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Emerging Diseases Lecture 5: Disease Transmission 5.1 Overview 5.2: Routes of Transmission 5.3: Summary 5.1: Overview The Germ Theory explains infectious diseases. They pass from person to persondirectly or indirectly through the environment. How does this happen? Overview: Disease Transmission • The “route of infection” is the way the disease moves from one individual to another • The disease enters the body through a “portal of entry”. • Different diseases are characterized by different routes of infection • Some pathogens (disease-causing agents) utilize more than one route • To attack your body, the pathogen must attach to a molecule on the surface of your cells called a “disease receptor” To stop a pathogen you have to block its route of transmission. This is called “breaking the chain of infection”. 5.2: Routes of Transmission • • • • • Gastrointestinal Respiratory Direct Contact Body fluids Vector They are not always clear-cut: sometimes they overlap Gastrointestinal Route • Also known as: fecal-oral, food-borne or waterborne, alimentary • Disease agent enters with contaminated food or water • Examples: typhoid, polio, Salmonella, E. coli O157:H7, many parasitic diseases • Raw or undercooked food is usually the problem • Beaver Valley Mall outbreak of hepatitis A is the classic example in Pennsylvania Hepatitis A Outbreak Beaver Valley Mall • 660 cases and 4 deaths Oct-Nov. 2003 • Largest Hepatitis Outbreak in State History • Health officials issued an alert yesterday, warning the estimated 11,000 customers who ate at the Beaver Valley Mall Chi-Chi's between October 22nd and November 2nd that they may have been exposed to Hepatitis A, and should get immunized as a precaution. January 9, 2004 Bill Vidonic, Times Staff Writer BEAVER - Richard Miller will be on antirejection medication for the rest of his life to keep his new liver functioning properly. The 57-year-old said he is struggling to regain the stamina he lost after a liver transplant on Nov. 8, a life-saving procedure made necessary when he contracted hepatitis A after eating at the Chi-Chi's Mexican restaurant in Center Township. "I lost my liver for no reason at all," Miller said from his Beaver home Thursday. What conditions favor the spread of gastrointestinal disease? • • • • • • • Garbage Sewage Bad sanitation Contaminated water No refrigeration Hot weather Others? Respiratory Route • Pathogen enters via breathing or via contact with the respiratory system • Smallpox, influenza, measles, many bacterial pathogens • Inhalation of dust or aerosols • Irritation of respiratory system leads to sneezing-droplets carry germs This is a great way to transmit disease What conditions favor the spread of respiratory disease? • • • • Crowded living conditions Dirty clothes and bedding Cold weather Others? Direct Contact Fomites Pathogens may contaminate inanimate objects from which a healthy person gets the disease: the objects are called fomites. What conditions favor the spread of direct contact disease? • Public facilities not clean • Improper hand-washing • Others? Transmission via Body Fluids (not inhaled) • “blood-borne”: Hepatitis B, HIV-1 and HIV-2 • “sexually-transmitted” or “STDs” or “urogenital”: Hepatitis B, HIV-1 and HIV-2, syphilis, gonorrhea, chlamydia • Herpes viruses like Epstein-Barr Virus can be transmitted through saliva (“mono” or “kissing disease”) What conditions favor the spread of diseases in body fluids? • Behavior • Others? Vector Transmission The disease is carried from person to person by an animal: Usually an insect or close relative such as a tick. The carrier animal is called a “vector”. Often, there are host species in addition to humans. These are called “reservoir” species or “reservoir” hosts. Malaria is the best example of a vector-borne disease. In Pennsylvania, two Important vector-borne diseases are West Nile (virus) and Lyme Disease (bacterial-caused by Borrelia burgdorferi). What conditions favor the spread of vector-borne disease? • Climate change • Habitat disruption • Others? More terms • Some pathogens live peacefully on or in your body until it weakens-then they attack. These are called “opportunistic” pathogens. • Diseases acquired from animals are called “zoonotic”. • Diseases acquired as a result of a medical procedure are “iatrogenic”. • Diseases acquired in a hospital are “nosocomial”. 5.3: Summary-Five Important Routes of Infection • • • • • Gastrointestinal: food-borne or water-borne Respiratory: air borne, most dangerous Direct Contact: common Body fluids: easy to stop Vector: complex because additional species involved