Download Introduction to Environmentally Transmitted Pathogens, Part 1

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Gastroenteritis wikipedia , lookup

Hookworm infection wikipedia , lookup

Traveler's diarrhea wikipedia , lookup

Rocky Mountain spotted fever wikipedia , lookup

Norovirus wikipedia , lookup

Chagas disease wikipedia , lookup

Anaerobic infection wikipedia , lookup

Cryptosporidiosis wikipedia , lookup

Onchocerciasis wikipedia , lookup

Middle East respiratory syndrome wikipedia , lookup

Herpes simplex virus wikipedia , lookup

West Nile fever wikipedia , lookup

Neglected tropical diseases wikipedia , lookup

Henipavirus wikipedia , lookup

Cross-species transmission wikipedia , lookup

Schistosoma mansoni wikipedia , lookup

Dirofilaria immitis wikipedia , lookup

African trypanosomiasis wikipedia , lookup

Marburg virus disease wikipedia , lookup

Leptospirosis wikipedia , lookup

Trichinosis wikipedia , lookup

Eradication of infectious diseases wikipedia , lookup

Chickenpox wikipedia , lookup

Hepatitis C wikipedia , lookup

Human cytomegalovirus wikipedia , lookup

Pandemic wikipedia , lookup

Sexually transmitted infection wikipedia , lookup

Schistosomiasis wikipedia , lookup

Neonatal infection wikipedia , lookup

Sarcocystis wikipedia , lookup

Coccidioidomycosis wikipedia , lookup

Hepatitis B wikipedia , lookup

Hospital-acquired infection wikipedia , lookup

Lymphocytic choriomeningitis wikipedia , lookup

Oesophagostomum wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Introduction to Environmentally
Transmitted Pathogens:
Some Basic Concepts of Epidemiology,
Infection, Disease, Environmental
Transmission and Waterborne-Exposure
Lecture 3
ENVR 421
Mark D. Sobsey
Epidemiology - Definition
• The logic of observation and the methods to quantify these
observations in populations (groups) of individuals.
• The study of the distribution of health-related states or events in
specified populations and the application of this study to the
control of health problems.
• Epidemiology includes:
– 1) methods for measuring the health of groups and for determining
the attributes and exposures that influence health;
– 2) study of the occurrence of disease in its natural habitat rather than
the controlled environment of the laboratory (exception: clinical
trials); and
– 3) methods for the quantitative study of the distribution, variation, an
determinants of health-related outcomes in specific groups
(populations) of individuals, and the application of this study to the
diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of these states or events.
Infectious Disease Epidemiology:
Classical Epidemiology
• the study of epidemics
• the study of the dynamic factors involved
in the transmission of infectious agents in
populations
• the natural history of infectious disease
– how a disease spreads through groups or a
population
– how a case of that disease develops in an
individual
Basic Epidemiological Concepts and Terms
•
•
•
•
•
Incidence: # of new cases of disease/total # at risk.
Incidence rate: Incidence/unit of time.
Prevalence: # cases (or # with defined condition) existing at one time.
Prevalence rate: # of such cases/total # at risk.
Epidemic:
– # cases in excess of expected # for population
– the uncontrolled spread of a disease (or condition) in a community.
• Immunity: Inherited, acquired, or induced resistance to infection by a
specific pathogen
– Acquired resistance due to previous infection is from protective cellular and
antibody responses in the host
• Herd immunity: cumulative # of immune persons in population or % of
population immune.
Outbreaks or Epidemics
• A disease or condition at involves many or an excessive
number of people at the same time and the same place
• The occurrence of a disease or condition at a frequency
that is unusual or unexpected
– increase above background or endemic level
Requirements for an outbreak or epidemic:
• (i) presence of an infected host or other source of
infection.
• (ii) adequate number of susceptibles
• (iii) an effective method of contact for transmission to
occur.
Transmission/Exposure Routes of Infectious Agents:
Entry to and/or Exit From the Body
Sites or Portals of
Exit or Entry:
• Respiratory
• Enteric or
Gastrointestinal
• Skin: especially if
skin barrier is
penetrated
• Genitourinary
• Eye
Routes or Methods of Entry
• Direct Personal Contact: Person (animal)-toPerson
• Indirect Personal Contact: Droplet, Fomites,
Other Vehicles
• Water and Food (Gastrointestinal Tract)
• Vector-borne: often insects
• Intrauterine or Transplacental
• Organ Transplants, Blood and Blood Products
Transmission Routes of Infectious Agents
Infectious Diseases and the Process of Infection
Infection: the growth/multiplication of a microbe in a host
• Infection does not always result in injury of the host
(disease)
• Two main classes of infection by site:
– localized
– generalized (disseminated; systemic)
• Some infections are usually localized but can
sometimes spread to another site
– Example: Amoebic dysentery occurs in the intestines
(colon); sometimes it spreads to the liver causing liver
abscess
Localized Infections
• Organism enters the body and reaches target site of infection
• Organism adheres to or enters host cells and multiplies at site
of infection
• Infection spreads within the site (e.g., respiratory tract;
intestines)
• Symptoms of illness appear
• Organism does not spread through the lymphatic system or
reach the bloodstream
• Infection subsides due to host defenses (e.g., immunity)
• Agent eliminated from the body; infected cells replaced;
"cure"
Generalized Infections
• Organism enters the body and reaches target site of initial
infection
• Organism adheres to or enters host cells and multiplies at
initial site of infection
• Infection spreads within site and to other sites via tissues,
lymphatic system, bloodstream (bacteremia, viremia, etc.) and
possibly other routes
• Symptoms of illness may appear
• Organisms infect other organs, tissues and cells; more spread
via bloodstream
• Symptoms of illness become severe
• Host defenses eliminate organisms leading to cure or disease
continues, possibly leading to irreversible damage or death
Factors Influencing Exposure and
Infection: Agent (Microbe) Factors
Sources, Reservoirs, Transport and Persistence
(in the Environment)
Ability to Enter a Portal in the Human or Other
Host
Ability to Reach and Proliferate at Site(s) of
Infection in the Host
Excretion of the Agent from the Host
Quantity and "Quality" (including virulence) of
the Infectious
Factors Influencing Exposure and
Infection: Environmental Factors
• Reservoirs: where organisms can live, accumulate or persist
outside of the host of interest; could be another organism or the
inanimate environment.
• Vehicles: inanimate objects/materials by which organisms get from
one host to another; includes water, food, objects (called fomites)
and biological products (e.g., blood).
• Amplifiers: Types of reservoirs where organisms proliferate; often
applied to organisms transmitted by the airborne route.
• Vectors: Living organisms bringing infectious organisms to a host.
– Mechanical vectors: Microbes do not multiply in the vector
• ex: biting insects infected with the infectious organism
– Biological vectors: Microbes must propagate in the vector
before they can be transmitted to a host.
Environmental Factors Influencing Survival
or Proliferation of Infectious Agents
• Physical: temperature, relative humidity,
sunlight, moisture content or water activity,
climate and weather, etc.
• Chemical and Nutritional: Antimicrobial
chemicals, nutrients for microbial
proliferation.
• Biological: Antagonistic activity by other
organisms: antimicrobial agents, parasitism,
etc.; presence and state of a vector
Factors Influencing Exposure and Infection:
Host Factors and Host Susceptibility
• Opportunities for host exposure
– transmission routes
– host availability
• Susceptibility factors
– Dosage (quantity) and "quality" of infectious
organisms, including their "virulence";
– age
– immunity
– nutritional status
– immunocompetence and health status,
– genetics
– behavior (personal habits) of host.
Infectivity of Pathogenic Microorganisms
and Risk of Infection, Illness and Death
Infection

Illness
 Sequelae
Death
Secondary Spread
Dose-Response and Infectious Dose (ID)
• Probability of infection is dose-dependent
– Higher dose → higher probability of
infection/illness; dose-response
relationship
• Microbes differ in infectivity
• Enteric and respiratory viruses: infectious
at very low doses
– 1 cell culture ID has high probability of
infecting an exposed human.
– May still need exposure to many virions
• Most enteric bacteria: infective at moderate
(10s-100s cells) to high (1,000 cells) doses.
• Protozoa: can be infective at low doses
– ID50 at 1-10 cysts of Giardia lamblia) or
oocysts of Cryptosporidium parvum
Outcomes of Infection
Microbes differ in their ability to produce
the different outcomes of infection:
• (i) infection without illness;
• (ii) infection with illness; (with or without
long-term sequelae) and
• (iii) infection, illness and then death
The Iceberg Concept: As Applied to Virus Infections
Transmission Dynamics of Infectious Diseases:
Host States in Relation to Pathogen Transmission
Pathogen
Exposure
Susceptible
λ1
Infected
λ2
Resistant
λ3
λ = the rate or probability of movement from one state to another
Mortality Rates for Different Viruses in
Healthy, Immunocompetent Humans
(Rates Higher in the Immunocompromised)
VIRUSES:
• Adenovirus
• Enteroviruses
– Coxsackievirus B
– Echoviruses
• Hepatitis A virus
• Norwalk virus
• Rotavirus
% Mortality
0.01%
0.001 (average)
0.59-0.94
0.28
0.3
0.0001
0.01
Mortality Rates for Different Pathogens in
Healthy, Immunocompetent Humans
(Rates Higher in the Immunocompromised)
BACTERIA:
• Campylobacter jejuni
• E. coli
• Salmonella spp.
• Shigella spp.
% Mortality
0.1
0.2
0.1
0.2
• PARASITES:
• Giardia lamblia
• Entamoeba histolytica
0.0001
0.3
Transmission Categories of WaterRelated Diseases
• Water-borne
• Water-washed
• Water-based
• Water-related/Insect vectorborne
Waterborne
• Caused by ingestion of water contaminated by human or
animal feces or urine containing pathogenic bacteria or
viruses
• Mostly enteric diseases transmitted by the fecal-oral route
– Bacterial: cholera, typhoid, amoebic and bacillary
dysentery diseases
– Viral: Infectious hepatitis
– Protozoan parasitic: amoebic dysentery
• Some are due to organisms NOT fecally associated that
proliferate in water
– example: Legionellosis (Legionella bacteria) via
aerosols and droplets
Water-washed or Water Hygiene Diseases
• Caused by poor personal hygiene and skin or eye
contact with contaminated water
• Diseases whose exposure is reduced by the use of
water for personal and domestic hygiene:
– washing: clothes, floors, other household chores
– bathing and other personal hygiene
– cleaning of cooking and eating utensils
• Includes:
– many enteric organisms
– diseases of the skin and eyes (ex: trachoma)
– insect infestations
• Scabies caused by mites
• Pediculosis caused by lice
• Tick-borne diseases
Water-based
• Caused by parasites found in intermediate
organisms living in contaminated water
• Exposure by skin contact with infested
water
– Schistosomiasis
• free-living larvae released from
aquatic snails (the intermediate host)
invade the skin
– Dracunculiasis (Guinea Worm disease)
– Other helminths
Water-related, Insect Vector-borne
• Caused by insect vectors, especially mosquitoes,
that breed in water; water habitat "insect vector"
diseases
– Insect vectors breed in or near water
• Examples:
– Dengue (virus)
– Filariasis (nematode worms)
– Malaria (protozoan)
– Onchocerciasis; river blindness (filarial worm)
– Trypanosomiasis (parasite)
– Yellow Fever (virus)