you cook meat well and boil
eggs for more than five minutes or fry them properly (so that the egg
white is really white). See Table 2 for other examples of zoonosis that
can be spread via food.
Type of food | Disease | Some extra information |
Meat | Toxoplasmosis Trichinellosis Cysticercosis and Tapeworms Anthrax Sarcocystosis* Campylobacter |
In raw pork or mutton In pork Tapeworms from pork are dangerous; tapeworms from beef are not dangerous. The intestinal form of anthrax is caused by eating the meat of animals that died from anthrax. Causes various symptoms: slight headache, painful muscle swelling, influenza-like symptoms. Present in raw meat |
Raw Milk and dairy products (fresh cheese) | Brucellosis Tuberculosis |
Gives influenza-like symptoms when transmitted
via milk. See also Table 1. Bovine tuberculosis affects the stomach and intestines. |
Eggs | Salmonellosis | Present in raw eggs; may be deadly to very young, old or weak people. |
Fish and seafood | Fish liver flukes | In fresh water fish and snails, mainly in southeast Asia. They cause chronic and painful infections in the liver and bile duct. |
Honey | Botulism | Especially a problem for babies. |
Table 2: Some major food-borne zoonotic diseases and how they
are transmitted.
Some zoonotic diseases can also be transmitted via food that is not of
animal origin, such as vegetables and fruits that are eaten without
prior cooking. It also means that drinking water can be a source of
infection too.
Examples:
- When plants such as lettuce are irrigated with water contaminated with human excrement containing parasites, cysticercosis - in particular - can occur.
- People eating lettuce that has been fertilised with cow manure containing E. coli O157 bacteria (also called VTEC) can become infected with these bacteria.
- The Nipah virus can be transmitted through droppings of bats. People who eat fruit contaminated with bat-droppings could get Nipah.
Indirect transmission via the environment
Here we talk about microbes or parasites that are not directly transmitted
from animals to humans. Instead, they are transmitted from animals (or animal products) first to water, soil, household equipment or
garden tools, and thence to humans.
Animals droppings on agricultural land |
© Agromisa Foundation and CTA, Wageningen, 2008. |
For example, those who work on the land can be contaminated with
residues of animal excrement that contain parasites or pathogenic microbes.
To prevent this, it is essential that you wash your hands with
soap after working on the land, before preparing food and before eating.
Likewise, it is necessary to fry or cook vegetables before eating
them.
Another example is raw chicken meat that may contain Salmonella or
Campylobacter microbes. People are exposed to the risk of becoming
infected when they eat cooked food that has been cut or prepared on
the same plate used for raw chicken, which could be infected.
Examples of microbes that can be in dirty soil are: larva migrans, listeria
and toxoplasma (see that chapter). Leptospira can be found in
the urine of rodents. Dirty wells with dead rats in it are notorious for
causing leptospirosis (see that chapter). Examples of other waterborne
zoonoses are explained in the text in Box 3.
Box 3: Faecal contamination of water
Faecal contamination is contamination of water by excrement, dung. Microbes
contaminate water when animals or humans defecate in the water. Some examples
are:
Prevention 1) Prevent water from becoming contaminated: If you use a lake or river for
drinking water, make sure that ruminants and pigs do not walk in the water
and defecate there. Water deep in the ground is cleaner than water in rivers
or from roofs of houses after rain. Use a pump to get drinking water
from a well that has a cover so that excrements of humans and animals
cannot fall into the well.
2) Prevent people from drinking contaminated water or get rid of the contamination:
Boil drinking water and drink it shortly after you boil it, because if
you let it stand too long it may become contaminated again.
|
Indirect transmission via insects, ticks or other creatures
In this case, a so-called vector is needed for transmission, for example
ticks and mosquitoes as shown in Table 3. For example, when a tsetse
fly bites an animal carrying sleeping sickness microbes, these microbes
are transmitted to the fly. Then, when the fly bites a human the
microbes enter the bloodstream of this human causing sleeping sickness.
Diseases spread by insects from person to person, without an animal reservoir are NOT called zoonoses (for example malaria). |
Table 3: Some major zoonotic diseases and transmission via insects, ticks and other animals
Vector | Disease | Some extra info |
Mosquitoes | Equine encephalitis* Rift Valley Fever, Yellow fever, Dengue Japanese encephalitis West Nile Virus |
Western and eastern equine encephalitis (WEE and EEE)
occur in North America. Venezuelan encephalitis is found in
South and Central America. In severe cases brain problems
occur that can cause paralysis. Rift Valley fever, Yellow fever and Dengue are all hemorrhagic fevers (HF). All HF begin with fever, muscle pain and fatigue. Sometimes there is a second phase with severe bleeding (haemorrhage). Japanese encephalitis: Pigs and birds are reservoirs; not only present in Japan, but in whole southeast Asia. West Nile Virus: Mainly in North America. |
Sand fly | Leishmaniasis | There are several forms of Leishmaniasis and not all of them are zoonoses. |
Vinchuca | Chagas' Disease | The vinchuca is a kind of beetle. Symptoms vary from nothing to very severe illness. |
Fleas | Pest / Plague | Has caused major epidemics in the past; is now only present in certain areas of the world. |
Tsetse fly | Sleeping sickness | Animals do not get ill from human sleeping sickness, but they can be a reservoir*. |
A vector not mentioned in Table 3 is the tick. Ticks are small insects with an oval body, a head and eight legs. There are around 800 sorts of ticks which all feed on blood. Toxins or microbes in the tick's saliva are transmitted through the bite into the human or animal blood stream and can cause disease.
Examples of tick-borne zoonoses are Lyme disease (found in Europe and North America), tick-bite fever (has different names in different parts of the world) Q-fever and Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (mainly in Africa).
Ticks not only transmit zoonotic diseases they also transmit other animal diseases such as East Coast fever, babesiosis and "heart water disease" in cattle, which cause major problems and economic losses.
Figure 4: Two types of ticks that can be carriers of many different (zoonotic) diseases: Ixodes ticks (left, also called 'bont tick') and Amblyomma ticks. Amblyomma ticks (right) mostly sit on the udder and under the tail of animals, while Ixodes ticks can be found on the whole body of animals and humans. The ticks in the figure are enlarged; normally they are half a centimetre in size, at most. |
© Agromisa Foundation and CTA, Wageningen, 2008. |
Figure 5: Small pair of curved forceps or tweezers made of metal. The middle section is movable and can be moved back and forth to open and close the tweezers. |
© Agromisa Foundation and CTA, Wageningen, 2008. |
Box 4: How to remove ticks from humans?
The best way to prevent tick-borne zoonoses in humans is to prevent ticks
from biting. This can be done by being properly dressed (cover arms and legs)
or by using repellents*. If you find a tick on your body you must remove it as
quickly as possible. Be careful! If you squeeze the tick too much, it can inject
its saliva into your body before you get it out of your skin and so it can infect
you anyway.
Use a small pair of curved forceps or tweezers (There is one specially designed
for the purpose, see Figure 5). Grasp the tick firmly with the tweezers
as close to the skin as possible. Pull the tick gently from your skin. Twisting or
turning is not necessary. After removal, check whether there are no parts of
the tick left. If these parts are difficult to remove ask a medical worker to do it.
|
People at risk
Some people run more risk of becoming infected with zoonoses than
others. They can be divided into three main groups as follows:
1 Professional contacts: farmers, butchers, veterinarians or others
whose work brings them into intensive contact with animals or animal-
products.
2 Young children, elderly, and HIV infected persons, more vulnerable
due to a less effective immune system.
3 Pregnant women.
Please see chapter on "Prevention at farm and community level"
on how these persons can protect themselves against zoonoses.
Professional contacts
If you work with animals or animal products (professional contacts)
you should be aware of the specific zoonotic risks you may encounter
while you work. And it is important if you get ill that you tell the
medical personnel in the hospital that you work with animals or animal
products. You could take this book with you to make clear that
some diseases can be transmitted from carcasses to butchers, for example.
Examples of people whose occupations place them at greater
risk are:
- Veterinarians and vaccinators
- Butchers and meat inspectors
- Milkers and milk inspectors
- Inseminators
- Farmers and people who work with livestock
- Tanners, people who work with leather
- People who work with crude wool
A woman wearing protective clothing has less risk of an infection while milking a camel. |
© Agromisa Foundation and CTA, Wageningen, 2008. |
Examples of specific zoonotic risks for these professional contacts
are: anthrax, brucellosis, tetanus and rabies.
People with a weak immune system
Everyone should be aware of the vulnerability of these persons whose
immune system is not capable of fighting diseases. They include:
- Young children: because their immune system is not yet fully developed
- Very old people: high age results in a weaker immune system
- Malnourished people: the immune system does not function well if certain vitamins are lacking or people are not getting enough food
- People with diseases affecting the immune system, such as HIV/AIDS or leukaemia.
These people and their carers need to be aware of the risk of getting ill
from many diseases. Salmonellosis is one example of a disease that
gives some people diarrhoea or no problems at all, but can kill people
with a weakened immune system.
Pregnant women
Pregnant women should take care of their own health and that of their
unborn child. A foetus is very vulnerable and the immune system of a
pregnant woman does not work as optimally as that of a non-pregnant
woman. Examples of zoonoses that pregnant women should worry
about are toxoplasmosis, listeriosis and brucellosis (see chapter "Examples of zoonoses").
More Risk factors
Risk factors are those factors that increase the risk of getting infected
by a zoonosis. Apart from occupations (see above), these can be habits,
things we do, environmental features and the like. Examples of
risk factors are:
- Poor hygiene
- Travelling
- Hunting
- Certain eating habits
- Poor meat inspection
- Poor slaughter hygiene
- Water management
- Stray dogs
- Markets with live animals
Poor hygiene
Hygiene literally means "keeping yourself
clean": by washing hands, using latrines for
the purpose of urinating or defecating, and
keeping the kitchen clean. Many diseases
can be transmitted: from (unwashed) hands
to other persons or to the mouth; or from
contaminated meat to the mouth. Examples are echinococcosis, salmonellosis and cysticercosis. Some diseases
have been virtually eradicated from so-called western countries, because
after these countries began building latrines and providing clean
water.
Human behaviour such as travelling, eating habits or hunting
People who travel are confronted with all kinds of diseases that are not
present in their home surroundings, therefore their immune systems
are not prepared to deal with these diseases (see also the text in Box 8
about vaccination in Section 5.2). Eating habits are risk factors as
well: the risk of getting salmonellosis from eating raw eggs is greater
than from eating well boiled eggs. Hunting, furthermore, brings one
into contact with wild animals that can carry many different diseases
and parasites.
Meat inspection and slaughter hygiene
Through meat inspection the meat from healthy animals can be differentiated
from the meat of sick animals. Detectable diseases in meat
include: echinococcosis, cysticercosis and bovine tuberculosis. Some
diseases like toxoplasmosis in pig meat, for example, cannot be detected
in meat, likewise salmonellosis in pig or poultry meat. Therefore,
the health of animals should be checked when still alive. When
animals are slaughtered, it is very important that this is done as hygienically
as possible and in a cool place as well. If you keep everything
clean, the healthy meat can stay uninfected. Cool places are important
because bacteria grow fast in temperatures above 10º C.
Poor water management
An example of a disease that can be transmitted via water is leptospirosis.
The water of a well can become infected if it is not protected
from livestock that could drink or urinate into it or if small (infected)
animals are able to fall into the well and cannot get out again. Many
microbes thrive in stagnant water or moist environments.
Other risk factors
Stray dogs carry a risk of rabies. Markets where lots of live and dead
birds are sold side by side are places exposed to the risk of avian influenza.
The dead birds could have died from avian influenza and the
microbes can then spread to the living birds. Fruit orchards where bats
live can harbour the Nipah* virus. Poverty and lack of education are
risk factors as well Many people do not know that hand washing helps
to prevent diarrhoeal diseases. And, persons with little money may
choose to buy cheaper (but less well inspected) meat.
Information Source Links
- Zoonoses - Diseases transmitted from animals to humans. Agromisia. (2008). Agrodok-Series No.46. ISBN Agromisa: 978-90-8573-105-4