Showing posts with label Francisella tularensis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Francisella tularensis. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Alameda County: Tularemia Surveillance 2006-2007

Annual Report 2006-2007, Alameda County Vector Control Services

Tularemia is caused by the bacterium Francisella tularensis that infects a variety of arthropods and vertebrates. Symptoms of human tularemia may include fever, chills, malaise, and fatigue. The disease is commonly transmitted by contacts with rabbits, insects, or tick bites. In Alameda County, a confirmed human case, transmitted by an American dog tick, Dermacentor variabilis was reported by CDHS in 2004. Since tularemia is classified as a bio-terrorism agent, the CDHS requested blood samples from various animals for testing. In 2006, 12 rodent samples were submitted; results are still pending.

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Tick Surveillance in California, 2005

Vector-Borne Diseases in California, Annual Report 2005, California Department of Health Services, Vector-Borne Disease Section

Tick surveillance

CDHS Vector-Borne Disease Section (VBDS) and collaborating agencies conducted tick surveillance in 17 California counties in 2005. Totals of 1,965 Ixodes pacificus (1,797 adults and 168 nymphs), 782 Dermacentor occidentalis, and 38 Dermacentor variabilis were collected. Nineteen hundred I. pacificus (1,736 adults and 164 nymphs) from 16 counties were tested for Borrelia burgdorferi in two laboratories. Ticks were tested by indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) and/or polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Evidence of Borrelia sp. was identified in ticks collected from six counties. Borrelia burgdorferi was detected in 4 of 33 pools by IFA and 12 of 192 pools by PCR.

The U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine tested by PCR 1,618 I. pacificus. Any ticks initially positive for the genus Borrelia were tested by an additional PCR assay using primers specific to B. burgdorferi. Borrelia sp. spirochetes detected in tick pools from Placer (1), Shasta (1), Trinity (1), Tuolumne (1) Counties did not match the genetic sequence for B. burgdorferi. These isolates most closely resembled B. miyamotoi, a Borrelia species in the RF genetic complex. Borrelia miyamotoi is not known to be pathogenic to humans.

A study of the ecology of I. pacificus in southern California, initiated in 2001, continued in 2005. VBDS and collaborating agencies (Los Angeles County Department of Health Services, Los Angeles West Vector Control District, and Riverside County Department of Health) monitored tick populations and collected questing ticks from six sites at three different geographic locales (Griffith Park, Santa Monica Mountains, and San Jacinto Mountains). Meterological factors, including rainfall and humidity, were simultaneously monitored. These data on tick populations, meterological factors, infections with B. burgdorferi, and molecular characterization of Borrelia spp. from ticks will continue to be collected to gain a better understanding of the ecology of I. pacificus ticks and B. burgdorferi in southern California.

Local surveillance was conducted in San Mateo County for Rickettsia rickettsii, the agent of Rocky Mountain spotted fever. In June, CDHS and San Mateo County Mosquito Abatement District personnel collected 320 D. occidentalis and 27 D. variabilis. All ticks were tested by PCR for R. rickettsii by CDHS, Viral and Rickettsial Disease Laboratory; all tested negative. In addition, 120 Rhipicephalus sanguineus were collected from Riverside County. Of 62 ticks tested by PCR at the Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, CDC, R. rickettsii was detected in one adult male R. sanguineus.

In June, CDHS collected 362 D. occidentalis and 5 D. variabilis in Tilden Regional Park, located in Contra Costa and Alameda Counties, as part of a continuing investigation of two human cases of tularemia in 2004. Ticks were tested for Francisella tularensis in 39 pools by PCR at DVBID CDC; all pools tested negative.

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Reported Cases of Tularemia in California 2004

Annual Report 2005, Alameda County Vector Control Services

Tularemia, a diseased caused by strains of Francisella tularensis, is not commonly transmitted by contacting rodents or tick bites. However, three human cases of tularemia were reported to CDHS in 2004; two of which were likely acquired through a tick bite: one from Alameda County and one from Contra Costa County. The adult American dog tick (Dermacentor variabilis) removed from the Alameda case was tested positive by culture and PCR for F. tularensis (type B) by Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Because of the human cases and also its importance as a bioterrorism agent, the CDHS requested blood samples from various animals for testing. Blood samples from twenty-three rodents from various locations in Alameda County were submitted for testing. None of these samples showed infection with F. tularensis. United State Department of Agriculture (USDA) – Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) submitted additional twenty-eight blood samples of feral cats, skunks, Norway rats, jackrabbits and red foxes. Of these, one striped skunk tested positive for the tularemia pathogen.

Monday, October 31, 2005

Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance in California, 2004

Vector-Borne Diseases in California, Annual Report 2004, California Department of Health Services, Vector-Borne Disease Section

Human disease surveillance

Lyme disease

Fifty-two cases of Lyme disease were reported to the California Department of Health Services (CDHS) in 2004. Case-patients were residents of 24 counties. Humboldt County reported the most cases (8) and incidence was highest in Trinity County at 23 cases per 100,000 residents. Of 32 cases for whom site of likely exposure was reported, 12 (37.5%) had exposure outside of their county of residence; 7 (22%) of these reported exposure outside California. The most frequently reported location of exposure was Humboldt County (9 cases).

The median age of reported Lyme disease cases was 32 years (range, 3 to 80 years) and 31 (60%) were male. Race was reported as white for 47 (91%) cases, Asian for 3, black for 1, and unknown for 1 case. Erythema migrans (EM) was identified in 23 (44%) cases. Of 22 cases with EM for which date of illness onset was reported, 13 (59%) occurred between May and August.

Anaplasmosis

Two cases of human granulocytic anaplasmosis (HGA, formerly known as human granulocytic ehrlichiosis) were reported to CDHS in 2004. In June, a 53-year-old female resident of Alameda County developed high fever (104 degrees F), headache, malaise, and rash. The CDHS Viral and Rickettsial Disease Laboratory (VRDL) detected antibodies to Anaplasma phagocytophilum (IgM > 1:40, IgG > 1:1024) in a serum specimen collected approximately four weeks after onset. The patient recovered without specific treatment.

The patient reported removing an attached tick from her back at least 12 hours after hiking in Tilden Park, Alameda County. In July 2004, CDHS staff conducted surveillance for ticks at Tilden Park. One Ixodes pacificus adult female tick was recovered and tested negative by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to A. phagocytophilum at the United States Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine - West at Fort Lewis Washington (USACHPPM). Although A. phagocytophilum were detected by PCR in I. pacificus collected from Alameda County in 1996, this was the first HGA case reported from this county.

A second case of anaplasmosis was reported in a male resident of San Mateo County. The case-patient had onset of illness in December following a tick bite he received in New Jersey.

Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever

One case of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (RMSF) was reported to CDHS in 2004. In June, a 52-year-old male resident of San Mateo County presented to an emergency room with fever (101 degrees F - 104 degrees F), lethargy, altered consciousness, and hallucinations. The patient was hospitalized and three days later developed a macular rash that began on the palms and soles and expanded to the upper limbs and trunk. Despite initiation of antibiotic treatment, the patient remained comatose with encephalitis for four days. The patient eventually improved and was discharged from the hospital 13 days after admission. The VRDL detected a significant rise in IgG titer to Rickettsia rickettsii between acute (1:4096) and convalescent (1:16,384) sera collected approximately seven and seventeen days after onset, respectively. The patient reported travel and camping in Marin and San Mateo Counties in May and June; he had observed ticks but did not recall a specific bite. Staff of Marin-Sonoma Mosquito and Vector Control District and the CDHS Vector-Borne Disease Section (VBDS) collected three male and one female Dermacentor occidentalis ticks from the Marin County site in July. VBDS and staff from the San Mateo County Mosquito Abatement District collected four male and two female D. occidentalis, three male, six female, and one nymphal D. variabilis, and one female and five nymphal I. pacificus from two sites in San Mateo County in July. The USACHPPM reported detecting by PCR Spotted Fever Group Rickettsia in two D. occidentalis from Marin County and one D. variabilis from San Mateo County.

Tularemia

Three cases of tularemia were reported to CDHS in 2004, two of which were likely acquired through a tick bite. In late May, a ten-year-old male resident of Contra Costa County developed cervical lymphadenitis. He was initially treated as an outpatient but did not improve. The CDHS Microbial Disease Laboratory (MDL) cultured Francisella tularensis (Type A) from a lymph node aspirate obtained approximately five weeks after onset. In late June, a five-year-old male resident of Alameda County had similar onset of fever and cevical lymphadenitis. The MDL isolated F. tularensis (Type B) from a lymph node culture in July from the Alameda patient. Both patients recovered following short hospitalizations.

The Alameda case-patient had camped in San Mateo County about five days prior to oneset and had visited Tilden Park in Alameda County about 10 days earlier. The Contra Costa case-patient also walked trails in Tilden Park in the week prior to onset. Neither patient had any contact with rabbits or other wild animals. Both case-patients reported tick bites to their face or head about three days prior to onset of illness. The tick from the Alameda case was retained and later identified by CDHS staff as an adult D. variabilis.

In July, CDHS conducted surveillance for ticks at the Tilden Park and San Mateo locations. Forty D. occidentalis were collected from Tilden Park and 16 D. occidentalis and 87 D. variabilis from the San Mateo location. Ticks were submitted to the Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, for culture and PCR. F. tularensis (Type B) was identified in the tick recovered from the Alameda patient; all ticks collected in the field were negative.

Tick-borne relapsing fever

Six cases of tick-borne relapsing fever were reported to CDHS in 2004. Case-patients were residents of five counties (Contra Costa, El Dorado, Madera, San Mateo, and Santa Clara) and ranged from 8 to 49-years-old. Five case-patients were likely infected while visiting the western Sierra Nevada; exposure information was unavailable for one case.