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Brucellosis

Brucellosis[4] is a zoonosis caused by ingestion of unpasteurized milk from infected animals, or close contact with their secretions.[5] It is also known as undulant fever, Malta fever, and Mediterranean fever.[6]

Brucellosis
Other namesundulant fever, undulating fever, Mediterranean fever, Malta fever, Cyprus fever, rock fever (Micrococcus melitensis)[1]
SpecialtyInfectious disease
Symptomsfever, chills, loss of appetite, sweats, weakness, fatigue, Joint, muscle and back pain, Headache.[2]
Complicationscentral nervous system infections, inflammation and infection of the spleen and liver, inflammation and infection of the testicles (epididymo-orchitis), Arthritis, Inflammation of the inner lining of the heart chambers (endocarditis).[2]
Diagnostic methodx-rays, computerized tomography (CT) scan or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), cerebrospinal fluid culture, echocardiography.[3]
Preventionavoid unpasteurized dairy foods, cook meat thoroughly, wear gloves, take safety precautions in high-risk workplaces, vaccinate domestic animals.[2]
Treatmentantibiotics
Medicationtetracyclines, rifampicin, aminoglycosides

The bacteria causing this disease, Brucella, are small, Gram-negative, nonmotile, nonspore-forming, rod-shaped (coccobacilli) bacteria. They function as facultative intracellular parasites, causing chronic disease, which usually persists for life. Four species infect humans: B. abortus, B. canis, B. melitensis, and B. suis. B. abortus is less virulent than B. melitensis and is primarily a disease of cattle. B. canis affects dogs. B. melitensis is the most virulent and invasive species; it usually infects goats and occasionally sheep. B. suis is of intermediate virulence and chiefly infects pigs. Symptoms include profuse sweating and joint and muscle pain. Brucellosis has been recognized in animals and humans since the early 20th century.[7][8]

Signs and symptoms edit

 
A graph of the cases of brucellosis in humans in the United States from the years 1993–2010 surveyed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention through the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System[9]

The symptoms are like those associated with many other febrile diseases, but with emphasis on muscular pain and night sweats. The duration of the disease can vary from a few weeks to many months or even years.

In the first stage of the disease, bacteremia occurs and leads to the classic triad of undulant fevers, sweating (often with a characteristic foul, moldy smell sometimes likened to wet hay), and migratory arthralgia and myalgia (joint and muscle pain).[10] Blood tests characteristically reveal a low number of white blood cells and red blood cells, show some elevation of liver enzymes such as aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase, and demonstrate positive Bengal rose and Huddleston reactions. Gastrointestinal symptoms occur in 70% of cases and include nausea, vomiting, decreased appetite, unintentional weight loss, abdominal pain, constipation, diarrhea, an enlarged liver, liver inflammation, liver abscess, and an enlarged spleen.[citation needed]

This complex is, at least in Portugal, Israel, Syria, and Jordan, known as Malta fever. During episodes of Malta fever, melitococcemia (presence of brucellae in the blood) can usually be demonstrated by means of blood culture in tryptose medium or Albini medium. If untreated, the disease can give origin to focalizations[clarification needed] or become chronic. The focalizations of brucellosis occur usually in bones and joints, and osteomyelitis or spondylodiscitis of the lumbar spine accompanied by sacroiliitis is very characteristic of this disease. Orchitis is also common in men.

The consequences of Brucella infection are highly variable and may include arthritis, spondylitis, thrombocytopenia, meningitis, uveitis, optic neuritis, endocarditis, and various neurological disorders collectively known as neurobrucellosis.

Cause edit

 
Granuloma and necrosis in the liver of a guinea pig infected with Brucella suis

Brucellosis in humans is usually associated with consumption of unpasteurized milk and soft cheeses made from the milk of infected animals—often goats—infected with B. melitensis, and with occupational exposure of laboratory workers, veterinarians, and slaughterhouse workers. These infected animals may be healthy and asymptomatic.[11] Some vaccines used in livestock, most notably B. abortus strain 19, also cause disease in humans if accidentally injected. Brucellosis induces inconstant fevers, miscarriage, sweating, weakness, anemia, headaches, depression, and muscular and bodily pain. The other strains, B. suis and B. canis, cause infection in pigs and dogs, respectively.[citation needed]

Overall findings support that brucellosis poses an occupational risk to goat farmers with specific areas of concern including weak awareness of disease transmission to humans and lack of knowledge on specific safe farm practices such as quarantine practices.[12]

Diagnosis edit

 
Brucella Coombs Gel Test. Seropositivity detected to GN177
 
Rose Bengal Plate Test.

The diagnosis of brucellosis relies on:[citation needed]

  1. Demonstration of the agent: blood cultures in tryptose broth, bone marrow cultures: The growth of brucellae is extremely slow (they can take up to two months to grow) and the culture poses a risk to laboratory personnel due to high infectivity of brucellae.
  2. Demonstration of antibodies against the agent either with the classic Huddleson, Wright, and/or Bengal Rose reactions, either with ELISA or the 2-mercaptoethanol assay for IgM antibodies associated with chronic disease
  3. Histologic evidence of granulomatous hepatitis on hepatic biopsy
  4. Radiologic alterations in infected vertebrae: the Pedro Pons sign (preferential erosion of the anterosuperior corner of lumbar vertebrae) and marked osteophytosis are suspicious of brucellic spondylitis.

Definite diagnosis of brucellosis requires the isolation of the organism from the blood, body fluids, or tissues, but serological methods may be the only tests available in many settings. Positive blood culture yield ranges between 40 and 70% and is less commonly positive for B. abortus than B. melitensis or B. suis. Identification of specific antibodies against bacterial lipopolysaccharide and other antigens can be detected by the standard agglutination test (SAT), rose Bengal, 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME), antihuman globulin (Coombs') and indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). SAT is the most commonly used serology in endemic areas.[13][14] An agglutination titre greater than 1:160 is considered significant in nonendemic areas and greater than 1:320 in endemic areas.[citation needed]

Due to the similarity of the O polysaccharide of Brucella to that of various other Gram-negative bacteria (e.g. Francisella tularensis, Escherichia coli, Salmonella urbana, Yersinia enterocolitica, Vibrio cholerae, and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia), the appearance of cross-reactions of class M immunoglobulins may occur. The inability to diagnose B. canis by SAT due to lack of cross-reaction is another drawback. False-negative SAT may be caused by the presence of blocking antibodies (the prozone phenomenon) in the α2-globulin (IgA) and in the α-globulin (IgG) fractions.[citation needed]

Dipstick assays are new and promising, based on the binding of Brucella IgM antibodies, and are simple, accurate, and rapid. ELISA typically uses cytoplasmic proteins as antigens. It measures IgM, IgG, and IgA with better sensitivity and specificity than the SAT in most recent comparative studies.[15] The commercial Brucellacapt test, a single-step immunocapture assay for the detection of total anti-Brucella antibodies, is an increasingly used adjunctive test when resources permit. PCR is fast and should be specific. Many varieties of PCR have been developed (e.g. nested PCR, realtime PCR, and PCR-ELISA) and found to have superior specificity and sensitivity in detecting both primary infection and relapse after treatment.[16] Unfortunately, these are not standardized for routine use, and some centres have reported persistent PCR positivity after clinically successful treatment, fuelling the controversy about the existence of prolonged chronic brucellosis.[citation needed]

Other laboratory findings include normal peripheral white cell count, and occasional leucopenia with relative lymphocytosis. The serum biochemical profiles are commonly normal.[17]

Prevention edit

Surveillance using serological tests, as well as tests on milk such as the milk ring test, can be used for screening and play an important role in campaigns to eliminate the disease. Also, individual animal testing both for trade and for disease-control purposes is practiced. In endemic areas, vaccination is often used to reduce the incidence of infection. An animal vaccine is available that uses modified live bacteria. The World Organisation for Animal Health Manual of Diagnostic Test and Vaccines for Terrestrial Animals provides detailed guidance on the production of vaccines. As the disease is closer to being eliminated, a test and eradication program is required to eliminate it.[citation needed]

The main way of preventing brucellosis is by using fastidious hygiene in producing raw milk products, or by pasteurizing all milk that is to be ingested by human beings, either in its unaltered form or as a derivative, such as cheese.[citation needed]

Another important aspect of Brucellosis prevention is public awareness. People in endemic areas demonstrated a high lack of knowledge and understanding of the disease and its causes.[18] To combat this, the One Health concept has been proposed. One Health is a method for combining disciplines such as public health, veterinary services, and microbiology to bring awareness to the disease. However, the implementation of this method faces many challenges including economic, political, and social barriers.[19]

Treatment edit

Antibiotics such as tetracyclines, rifampicin, and the aminoglycosides streptomycin and gentamicin are effective against Brucella bacteria. However, the use of more than one antibiotic is needed for several weeks, because the bacteria incubate within cells.[citation needed]

The gold standard treatment for adults is daily intramuscular injections of streptomycin 1 g for 14 days and oral doxycycline 100 mg twice daily for 45 days (concurrently). Gentamicin 5 mg/kg by intramuscular injection once daily for 7 days is an acceptable substitute when streptomycin is not available or contraindicated.[20] Another widely used regimen is doxycycline plus rifampicin twice daily for at least 6 weeks. This regimen has the advantage of oral administration. A triple therapy of doxycycline, with rifampicin and co-trimoxazole, has been used successfully to treat neurobrucellosis.[21] Doxycycline plus streptomycin regimen (for 2 to 3 weeks) is more effective than doxycycline plus rifampicin regimen (for 6 weeks).[22]

Doxycycline is able to cross the blood–brain barrier, but requires the addition of two other drugs to prevent relapse. Ciprofloxacin and co-trimoxazole therapy is associated with an unacceptably high rate of relapse. In brucellic endocarditis, surgery is required for an optimal outcome. Even with optimal antibrucellic therapy, relapses still occur in 5 to 10% of patients with Malta fever.[citation needed]

Prognosis edit

The mortality of the disease in 1909, as recorded in the British Army and Navy stationed in Malta, was 2%. The most frequent cause of death was endocarditis. Recent advances in antibiotics and surgery have been successful in preventing death due to endocarditis. Prevention of human brucellosis can be achieved by eradication of the disease in animals by vaccination and other veterinary control methods such as testing herds/flocks and slaughtering animals when infection is present. Currently, no effective vaccine is available for humans. Boiling milk before consumption, or before using it to produce other dairy products, is protective against transmission via ingestion. Changing traditional food habits of eating raw meat, liver, or bone marrow is necessary, but difficult to implement.[citation needed] Patients who have had brucellosis should probably be excluded indefinitely from donating blood or organs. Exposure of diagnostic laboratory personnel to Brucella organisms remains a problem in both endemic settings and when brucellosis is unknowingly imported by a patient.[23] After appropriate risk assessment, staff with significant exposure should be offered postexposure prophylaxis and followed up serologically for 6 months.[24]

Epidemiology edit

Argentina edit

According to a study published in 2002, an estimated 10–13% of farm animals were infected with Brucella species.[25] Annual losses from the disease were calculated at around US$60 million. Since 1932, government agencies have undertaken efforts to contain the disease. As of 2022 all cattle of ages 3–8 months must receive the Brucella abortus strain 19 vaccine.[26]

Australia edit

Australia is free of cattle brucellosis, although it occurred in the past. Brucellosis of sheep or goats has never been reported. Brucellosis of pigs does occur. Feral pigs are the typical source of human infections.[27][28]

Canada edit

On 19 September 1985, the Canadian government declared its cattle population brucellosis-free. Brucellosis ring testing of milk and cream, and testing of cattle to be slaughtered ended on 1 April 1999. Monitoring continues through testing at auction markets, through standard disease-reporting procedures, and through testing of cattle being qualified for export to countries other than the United States.[29]

China edit

An outbreak infecting humans took place in Lanzhou in 2019 after the Lanzhou Biopharmaceutical Plant, which was involved in vaccine production, accidentally pumped out the bacteria into the atmosphere in exhaust air due to use of expired disinfectant.[30][31]

According to Georgios Pappas, an infectious-disease specialist and author of a report published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases,[32] the result was “possibly the largest laboratory accident in the history of infectious diseases.” According to Pappas, out of nearly 70,000 people tested, more than 10,000 were seropositive, citing figures compiled by the provincial health authorities in Lanzhou’s Gansu province. Pappas also states that Chinese documents show that more than 3,000 people living near the plant applied for compensation, an indication of at least a mild illness.[33]

Europe edit

 
Disease incidence map of B. melitensis infections in animals in Europe during the first half of 2006
  never reported
  not reported in this period
  confirmed clinical disease
  confirmed infection
  no information

Malta edit

Until the early 20th century, the disease was endemic in Malta to the point of it being referred to as "Maltese fever". Since 2005, due to a strict regimen of certification of milk animals and widespread use of pasteurization, the illness has been eradicated from Malta.[34]

Republic of Ireland edit

Ireland was declared free of brucellosis on 1 July 2009. The disease had troubled the country's farmers and veterinarians for several decades.[35][36] The Irish government submitted an application to the European Commission, which verified that Ireland had been liberated.[36] Brendan Smith, Ireland's then Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine, said the elimination of brucellosis was "a landmark in the history of disease eradication in Ireland".[35][36] Ireland's Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine intends to reduce its brucellosis eradication programme now that eradication has been confirmed.[35][36]

UK edit

Mainland Britain has been free of brucellosis since 1979, although there have been episodic re-introductions since.[37] The last outbreak of brucellosis in Great Britain was in cattle in Cornwall in 2004.[37][38] Northern Ireland was declared officially brucellosis-free in 2015.[37]

New Zealand edit

Brucellosis in New Zealand is limited to sheep (B. ovis). The country is free of all other species of Brucella.[39]

United States edit

Dairy herds in the U.S. are tested at least once a year to be certified brucellosis-free[40] with the Brucella milk ring test.[41] Cows confirmed to be infected are often killed. In the United States, veterinarians are required[citation needed] to vaccinate all young stock, to further reduce the chance of zoonotic transmission. This vaccination is usually referred to as a "calfhood" vaccination. Most cattle receive a tattoo in one of their ears, serving as proof of their vaccination status. This tattoo also includes the last digit of the year they were born.[42]

The first state–federal cooperative efforts towards eradication of brucellosis caused by B. abortus in the U.S. began in 1934.[citation needed]

Brucellosis was originally imported to North America with non-native domestic cattle (Bos taurus), which transmitted the disease to wild bison (Bison bison) and elk (Cervus canadensis). No records exist of brucellosis in ungulates native to America until the early 19th century.[43]

History edit

 
David Bruce (centre), with members of the Mediterranean Fever Commission (Brucellosis)
 
The lab in which Sir Themistocles Zammit and the Mediterranean Fever Commission carried out research about brucellosis from 1904 to 1906 is located within the Castellania in Valletta, Malta.

Brucellosis first came to the attention of British medical officers in the 1850s in Malta during the Crimean War, and was referred to as Malta Fever. Jeffery Allen Marston (1831–1911) described his own case of the disease in 1861. The causal relationship between organism and disease was first established in 1887 by David Bruce.[44][45] Bruce considered the agent spherical and classified it as a coccus.[citation needed]

In 1897, Danish veterinarian Bernhard Bang isolated a bacillus as the agent of heightened spontaneous abortion in cows, and the name "Bang's disease" was assigned to this condition. Bang considered the organism rod-shaped and classified it as a bacillus. At the time no one knew that this bacillus had anything to do with the causative agent of Malta fever.[46]

Maltese scientist and archaeologist Themistocles Zammit identified unpasteurized goat milk as the major etiologic factor of undulant fever in June 1905.[47]

In the late 1910s, American bacteriologist Alice C. Evans was studying the Bang bacillus and gradually realized that it was virtually indistinguishable from the Bruce coccus.[48] The short-rod versus oblong-round morphologic borderline explained the leveling of the erstwhile bacillus/coccus distinction (that is, these "two" pathogens were not a coccus versus a bacillus but rather were one coccobacillus).[48] The Bang bacillus was already known to be enzootic in American dairy cattle, which showed itself in the regularity with which herds experienced contagious abortion.[48] Having made the discovery that the bacteria were certainly nearly identical and perhaps totally so, Evans then wondered why Malta fever was not widely diagnosed or reported in the United States.[48] She began to wonder whether many cases of vaguely defined febrile illnesses were in fact caused by the drinking of raw (unpasteurized) milk.[48] During the 1920s, this hypothesis was vindicated. Such illnesses ranged from undiagnosed and untreated gastrointestinal upset to misdiagnosed[48] febrile and painful versions, some even fatal. This advance in bacteriological science sparked extensive changes in the American dairy industry to improve food safety. The changes included making pasteurization standard and greatly tightening the standards of cleanliness in milkhouses on dairy farms. The expense prompted delay and skepticism in the industry,[48] but the new hygiene rules eventually became the norm. Although these measures have sometimes struck people as overdone in the decades since, being unhygienic at milking time or in the milkhouse, or drinking raw milk, are not a safe alternative.[citation needed]

In the decades after Evans's work, this genus, which received the name Brucella in honor of Bruce, was found to contain several species with varying virulence. The name "brucellosis" gradually replaced the 19th-century names Mediterranean fever and Malta fever.[49]

Neurobrucellosis, a neurological involvement in brucellosis, was first described in 1879. In the late 19th century, its symptoms were described in more detail by M. Louis Hughes, a Surgeon-Captain of the Royal Army Medical Corps stationed in Malta who isolated brucella organisms from a patient with meningo-encephalitis.[50] In 1989, neurologists in Saudi Arabia made significant contributions to the medical literature involving neurobrucellosis.[51][52]

These obsolete names have previously been applied to brucellosis:[49][53]

  • Crimean fever
  • Cyprus fever
  • Gibraltar fever
  • Goat fever
  • Italian fever
  • Neapolitan fever

Biological warfare edit

Brucella species had been weaponized by several advanced countries by the mid-20th century. In 1954, B. suis became the first agent weaponized by the United States at its Pine Bluff Arsenal near Pine Bluff, Arkansas. Brucella species survive well in aerosols and resist drying. Brucella and all other remaining biological weapons in the U.S. arsenal were destroyed in 1971–72 when the American offensive biological warfare program was discontinued by order of President Richard Nixon.[54]

The experimental American bacteriological warfare program focused on three agents of the Brucella group:[citation needed]

Agent US was in advanced development by the end of World War II. When the United States Air Force (USAF) wanted a biological warfare capability, the Chemical Corps offered Agent US in the M114 bomblet, based on the four-pound bursting bomblet developed for spreading anthrax during World War II. Though the capability was developed, operational testing indicated the weapon was less than desirable, and the USAF designed it as an interim capability until it could eventually be replaced by a more effective biological weapon.[citation needed]

The main drawback of using the M114 with Agent US was that it acted mainly as an incapacitating agent, whereas the USAF administration wanted weapons that were deadly. The stability of M114 in storage was too low to allow for storing it at forward air bases, and the logistical requirements to neutralize a target were far higher than originally planned. Ultimately, this would have required too much logistical support to be practical in the field.[citation needed]

Agents US and AA had a median infective dose of 500 organisms/person, and for Agent AM it was 300 organisms/person. The incubation time was believed to be about 2 weeks, with a duration of infection of several months. The lethality estimate was, based on epidemiological information, 1 to 2 per cent. Agent AM was believed to be a somewhat more virulent disease, with a fatality rate of 3 per cent being expected.[citation needed]

Other animals edit

Species infecting domestic livestock are B. abortus (cattle, bison, and elk), B. canis (dogs), B. melitensis (goats and sheep), B. ovis (sheep), and B. suis (caribou and pigs). Brucella species have also been isolated from several marine mammal species (cetaceans and pinnipeds).[citation needed]

Cattle edit

B. abortus is the principal cause of brucellosis in cattle. The bacteria are shed from an infected animal at or around the time of calving or abortion. Once exposed, the likelihood of an animal becoming infected is variable, depending on age, pregnancy status, and other intrinsic factors of the animal, as well as the number of bacteria to which the animal was exposed.[55] The most common clinical signs of cattle infected with B. abortus are high incidences of abortions, arthritic joints, and retained placenta.[citation needed]

The two main causes for spontaneous abortion in animals are erythritol, which can promote infections in the fetus and placenta,[clarification needed] and the lack of anti-Brucella activity in the amniotic fluid. Males can also harbor the bacteria in their reproductive tracts, namely seminal vesicles, ampullae, testicles, and epididymises.[citation needed]

Dogs edit

The causative agent of brucellosis in dogs, B. canis, is transmitted to other dogs through breeding and contact with aborted fetuses. Brucellosis can occur in humans who come in contact with infected aborted tissue or semen. The bacteria in dogs normally infect the genitals and lymphatic system, but can also spread to the eyes, kidneys, and intervertebral discs. Brucellosis in the intervertebral disc is one possible cause of discospondylitis. Symptoms of brucellosis in dogs include abortion in female dogs and scrotal inflammation and orchitis in males. Fever is uncommon. Infection of the eye can cause uveitis, and infection of the intervertebral disc can cause pain or weakness. Blood testing of the dogs prior to breeding can prevent the spread of this disease. It is treated with antibiotics, as with humans, but it is difficult to cure.[56]

Aquatic wildlife edit

Brucellosis in cetaceans is caused by the bacterium B. ceti. First discovered in the aborted fetus of a bottlenose dolphin, the structure of B. ceti is similar to Brucella in land animals. B. ceti is commonly detected in two suborders of cetaceans, the Mysticeti and Odontoceti. The Mysticeti include four families of baleen whales, filter-feeders, and the Odontoceti include two families of toothed cetaceans ranging from dolphins to sperm whales. B. ceti is believed to transfer from animal to animal through sexual intercourse, maternal feeding, aborted fetuses, placental issues, from mother to fetus, or through fish reservoirs. Brucellosis is a reproductive disease, so has an extreme negative impact on the population dynamics of a species. This becomes a greater issue when the already low population numbers of cetaceans are taken into consideration. B. ceti has been identified in four of the 14 cetacean families, but the antibodies have been detected in seven of the families. This indicates that B. ceti is common amongst cetacean families and populations. Only a small percentage of exposed individuals become ill or die. However, particular species apparently are more likely to become infected by B. ceti. The harbor porpoise, striped dolphin, white-sided dolphin, bottlenose dolphin, and common dolphin have the highest frequency of infection amongst odontocetes. In the mysticetes families, the northern minke whale is by far the most infected species. Dolphins and porpoises are more likely to be infected than cetaceans such as whales. With regard to sex and age biases, the infections do not seem influenced by the age or sex of an individual. Although fatal to cetaceans, B. ceti has a low infection rate for humans.[57]

Terrestrial wildlife edit

The disease in its various strains can infect multiple wildlife species, including elk (Cervus canadensis), bison (Bison bison), African buffalo (Syncerus caffer), European wild boar (Sus scrofa), caribou (Rangifer tarandus), moose (Alces alces), and marine mammals (see section on aquatic wildlife above).[58][59] While some regions use vaccines to prevent the spread of brucellosis between infected and uninfected wildlife populations, no suitable brucellosis vaccine for terrestrial wildlife has been developed.[60] This gap in medicinal knowledge creates more pressure for management practices that reduce spread of the disease.[60]

Wild bison and elk in the greater Yellowstone area are the last remaining reservoir of B. abortus in the US. The recent transmission of brucellosis from elk back to cattle in Idaho and Wyoming illustrates how the area, as the last remaining reservoir in the United States, may adversely affect the livestock industry. Eliminating brucellosis from this area is a challenge, as many viewpoints exist on how to manage diseased wildlife. However, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department has recently begun to protect scavengers (particularly coyotes and red fox) on elk feedgrounds, because they act as sustainable, no-cost, biological control agents by removing infected elk fetuses quickly.[61]

The National Elk Refuge in Jackson, Wyoming asserts that the intensity of the winter feeding program affects the spread of brucellosis more than the population size of elk and bison.[58] Since concentrating animals around food plots accelerates spread of the disease, management strategies to reduce herd density and increase dispersion could limit its spread.[58]

Effects on hunters edit

Hunters may be at additional risk for exposure to brucellosis due to increased contact with susceptible wildlife, including predators that may have fed on infected prey. Hunting dogs can also be at risk of infection.[62] Exposure can occur through contact with open wounds or by directly inhaling the bacteria while cleaning game.[63] In some cases, consumption of undercooked game can result in exposure to the disease.[63] Hunters can limit exposure while cleaning game through the use of precautionary barriers, including gloves and masks, and by washing tools rigorously after use.[60][64] By ensuring that game is cooked thoroughly, hunters can protect themselves and others from ingesting the disease.[63] Hunters should refer to local game officials and health departments to determine the risk of brucellosis exposure in their immediate area and to learn more about actions to reduce or avoid exposure.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • WHO fact sheet on brucellosis
  • genomes and related information at PATRIC, a Bioinformatics Resource Center funded by NIAID
  • from Centers for Disease Control
  • Capasso L (August 2002). "Bacteria in two-millennia-old cheese, and related epizoonoses in Roman populations". The Journal of Infection. 45 (2): 122–7. doi:10.1053/jinf.2002.0996. PMID 12217720. – re high rate of brucellosis in humans in ancient Pompeii
  • Brucellosis, factsheet from European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control

brucellosis, zoonosis, caused, ingestion, unpasteurized, milk, from, infected, animals, close, contact, with, their, secretions, also, known, undulant, fever, malta, fever, mediterranean, fever, other, namesundulant, fever, undulating, fever, mediterranean, fe. Brucellosis 4 is a zoonosis caused by ingestion of unpasteurized milk from infected animals or close contact with their secretions 5 It is also known as undulant fever Malta fever and Mediterranean fever 6 BrucellosisOther namesundulant fever undulating fever Mediterranean fever Malta fever Cyprus fever rock fever Micrococcus melitensis 1 SpecialtyInfectious diseaseSymptomsfever chills loss of appetite sweats weakness fatigue Joint muscle and back pain Headache 2 Complicationscentral nervous system infections inflammation and infection of the spleen and liver inflammation and infection of the testicles epididymo orchitis Arthritis Inflammation of the inner lining of the heart chambers endocarditis 2 Diagnostic methodx rays computerized tomography CT scan or magnetic resonance imaging MRI cerebrospinal fluid culture echocardiography 3 Preventionavoid unpasteurized dairy foods cook meat thoroughly wear gloves take safety precautions in high risk workplaces vaccinate domestic animals 2 TreatmentantibioticsMedicationtetracyclines rifampicin aminoglycosidesThe bacteria causing this disease Brucella are small Gram negative nonmotile nonspore forming rod shaped coccobacilli bacteria They function as facultative intracellular parasites causing chronic disease which usually persists for life Four species infect humans B abortus B canis B melitensis and B suis B abortus is less virulent than B melitensis and is primarily a disease of cattle B canis affects dogs B melitensis is the most virulent and invasive species it usually infects goats and occasionally sheep B suis is of intermediate virulence and chiefly infects pigs Symptoms include profuse sweating and joint and muscle pain Brucellosis has been recognized in animals and humans since the early 20th century 7 8 Contents 1 Signs and symptoms 2 Cause 3 Diagnosis 4 Prevention 5 Treatment 6 Prognosis 7 Epidemiology 7 1 Argentina 7 2 Australia 7 3 Canada 7 4 China 7 5 Europe 7 5 1 Malta 7 5 2 Republic of Ireland 7 5 3 UK 7 6 New Zealand 7 7 United States 8 History 8 1 Biological warfare 9 Other animals 9 1 Cattle 9 2 Dogs 9 3 Aquatic wildlife 9 4 Terrestrial wildlife 9 5 Effects on hunters 10 See also 11 References 12 Further readingSigns and symptoms editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Brucellosis news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp A graph of the cases of brucellosis in humans in the United States from the years 1993 2010 surveyed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention through the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System 9 The symptoms are like those associated with many other febrile diseases but with emphasis on muscular pain and night sweats The duration of the disease can vary from a few weeks to many months or even years In the first stage of the disease bacteremia occurs and leads to the classic triad of undulant fevers sweating often with a characteristic foul moldy smell sometimes likened to wet hay and migratory arthralgia and myalgia joint and muscle pain 10 Blood tests characteristically reveal a low number of white blood cells and red blood cells show some elevation of liver enzymes such as aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase and demonstrate positive Bengal rose and Huddleston reactions Gastrointestinal symptoms occur in 70 of cases and include nausea vomiting decreased appetite unintentional weight loss abdominal pain constipation diarrhea an enlarged liver liver inflammation liver abscess and an enlarged spleen citation needed This complex is at least in Portugal Israel Syria and Jordan known as Malta fever During episodes of Malta fever melitococcemia presence of brucellae in the blood can usually be demonstrated by means of blood culture in tryptose medium or Albini medium If untreated the disease can give origin to focalizations clarification needed or become chronic The focalizations of brucellosis occur usually in bones and joints and osteomyelitis or spondylodiscitis of the lumbar spine accompanied by sacroiliitis is very characteristic of this disease Orchitis is also common in men The consequences of Brucella infection are highly variable and may include arthritis spondylitis thrombocytopenia meningitis uveitis optic neuritis endocarditis and various neurological disorders collectively known as neurobrucellosis Cause edit nbsp Granuloma and necrosis in the liver of a guinea pig infected with Brucella suisBrucellosis in humans is usually associated with consumption of unpasteurized milk and soft cheeses made from the milk of infected animals often goats infected with B melitensis and with occupational exposure of laboratory workers veterinarians and slaughterhouse workers These infected animals may be healthy and asymptomatic 11 Some vaccines used in livestock most notably B abortus strain 19 also cause disease in humans if accidentally injected Brucellosis induces inconstant fevers miscarriage sweating weakness anemia headaches depression and muscular and bodily pain The other strains B suis and B canis cause infection in pigs and dogs respectively citation needed Overall findings support that brucellosis poses an occupational risk to goat farmers with specific areas of concern including weak awareness of disease transmission to humans and lack of knowledge on specific safe farm practices such as quarantine practices 12 Diagnosis edit nbsp Brucella Coombs Gel Test Seropositivity detected to GN177 nbsp Rose Bengal Plate Test The diagnosis of brucellosis relies on citation needed Demonstration of the agent blood cultures in tryptose broth bone marrow cultures The growth of brucellae is extremely slow they can take up to two months to grow and the culture poses a risk to laboratory personnel due to high infectivity of brucellae Demonstration of antibodies against the agent either with the classic Huddleson Wright and or Bengal Rose reactions either with ELISA or the 2 mercaptoethanol assay for IgM antibodies associated with chronic disease Histologic evidence of granulomatous hepatitis on hepatic biopsy Radiologic alterations in infected vertebrae the Pedro Pons sign preferential erosion of the anterosuperior corner of lumbar vertebrae and marked osteophytosis are suspicious of brucellic spondylitis Definite diagnosis of brucellosis requires the isolation of the organism from the blood body fluids or tissues but serological methods may be the only tests available in many settings Positive blood culture yield ranges between 40 and 70 and is less commonly positive for B abortus than B melitensis or B suis Identification of specific antibodies against bacterial lipopolysaccharide and other antigens can be detected by the standard agglutination test SAT rose Bengal 2 mercaptoethanol 2 ME antihuman globulin Coombs and indirect enzyme linked immunosorbent assay ELISA SAT is the most commonly used serology in endemic areas 13 14 An agglutination titre greater than 1 160 is considered significant in nonendemic areas and greater than 1 320 in endemic areas citation needed Due to the similarity of the O polysaccharide of Brucella to that of various other Gram negative bacteria e g Francisella tularensis Escherichia coli Salmonella urbana Yersinia enterocolitica Vibrio cholerae and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia the appearance of cross reactions of class M immunoglobulins may occur The inability to diagnose B canis by SAT due to lack of cross reaction is another drawback False negative SAT may be caused by the presence of blocking antibodies the prozone phenomenon in the a2 globulin IgA and in the a globulin IgG fractions citation needed Dipstick assays are new and promising based on the binding of Brucella IgM antibodies and are simple accurate and rapid ELISA typically uses cytoplasmic proteins as antigens It measures IgM IgG and IgA with better sensitivity and specificity than the SAT in most recent comparative studies 15 The commercial Brucellacapt test a single step immunocapture assay for the detection of total anti Brucella antibodies is an increasingly used adjunctive test when resources permit PCR is fast and should be specific Many varieties of PCR have been developed e g nested PCR realtime PCR and PCR ELISA and found to have superior specificity and sensitivity in detecting both primary infection and relapse after treatment 16 Unfortunately these are not standardized for routine use and some centres have reported persistent PCR positivity after clinically successful treatment fuelling the controversy about the existence of prolonged chronic brucellosis citation needed Other laboratory findings include normal peripheral white cell count and occasional leucopenia with relative lymphocytosis The serum biochemical profiles are commonly normal 17 Prevention editSurveillance using serological tests as well as tests on milk such as the milk ring test can be used for screening and play an important role in campaigns to eliminate the disease Also individual animal testing both for trade and for disease control purposes is practiced In endemic areas vaccination is often used to reduce the incidence of infection An animal vaccine is available that uses modified live bacteria The World Organisation for Animal Health Manual of Diagnostic Test and Vaccines for Terrestrial Animals provides detailed guidance on the production of vaccines As the disease is closer to being eliminated a test and eradication program is required to eliminate it citation needed The main way of preventing brucellosis is by using fastidious hygiene in producing raw milk products or by pasteurizing all milk that is to be ingested by human beings either in its unaltered form or as a derivative such as cheese citation needed Another important aspect of Brucellosis prevention is public awareness People in endemic areas demonstrated a high lack of knowledge and understanding of the disease and its causes 18 To combat this the One Health concept has been proposed One Health is a method for combining disciplines such as public health veterinary services and microbiology to bring awareness to the disease However the implementation of this method faces many challenges including economic political and social barriers 19 Treatment editAntibiotics such as tetracyclines rifampicin and the aminoglycosides streptomycin and gentamicin are effective against Brucella bacteria However the use of more than one antibiotic is needed for several weeks because the bacteria incubate within cells citation needed The gold standard treatment for adults is daily intramuscular injections of streptomycin 1 g for 14 days and oral doxycycline 100 mg twice daily for 45 days concurrently Gentamicin 5 mg kg by intramuscular injection once daily for 7 days is an acceptable substitute when streptomycin is not available or contraindicated 20 Another widely used regimen is doxycycline plus rifampicin twice daily for at least 6 weeks This regimen has the advantage of oral administration A triple therapy of doxycycline with rifampicin and co trimoxazole has been used successfully to treat neurobrucellosis 21 Doxycycline plus streptomycin regimen for 2 to 3 weeks is more effective than doxycycline plus rifampicin regimen for 6 weeks 22 Doxycycline is able to cross the blood brain barrier but requires the addition of two other drugs to prevent relapse Ciprofloxacin and co trimoxazole therapy is associated with an unacceptably high rate of relapse In brucellic endocarditis surgery is required for an optimal outcome Even with optimal antibrucellic therapy relapses still occur in 5 to 10 of patients with Malta fever citation needed Prognosis editThe mortality of the disease in 1909 as recorded in the British Army and Navy stationed in Malta was 2 The most frequent cause of death was endocarditis Recent advances in antibiotics and surgery have been successful in preventing death due to endocarditis Prevention of human brucellosis can be achieved by eradication of the disease in animals by vaccination and other veterinary control methods such as testing herds flocks and slaughtering animals when infection is present Currently no effective vaccine is available for humans Boiling milk before consumption or before using it to produce other dairy products is protective against transmission via ingestion Changing traditional food habits of eating raw meat liver or bone marrow is necessary but difficult to implement citation needed Patients who have had brucellosis should probably be excluded indefinitely from donating blood or organs Exposure of diagnostic laboratory personnel to Brucella organisms remains a problem in both endemic settings and when brucellosis is unknowingly imported by a patient 23 After appropriate risk assessment staff with significant exposure should be offered postexposure prophylaxis and followed up serologically for 6 months 24 Epidemiology editArgentina edit According to a study published in 2002 an estimated 10 13 of farm animals were infected with Brucella species 25 Annual losses from the disease were calculated at around US 60 million Since 1932 government agencies have undertaken efforts to contain the disease As of 2022 update all cattle of ages 3 8 months must receive the Brucella abortus strain 19 vaccine 26 Australia edit Australia is free of cattle brucellosis although it occurred in the past Brucellosis of sheep or goats has never been reported Brucellosis of pigs does occur Feral pigs are the typical source of human infections 27 28 Canada edit On 19 September 1985 the Canadian government declared its cattle population brucellosis free Brucellosis ring testing of milk and cream and testing of cattle to be slaughtered ended on 1 April 1999 Monitoring continues through testing at auction markets through standard disease reporting procedures and through testing of cattle being qualified for export to countries other than the United States 29 China edit An outbreak infecting humans took place in Lanzhou in 2019 after the Lanzhou Biopharmaceutical Plant which was involved in vaccine production accidentally pumped out the bacteria into the atmosphere in exhaust air due to use of expired disinfectant 30 31 According to Georgios Pappas an infectious disease specialist and author of a report published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases 32 the result was possibly the largest laboratory accident in the history of infectious diseases According to Pappas out of nearly 70 000 people tested more than 10 000 were seropositive citing figures compiled by the provincial health authorities in Lanzhou s Gansu province Pappas also states that Chinese documents show that more than 3 000 people living near the plant applied for compensation an indication of at least a mild illness 33 Europe edit nbsp Disease incidence map of B melitensis infections in animals in Europe during the first half of 2006 never reported not reported in this period confirmed clinical disease confirmed infection no informationMalta edit Until the early 20th century the disease was endemic in Malta to the point of it being referred to as Maltese fever Since 2005 due to a strict regimen of certification of milk animals and widespread use of pasteurization the illness has been eradicated from Malta 34 Republic of Ireland edit Ireland was declared free of brucellosis on 1 July 2009 The disease had troubled the country s farmers and veterinarians for several decades 35 36 The Irish government submitted an application to the European Commission which verified that Ireland had been liberated 36 Brendan Smith Ireland s then Minister for Agriculture Food and the Marine said the elimination of brucellosis was a landmark in the history of disease eradication in Ireland 35 36 Ireland s Department of Agriculture Food and the Marine intends to reduce its brucellosis eradication programme now that eradication has been confirmed 35 36 UK edit Mainland Britain has been free of brucellosis since 1979 although there have been episodic re introductions since 37 The last outbreak of brucellosis in Great Britain was in cattle in Cornwall in 2004 37 38 Northern Ireland was declared officially brucellosis free in 2015 37 New Zealand edit Brucellosis in New Zealand is limited to sheep B ovis The country is free of all other species of Brucella 39 United States edit Dairy herds in the U S are tested at least once a year to be certified brucellosis free 40 with the Brucella milk ring test 41 Cows confirmed to be infected are often killed In the United States veterinarians are required citation needed to vaccinate all young stock to further reduce the chance of zoonotic transmission This vaccination is usually referred to as a calfhood vaccination Most cattle receive a tattoo in one of their ears serving as proof of their vaccination status This tattoo also includes the last digit of the year they were born 42 The first state federal cooperative efforts towards eradication of brucellosis caused by B abortus in the U S began in 1934 citation needed Brucellosis was originally imported to North America with non native domestic cattle Bos taurus which transmitted the disease to wild bison Bison bison and elk Cervus canadensis No records exist of brucellosis in ungulates native to America until the early 19th century 43 History edit nbsp David Bruce centre with members of the Mediterranean Fever Commission Brucellosis nbsp The lab in which Sir Themistocles Zammit and the Mediterranean Fever Commission carried out research about brucellosis from 1904 to 1906 is located within the Castellania in Valletta Malta Brucellosis first came to the attention of British medical officers in the 1850s in Malta during the Crimean War and was referred to as Malta Fever Jeffery Allen Marston 1831 1911 described his own case of the disease in 1861 The causal relationship between organism and disease was first established in 1887 by David Bruce 44 45 Bruce considered the agent spherical and classified it as a coccus citation needed In 1897 Danish veterinarian Bernhard Bang isolated a bacillus as the agent of heightened spontaneous abortion in cows and the name Bang s disease was assigned to this condition Bang considered the organism rod shaped and classified it as a bacillus At the time no one knew that this bacillus had anything to do with the causative agent of Malta fever 46 Maltese scientist and archaeologist Themistocles Zammit identified unpasteurized goat milk as the major etiologic factor of undulant fever in June 1905 47 In the late 1910s American bacteriologist Alice C Evans was studying the Bang bacillus and gradually realized that it was virtually indistinguishable from the Bruce coccus 48 The short rod versus oblong round morphologic borderline explained the leveling of the erstwhile bacillus coccus distinction that is these two pathogens were not a coccus versus a bacillus but rather were one coccobacillus 48 The Bang bacillus was already known to be enzootic in American dairy cattle which showed itself in the regularity with which herds experienced contagious abortion 48 Having made the discovery that the bacteria were certainly nearly identical and perhaps totally so Evans then wondered why Malta fever was not widely diagnosed or reported in the United States 48 She began to wonder whether many cases of vaguely defined febrile illnesses were in fact caused by the drinking of raw unpasteurized milk 48 During the 1920s this hypothesis was vindicated Such illnesses ranged from undiagnosed and untreated gastrointestinal upset to misdiagnosed 48 febrile and painful versions some even fatal This advance in bacteriological science sparked extensive changes in the American dairy industry to improve food safety The changes included making pasteurization standard and greatly tightening the standards of cleanliness in milkhouses on dairy farms The expense prompted delay and skepticism in the industry 48 but the new hygiene rules eventually became the norm Although these measures have sometimes struck people as overdone in the decades since being unhygienic at milking time or in the milkhouse or drinking raw milk are not a safe alternative citation needed In the decades after Evans s work this genus which received the name Brucella in honor of Bruce was found to contain several species with varying virulence The name brucellosis gradually replaced the 19th century names Mediterranean fever and Malta fever 49 Neurobrucellosis a neurological involvement in brucellosis was first described in 1879 In the late 19th century its symptoms were described in more detail by M Louis Hughes a Surgeon Captain of the Royal Army Medical Corps stationed in Malta who isolated brucella organisms from a patient with meningo encephalitis 50 In 1989 neurologists in Saudi Arabia made significant contributions to the medical literature involving neurobrucellosis 51 52 These obsolete names have previously been applied to brucellosis 49 53 Crimean fever Cyprus fever Gibraltar fever Goat fever Italian fever Neapolitan fever Biological warfare edit Brucella species had been weaponized by several advanced countries by the mid 20th century In 1954 B suis became the first agent weaponized by the United States at its Pine Bluff Arsenal near Pine Bluff Arkansas Brucella species survive well in aerosols and resist drying Brucella and all other remaining biological weapons in the U S arsenal were destroyed in 1971 72 when the American offensive biological warfare program was discontinued by order of President Richard Nixon 54 The experimental American bacteriological warfare program focused on three agents of the Brucella group citation needed Porcine brucellosis agent US Bovine brucellosis agent AA Caprine brucellosis agent AM Agent US was in advanced development by the end of World War II When the United States Air Force USAF wanted a biological warfare capability the Chemical Corps offered Agent US in the M114 bomblet based on the four pound bursting bomblet developed for spreading anthrax during World War II Though the capability was developed operational testing indicated the weapon was less than desirable and the USAF designed it as an interim capability until it could eventually be replaced by a more effective biological weapon citation needed The main drawback of using the M114 with Agent US was that it acted mainly as an incapacitating agent whereas the USAF administration wanted weapons that were deadly The stability of M114 in storage was too low to allow for storing it at forward air bases and the logistical requirements to neutralize a target were far higher than originally planned Ultimately this would have required too much logistical support to be practical in the field citation needed Agents US and AA had a median infective dose of 500 organisms person and for Agent AM it was 300 organisms person The incubation time was believed to be about 2 weeks with a duration of infection of several months The lethality estimate was based on epidemiological information 1 to 2 per cent Agent AM was believed to be a somewhat more virulent disease with a fatality rate of 3 per cent being expected citation needed Other animals editSpecies infecting domestic livestock are B abortus cattle bison and elk B canis dogs B melitensis goats and sheep B ovis sheep and B suis caribou and pigs Brucella species have also been isolated from several marine mammal species cetaceans and pinnipeds citation needed Cattle edit B abortus is the principal cause of brucellosis in cattle The bacteria are shed from an infected animal at or around the time of calving or abortion Once exposed the likelihood of an animal becoming infected is variable depending on age pregnancy status and other intrinsic factors of the animal as well as the number of bacteria to which the animal was exposed 55 The most common clinical signs of cattle infected with B abortus are high incidences of abortions arthritic joints and retained placenta citation needed The two main causes for spontaneous abortion in animals are erythritol which can promote infections in the fetus and placenta clarification needed and the lack of anti Brucella activity in the amniotic fluid Males can also harbor the bacteria in their reproductive tracts namely seminal vesicles ampullae testicles and epididymises citation needed Dogs edit The causative agent of brucellosis in dogs B canis is transmitted to other dogs through breeding and contact with aborted fetuses Brucellosis can occur in humans who come in contact with infected aborted tissue or semen The bacteria in dogs normally infect the genitals and lymphatic system but can also spread to the eyes kidneys and intervertebral discs Brucellosis in the intervertebral disc is one possible cause of discospondylitis Symptoms of brucellosis in dogs include abortion in female dogs and scrotal inflammation and orchitis in males Fever is uncommon Infection of the eye can cause uveitis and infection of the intervertebral disc can cause pain or weakness Blood testing of the dogs prior to breeding can prevent the spread of this disease It is treated with antibiotics as with humans but it is difficult to cure 56 Aquatic wildlife edit Brucellosis in cetaceans is caused by the bacterium B ceti First discovered in the aborted fetus of a bottlenose dolphin the structure of B ceti is similar to Brucella in land animals B ceti is commonly detected in two suborders of cetaceans the Mysticeti and Odontoceti The Mysticeti include four families of baleen whales filter feeders and the Odontoceti include two families of toothed cetaceans ranging from dolphins to sperm whales B ceti is believed to transfer from animal to animal through sexual intercourse maternal feeding aborted fetuses placental issues from mother to fetus or through fish reservoirs Brucellosis is a reproductive disease so has an extreme negative impact on the population dynamics of a species This becomes a greater issue when the already low population numbers of cetaceans are taken into consideration B ceti has been identified in four of the 14 cetacean families but the antibodies have been detected in seven of the families This indicates that B ceti is common amongst cetacean families and populations Only a small percentage of exposed individuals become ill or die However particular species apparently are more likely to become infected by B ceti The harbor porpoise striped dolphin white sided dolphin bottlenose dolphin and common dolphin have the highest frequency of infection amongst odontocetes In the mysticetes families the northern minke whale is by far the most infected species Dolphins and porpoises are more likely to be infected than cetaceans such as whales With regard to sex and age biases the infections do not seem influenced by the age or sex of an individual Although fatal to cetaceans B ceti has a low infection rate for humans 57 Terrestrial wildlife edit The disease in its various strains can infect multiple wildlife species including elk Cervus canadensis bison Bison bison African buffalo Syncerus caffer European wild boar Sus scrofa caribou Rangifer tarandus moose Alces alces and marine mammals see section on aquatic wildlife above 58 59 While some regions use vaccines to prevent the spread of brucellosis between infected and uninfected wildlife populations no suitable brucellosis vaccine for terrestrial wildlife has been developed 60 This gap in medicinal knowledge creates more pressure for management practices that reduce spread of the disease 60 Wild bison and elk in the greater Yellowstone area are the last remaining reservoir of B abortus in the US The recent transmission of brucellosis from elk back to cattle in Idaho and Wyoming illustrates how the area as the last remaining reservoir in the United States may adversely affect the livestock industry Eliminating brucellosis from this area is a challenge as many viewpoints exist on how to manage diseased wildlife However the Wyoming Game and Fish Department has recently begun to protect scavengers particularly coyotes and red fox on elk feedgrounds because they act as sustainable no cost biological control agents by removing infected elk fetuses quickly 61 The National Elk Refuge in Jackson Wyoming asserts that the intensity of the winter feeding program affects the spread of brucellosis more than the population size of elk and bison 58 Since concentrating animals around food plots accelerates spread of the disease management strategies to reduce herd density and increase dispersion could limit its spread 58 Effects on hunters edit Hunters may be at additional risk for exposure to brucellosis due to increased contact with susceptible wildlife including predators that may have fed on infected prey Hunting dogs can also be at risk of infection 62 Exposure can occur through contact with open wounds or by directly inhaling the bacteria while cleaning game 63 In some cases consumption of undercooked game can result in exposure to the disease 63 Hunters can limit exposure while cleaning game through the use of precautionary barriers including gloves and masks and by washing tools rigorously after use 60 64 By ensuring that game is cooked thoroughly hunters can protect themselves and others from ingesting the disease 63 Hunters should refer to local game officials and health departments to determine the risk of brucellosis exposure in their immediate area and to learn more about actions to reduce or avoid exposure citation needed See also editBrucella suisReferences edit Wyatt HV 2014 How did Sir David Bruce forget Zammit and his goats PDF Journal of Maltese History Malta Department of History University of Malta 4 1 41 ISSN 2077 4338 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 07 21 Journal archive a b c Brucellosis mayoclinic org Mayo Clinic Retrieved June 5 2022 Brucellosis mayoclinic org Mayo Clinic Retrieved June 5 2022 Brucellosis American Heritage Dictionary Archived from the original on 2011 06 06 Diagnosis and Management of Acute Brucellosis in Primary Care PDF Brucella Subgroup of the Northern Ireland Regional Zoonoses Group August 2004 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 10 13 Di Pierdomenico A Borgia SM Richardson D Baqi M July 2011 Brucellosis in a returned traveller CMAJ 183 10 E690 2 doi 10 1503 cmaj 091752 PMC 3134761 PMID 21398234 Park K Park s textbook of preventive and social medicine 23 editions Page 290 91 Roy R 2013 Chapter 23 Biostatistics Mahajan and Gupta Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers P Ltd pp 434 449 doi 10 5005 jp books 12262 23 inactive 31 January 2024 ISBN 9789350901878 retrieved 2022 11 13 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of January 2024 link Brucellosis Resources Surveillance CDC 2018 10 09 Hayoun MA Muco E Shorman M 2023 Brucellosis StatPearls Treasure Island FL StatPearls Publishing PMID 28722861 retrieved 2023 11 08 Wyatt HV October 2005 How Themistocles Zammit found Malta Fever brucellosis to be transmitted by the milk of goats Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine The Royal Society of Medicine Press 98 10 451 4 doi 10 1177 014107680509801009 OCLC 680110952 PMC 1240100 PMID 16199812 Peck ME Jenpanich C Amonsin A Bunpapong N Chanachai K Somrongthong R et al January 2019 Knowledge Attitudes and Practices Associated with Brucellosis among Small Scale Goat Farmers in Thailand Journal of Agromedicine 24 1 56 63 doi 10 1080 1059924X 2018 1538916 PMID 30350754 S2CID 53034163 Franco MP Mulder M Gilman RH Smits HL December 2007 Human brucellosis The Lancet Infectious Diseases 7 12 775 86 doi 10 1016 S1473 3099 07 70286 4 PMID 18045560 Al Dahouk S Nockler K July 2011 Implications of laboratory diagnosis on brucellosis therapy Expert Review of Anti Infective Therapy 9 7 833 45 doi 10 1586 eri 11 55 PMID 21810055 S2CID 5068325 Mantur B Parande A Amarnath S Patil G Walvekar R Desai A et al August 2010 ELISA versus conventional methods of diagnosing endemic brucellosis The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 83 2 314 8 doi 10 4269 ajtmh 2010 09 0790 PMC 2911177 PMID 20682874 Yu WL Nielsen K August 2010 Review of detection of Brucella spp by polymerase chain reaction Croatian Medical Journal 51 4 306 13 doi 10 3325 cmj 2010 51 306 PMC 2931435 PMID 20718083 Vrioni G Pappas G Priavali E Gartzonika C Levidiotou S June 2008 An eternal microbe Brucella DNA load persists for years after clinical cure Clinical Infectious Diseases 46 12 e131 6 doi 10 1086 588482 PMID 18462106 Zhang N Zhou H Huang D Guan P May 2 2023 Brucellosis awareness and knowledge in communities worldwide A systematic review and meta analysis of 79 observational studies PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases 13 5 e0007366 doi 10 1371 journal pntd 0007366 PMC 6497230 PMID 31048848 Moriyon I Blasco JM Letesson JJ De Massis F Moreno E August 2023 Brucellosis and One Health Inherited and Future Challenges Microorganisms 11 8 2070 doi 10 3390 microorganisms11082070 ISSN 2076 2607 PMC 10459711 PMID 37630630 Hasanjani Roushan MR Mohraz M Hajiahmadi M Ramzani A Valayati AA April 2006 Efficacy of gentamicin plus doxycycline versus streptomycin plus doxycycline in the treatment of brucellosis in humans Clinical Infectious Diseases 42 8 1075 80 doi 10 1086 501359 PMID 16575723 McLean DR Russell N Khan MY October 1992 Neurobrucellosis clinical and therapeutic features Clinical Infectious Diseases 15 4 582 90 doi 10 1093 clind 15 4 582 PMID 1420670 Yousefi Nooraie R Mortaz Hejri S Mehrani M Sadeghipour P October 2012 Antibiotics for treating human brucellosis The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 10 10 CD007179 doi 10 1002 14651858 cd007179 pub2 PMC 6532606 PMID 23076931 Yagupsky P Baron EJ August 2005 Laboratory exposures to brucellae and implications for bioterrorism Emerging Infectious Diseases 11 8 1180 5 doi 10 3201 eid1108 041197 PMC 3320509 PMID 16102304 Centers for Disease Control Prevention CDC January 2008 Laboratory acquired brucellosis Indiana and Minnesota 2006 MMWR Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 57 2 39 42 PMID 18199967 Samartino LE December 2002 Brucellosis in Argentina Veterinary Microbiology 90 1 4 71 80 doi 10 1016 s0378 1135 02 00247 x PMID 12414136 Brucelosis Bovina SENASA Argentine Government 2022 Archived from the original on 2016 02 16 Queensland Health Brucellosis State of Queensland Queensland Health 2010 11 24 Archived from the original on 2011 04 22 Retrieved 2011 06 06 Lehane Robert 1996 Beating the Odds in a Big Country The eradication of bovine brucellosis and tuberculosis in Australia CSIRO Publishing ISBN 0 643 05814 1 Reportable Diseases Accredited Veterinarian s Manual Canadian Food Inspection Agency Retrieved 2007 03 18 China reports outbreak of brucellosis disease way larger than originally thought 18 September 2020 www news com au accessed 18 September 2020 兰州药厂泄漏事件布病患者 肿痛无药可吃 有人已转成慢性病 绿政公署 澎湃新闻 The Paper www thepaper cn Retrieved 2 June 2021 Pappas G 15 November 2022 The Lanzhou Brucella Leak The Largest Laboratory Accident in the History of Infectious Diseases Clinical Infectious Diseases 75 10 1845 1847 doi 10 1093 cid ciac463 PMID 35675697 Warwick J Willman D April 12 2023 China s struggles with lab safety carry danger of another pandemic The Washington Post Washington D C Naudi JR 2005 Brucellosis The Malta Experience Malta Publishers Enterprises group PEG Ltd ISBN 978 99909 0 425 3 a b c Ireland free of brucellosis RTE 2009 07 01 Retrieved 2009 07 01 a b c d Ireland declared free of brucellosis The Irish Times 2009 07 01 Archived from the original on 2021 04 03 Retrieved 2009 07 01 Michael F Sexton president of Veterinary Ireland which represents vets in practice said Many vets and farmers in particular suffered significantly with brucellosis in past decades and it is greatly welcomed by the veterinary profession that this debilitating disease is no longer the hazard that it once was a b c Monitoring brucellosis in Great Britain 3 September 2020 veterinary practice com accessed 18 September 2020 Guidance Brucellosis how to spot and report the disease 18 October 2018 www gov uk accessed 18 September 2020 MAF Biosecurity New Zealand Brucellosis Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry of New Zealand Archived from the original on 2012 03 20 Retrieved 2011 06 06 Brucellosis Eradication APHIS 91 45 013 United States Department of Agriculture October 2003 p 14 Hamilton AV Hardy AV March 1950 The brucella ring test its potential value in the control of brucellosis American Journal of Public Health and the Nation s Health 40 3 321 3 doi 10 2105 AJPH 40 3 321 PMC 1528431 PMID 15405523 Vermont Beef Producers How important is calfhood vaccination PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 05 09 Meagher M Meyer ME September 1994 On the Origin of Brucellosis in Bison of Yellowstone National Park A Review PDF Conservation Biology 8 3 645 653 Bibcode 1994ConBi 8 645M doi 10 1046 j 1523 1739 1994 08030645 x JSTOR 2386505 Archived from the original PDF on 2017 01 08 Retrieved 2017 01 07 Wilkinson L 1993 Brucellosis In Kiple KF ed The Cambridge World History of Human Disease Cambridge University Press Brucellosis named after Major General Sir David Bruce at Who Named It Evans A 1963 Dr Alice C Evans Memoir Wyatt HV 2015 The Strange Case of Temi Zammit s missing experiments PDF Journal of Maltese History Malta Department of History University of Malta 4 2 54 56 ISSN 2077 4338 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 07 21 Journal archive a b c d e f g de Kruif P 1932 Ch 5 Evans death in milk Men Against Death New York Harcourt Brace OCLC 11210642 a b Wyatt HV 31 July 2004 Give A Disease A Bad Name British Medical Journal BMJ Publishing Group Ltd 329 7460 272 278 doi 10 1136 bmj 329 7460 272 ISSN 0959 535X JSTOR 25468794 OCLC 198096808 PMC 498028 Madkour MM 2014 Brucellosis Elsevier Science p 160 ISBN 9781483193595 Malhotra R 2004 Saudi Arabia Practical Neurology 4 3 184 185 doi 10 1111 j 1474 7766 2004 03 225 x Al Sous MW Bohlega S Al Kawi MZ Alwatban J McLean DR March 2004 Neurobrucellosis clinical and neuroimaging correlation AJNR American Journal of Neuroradiology 25 3 395 401 PMC 8158553 PMID 15037461 Medicine Goat Fever Time 1928 12 10 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 2017 05 01 Woods JB April 2005 USAMRIID s Medical Management of Biological Casualties Handbook PDF 6th ed Fort Detrick Maryland U S Army Medical Institute of Infectious Diseases p 53 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 09 Radostits O M C C Gay D C Blood and K W Hinchcliff 2000 Veterinary Medicine A textbook of the Diseases of Cattle Sheep Pigs Goats and Horses Harcourt Publishers Limited London pp 867 882 ISBN 0702027774 Ettinger SJ Feldman EC 1995 Textbook of Veterinary Internal Medicine 4th ed W B Saunders Company ISBN 978 0 7216 4679 4 Guzman Verri C Gonzalez Barrientos R Hernandez Mora G Morales JA Baquero Calvo E Chaves Olarte E Moreno E 2012 Brucella ceti and brucellosis in cetaceans Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology 2 3 doi 10 3389 fcimb 2012 00003 PMC 3417395 PMID 22919595 a b c Brucellosis www fws gov U S Fish amp Wildlife Service 2016 Archived from the original on 2016 10 09 Retrieved 2016 10 03 Godfroid J August 2002 Brucellosis in wildlife PDF Revue Scientifique et Technique 21 2 277 86 doi 10 20506 rst 21 2 1333 PMID 11974615 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 06 06 Retrieved 2016 10 07 a b c Godfroid J Garin Bastuji B Saegerman C Blasco JM April 2013 Brucellosis in terrestrial wildlife PDF Revue Scientifique et Technique 32 1 27 42 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 1020 9652 doi 10 20506 rst 32 1 2180 PMID 23837363 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 06 06 Retrieved 2016 10 07 Cross PC Maichak EJ Brennan A Scurlock BM Henningsen J Luikart G April 2013 An ecological perspective on Brucella abortus in the western United States PDF Revue Scientifique et Technique 32 1 79 87 doi 10 20506 rst 32 1 2184 PMID 23837367 CDC Hunters Risks Animals That Can Put Hunters at Risk a b c CDC Home Brucellosis www cdc gov Center for Disease Control 2016 Retrieved 2016 10 03 Zoonoses Brucellosis www who int en World Health Organization 2016 Archived from the original on March 9 2005 Retrieved 2016 10 03 Further reading editWHO fact sheet on brucellosis Brucella genomes and related information at PATRIC a Bioinformatics Resource Center funded by NIAID Prevention about Brucellosis from Centers for Disease Control Capasso L August 2002 Bacteria in two millennia old cheese and related epizoonoses in Roman populations The Journal of Infection 45 2 122 7 doi 10 1053 jinf 2002 0996 PMID 12217720 re high rate of brucellosis in humans in ancient Pompeii Brucellosis factsheet from European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brucellosis amp oldid 1205221725, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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