Brucellosis
[Undulant fever, Malta fever, Mediterranean fever]1. Identification:
Brucellosis is one of the major bacterial zoonoses. It has an acute or insidious onset, with continued, intermittent, or irregular fever, generalized aching, headache, profuse sweating and arthralgia. The disease may occur in severe manner with complications: Arthritis occur in 20% - 60% of cases; spondylitis is the most frequent. Genitourinary in 2%-10%; orchitis and epidedemitis. Localized suppurative infections of organs as liver and spleen and endocarditis Case-fatality rate in untreated cases is 2% or less and usually from endocarditis.The course of illness is variable, ranging from a few days, months or occasionally years. Recovery is usual but disability is often pronounced.
Relapsing illness is common. 5% of patients receiving appropriate therapy have one or more relapses within 3 years of initial onset, and the relapse rate is higher in the absence of appropriate therapy. The disease in animals may cause abortion, premature labors, infertility but not in human.
Diagnosis: 1. Clinical suspicion 2. Isolation of agent by culture of blood, BM, or synovial fluid (definite diagnosis but it take a time, so not practical). 3. Serological test (most practical but not definite): Brucella (tube) Agglutination Test (BAT). Rose-Bengal plate test. 2- Mercapto-Ethanol test (2ME), {to identify active infection}. ELISA appears to be more useful than BAT in areas of high endemicity. RIA, CFT and PCR.
Interpretation of BAT: In developing countries (Iraq):Titers of ≥ 1/640 are usually indicative of acute brucellosis. 1/320 is suggestive, but a successive increase in titer is more diagnostic than one high reading (as sub-clinical infection or cross immunity with other febrile illness lead to increase antibodies titer and false +ve results obtained).More than one of these serological tests should be used to confirm the diagnosis.
2. Infectious agents:Four species infect man:B. abortus → cattle. B. melitensis → goats and sheep (most virulent and invasive type). B. suis → pigs. B. canis → dogs.
Survival of bacteria
- Gram –ve slow-growing intracellular coccobacilli- Survive in nature for weeks, or months in favorable conditions of water, urine, feces, damp soil and manure.- In raw milk → survive for several days (boiling and souring kill M.O), unpasteurized cheese and ice-cream are risky. Fermentation and aging of cheese will increase acidity and kill the microorganism.Butter is usually safe.Destroyed by heat, acids and common disinfectants.
3. Occurrence:Worldwide, it is endemic in Mediterranean zones, central Asia and South America.In Iraq the disease is endemic and in Mosul city the disease is hyper-endemic. Brucellosis is predominantly an occupational disease of those dealing with infected animals or their tissues (farmers, veterinarians, butchers, lab. workers and slaughter houses workers).The disease is eradicated in Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Switzerland…
4. Reservoir: Main reservoir of human infection are cattle, goats, sheep, camels, pigs, buffaloes and horses.
5. Mode of transmission: Transmission is usually from infected animals to man. No evidence of man-to-man transmission. The routes of spread are: Food-borne infection: transmission of brucella by ingestion of raw milk or dairy products (unboilled or unpasteurized), undercooked meat and meat products is well recorded. Also raw vegetables grown on contaminated soil and contaminated water with excreta of infected animals. Contact infection: direct contact of braded skin, mucosa, or conjunctiva with tissues of infected animals, blood, urine and other discharge (veterinarians, lab. workers and abattoir workers).
Mode of transmission: A small number of cases have resulted from accidental inoculation at laboratories and veterinarians by contaminated needles with blood or brucella vaccine (S19 or Rev-1). Transmission via whole blood transfusions has been reported but is very rare
6. Incubation period: 1 week - 3 months (wide I.P, but it is usually around 1month).7. Period of communicability: No man to man transmission. 8. Susceptibility:Occupationally → adult males (farmers, shepherds, butchers, veterinarians and lab. workers).Immunity → uncertain.