Leptospirosis
What was Lepto previously thought of as?
A "livestock disease" in US, now urban and rural affected (pets)
Who can get Lepto?
All mammals
Treatment for lepto
Antibiotics Supportive care: IV fluids, anti inflammatories (use w/caution), anti-emetics
What serovars are humans susceptible to?
Any serovar
Where in the world could you get Lepto?
Anywhere
How do you avoid getting Lepto?
Avoid contact with urine/floodwater/food/drink
Emergency preparedness biosecurity measures
Avoid flood waters Stores clean water Mitigation plan for exposure situations (PPE, disinfectants)
What factors are influencing the spread of lepto?
Climate change: more/bigger disasters > increases exposures, decreases mitigation factors Urbanization: *rats pee/contaminate water in city Changing human/animal interface: outdoor recreation > *walking dog on leash on beach > contact with marine animals Poverty: underreporting > neglected tropical disease
Risk factors for Lepto in the US
Considered an occupational, outdoor, and recreational zoonosis Risk factors: farmers, vets, miners/sewer workers, abattoir workers, outdoor recreational it's, military personnel, pet/animal owners Globally, health care workers may be at increased risk
Direct contact
Contact with mucous membranes, contaminate open wounds, contact with aerosolized urine droplets Vertical transmission (mostly animals, rare in humans)
How do you get Lepto?
Contaminated water/urine
Serovars of the species borgpetersenii
Hardjo Javanica
Cattle - host adapted serovar and incidental serovars
Hardjo Pomona
Humans are always _______ hosts
Incidental
What is the gold standard for diagnosis
Indirect serum antibody test - need to prove seroconversion - four fold increase in antibodies (Microscopic agglutination test-MAT)
Unique chronic signs for cattle
Infertility, abortion
two species of leptospira
Interrogans Borgpetersenii
Serovar taxonomy
One spices may contain many serogroups and serovars There are over 300 identified serovars > these are divided into 61 serovars Different species may be in the same serovar
Biosecurity prevention measures
PPE - gloves, eye protection Hand washing Management of sick individuals / animals Rodent control Appropriate disposal of collected urine that contains lepto
Host/serovar relationship in the transmission cycle
Pathogen is maintained in the renal tubules and shed in urine It is possible for a host adapted serovar to produce clinical disease in the host
Vaccination for prevention in animals?
Yes Some cross protection - but vaccines do not confer immunity against all serovars For vaccine selection - Need to main serovars that affect each species and local ecology
Rats - host adapted serovar and incidental serovars
icterohaemorrhagiae Grippotyphosa, Autumnalis
Unique chronic signs for dogs
Chronic kidney disease
What animals are affected by lepto?
Can affect all mammals, including wildlife/marine mammals Not well documented in cats *dont really manifest disease Documentation in 'unconventional hosts' is rare
Dogs - host adapted serovar and incidental serovars
Canicola No incidental
Other methods of diagnosis
Canine Leptospira Antibody Test -Used in acute illness (day 4-10) Culture and PCR -from blood (first 7 days) -from CSF (between 4-10 days) -from urine (after day 10)
What taxonomy do we use to classify lepto?
BOTH! PH officials - must understand both classifications > must understand serovars to understand vaccines
What species can lepto cause reproductive issues
Cattle, horses, pigs
Lepto transmission routes
Direct contact with contaminated urine, blood Indirect environmental exposure to contaminated water, soil, food
Pathogenesis of lepto
E-Cadherin > cell adhesion protein is damaged by the bacteria Hepatocellular damage leads to bilirubinemia (yellow color) Vascular endothelial cell damage leads to hemorrhage > petechia
Reservoirs of lepto
Each serovar has different reservoir (maintence) and incidental hosts Humans are always incidental hosts
What are the high risk groups in USA
Occupational: vets, abattoir workers, miners/sewage plant workers Outdoors: foresters, landscapers Recreational: pet owners - dog parks !
Duration of clinical illness in humans
Few days to 3 weeks or more Sequelae may cause lifelong effects
is reporting required in OH?
For animals, voluntary reporting For human cases, reporting is required to the local PH dept. by the close of the next business day (class B)
Spatial and temporal distribution of lepto?
Found everywhere: seasonal variation in temperature climates Tropical climates more affected; no seasonality
Etiologic characteristics of Leptospira spp.
Gram negative spirochete bacteria Double membrane-outer membrane LPS is the main antigen (determines serovar) Aerobic, mobile Can persist in the environment for weeks to months, but needs moisture ! Susceptible to dehydration, heat, common disinfectants
Raccoon - host adapted serovar and incidental serovars
Grippotyphosa Pomona, Autumnalis
Pathogenesis of lepto in incidental hosts
Lepto remains in kidney tubules for a short period of time and is shed in urine for a few days to several weeks
Lepto genus
Leptospira
What is the etiologic agent of Lepto?
Leptospira spp.
How common is lepto?
Leptospirosis is the most common zoonotic disease in the world
Role of reservoir host
Maintains pathogen in the ecosystem
Infection in humans: asymptomatic vs symptomatic
Majority of lepto infections are asymptomatic Of the symptomatic cases > 90% Anicteric form , 10% Icteric form (Weil's disease) Signs are flu like symptoms > leads to underreporting
Indirect transmission
May be ingested, contact with MM, contaminate open wounds, may penetrate skin that has been in prolonged contact with water (controversial)
Role of incidental host
May have symptomatic or asymptomatic infection, will shed pathogen, not required to maintain pathogen
What happens if you get Lepto?
Mostly little to no illness > mostly flu like illness
Vaccination for prevention in humans?
No vaccine for humans
Pigs - host adapted serovar and incidental serovars
Pomona Bratislava, icterohaemorrhagiae
serovars of the species interrogans
Pomona Hardjo Canicola
Deer, Opossum - host adapted serovar and incidental serovars
Pomona No incidental listed
Where do the majority of lepto cases in the US come from?
Puerto Rico, Hawaii Outbreaks seen after heavy rainfall/flooding events
Unique chronic signs for horses
Recurrent uveitis "moon blindness"
Pathogenesis of lepto in maintenance hosts
Remains in renal tubules and is shed in urine and genital fluids in large quantities in persistently infected animals for months to years
Unique chronic signs in pigs
Reproductive losses
Serovar adapted to the host >
Subclinical infection > maintenance host > long term shedding, low antibody titers
Serovar not adapted to the host >
Subclinical infection or clinical disease that leads to death > incidental host > short term shedding, high antibody titers
Synonyms for Lepto?
Weil's syndrome, mud disease, swamp fever, autumn fever, swine herds disease, etc.
Why is diagnosis complicated
Titers can be affected by exposure/vaccination
Leptospira spp. taxonomy system
Two systems, based on DNA and serology Based on WGS 2 clades (pathogenic, saprophytic), 4 subclasses -68 species (>19 pathogenic)
How long before clinical signs develop in humans?
Typically 2 days - 4 weeks
