Plaque Pest, Black Death, Pestilential Fever: Veterinary Medicine-UB
Plaque Pest, Black Death, Pestilential Fever: Veterinary Medicine-UB
Plaque Pest, Black Death, Pestilential Fever: Veterinary Medicine-UB
PLAQUE
Pest, black death, pestilential
fever
Etiologic agent
The
human diarrheal
F. tularensis
human septic infection
Pasteurella
animal & human pathogens
Modes of transmission of
Yersinia pestis
Flea
multiply
Lymphatic
Inflammation (enlarge the lymph nodes)
Necrosis
fulminant
Bloodstream (dissemanation)
Hemorrhagic & necrotic in all organs
Pneumonic plaque with hemorrhagic, sepsis, & dead
Transmission by ingestion of an
infected animals:
Ingestion of infected rodents is a
common method of transmission to
domestic cats, and can also be a route of
infection for humans
Transmission
Clinical presentation of
Yersinia pestis infection in
humans, cats and dogs
Three major forms of disease occur in both cats and
humans.
Bubonic plague:
This usually produces an ulcer at the site of the bite
and enlarged painful lymph nodes ("buboes")
Following a 2-8 day incubation period, patients
develop high fever (105 F+), anorexia, lethargy,
headache, malaise, and warm, swollen, extremely
painful lymph nodes that undergo hemorrhagic
necrosis.
75% of cases in cats involve the submandibular LNs,
Septicemic plague:
This
septicemic plague.
Shock,
Pneumonic plague:
Infection in the lungs may follow inhalation of the
organism or systemic spread.
This is considered the most fatal form of plague. It is
100% fatal in people if left untreated. This is the route
of concern for the use of Y. pestis as a bioterrorist
agent (CDC List A).
A retrospective review of 119 clinical cases of plague in cats
Diagnosis:
Specimens
nodes
sputum, CSF
Smear
Giemsas stain
bacterial culture : BAP, MacConkey, BHI
gram (-) bipolar rod---It is very important that
serology
Treatment:
Aspirate
Animals:
A plague vaccine for cats is currently being developed
commercially in the U.S.
There is also interest in developing a vaccine for
endangered black-footed ferrets and prairie dogs. Both
are quite sensitive to Y. pestis infection. In addition,
plague among prairie dogs is a significant impediment to
successful re-introductions of the ferrets. This is because
the prairie dogs serve as not only a major prey food
source for the ferrets, but they also share their tunnel
homes with the ferrets. During the summer of 2000, tens
of thousands of prairie dogs died of plague in the western
U.S., and another outbreak occurred in Colorado in 2002.
TERIMA KASIH