Disease |
Causative Organism |
Animals Involved |
Known Distribution |
Probable Means of Spread to People |
Clinical Manifestations in People |
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Bacterial Diseases |
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Actinomycosis (see Actinomycosis) |
Actinomyces bovis and other species in animals may affect people, but most human infections are caused by commensals of people, especially Actinomyces israelii |
Mammals |
Worldwide; very rare in people |
Probably contact; actinomycosis usually disseminates from endogenous human flora |
Granulomas, abscesses, skin lesions; chronic bronchopneumonia; abdominal mass that may mimic a tumor; endocarditis; sepsis |
Anthrax (see Anthrax) |
Bacillus anthracis |
Mainly in cattle, sheep, goats, horses, wild herbivorous animals; virtually all mammals and some birds are susceptible to high dose |
Worldwide but distribution is focal; common in Africa, Asia, South America, Middle East, parts of Europe |
Occupational contact exposure (abraded skin, mechanical transmission by biting flies, other routes); ingestion/foodborne, rarely airborne |
Early signs vary with route of inoculation; papule to ulcerative skin lesions; mild to severe gastroenteritis ± hematemesis, bloody diarrhea, ascites (abdominal GI form); sore throat, dysphagia, fever, neck swelling, mouth lesions (oropharyngeal GI form); pneumonia; all may progress to sepsis, meningitis; untreated cases fatal in 5%–20% (cutaneous) to 100% (inhalation) |
Arcobacter infections |
Arcobacter butzleri, A cryaerophilus, A skirrowii, possibly others |
Poultry, cattle, pigs, sheep, horses, shellfish; some studies detected these organisms in dogs and/or cats |
Worldwide |
Ingestion of contaminated water, undercooked meat (especially poultry) has been suggested |
Gastroenteritis; bacteremia, mainly in patients with chronic illnesses; endocarditis, peritonitis; emerging and incompletely understood |
Bordetellosis (see Respiratory Diseases of Pigs and Infectious Tracheobronchitis of Dogs) |
Bordetella bronchiseptica |
Dogs, rabbits, cats, pigs, guinea pigs, other mammals |
Worldwide; uncommon in people |
Exposure to saliva or sputum, aerosols |
Sinusitis, bronchitis, pertussis-like illness; pneumonia and disseminated disease (eg, endocarditis, peritonitis, meningitis), usually in immunocompromised; wound infection |
Borreliosis (see Lyme Borreliosis) |
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—Lyme disease |
Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato complex (B burgdorferi sensu stricto, B garinii, B afzelii, B spielmanii, B japonica) |
Wild rodents, insectivores, hedgehogs, hares, other mammals; birds are reservoirs for agent; deer are hosts for tick vector only (blood meals) |
Agents exist worldwide where Ixodes ticks are found; human cases have been reported in North America, Europe, Australia, parts of Asia, Amazon region of South America |
Ixodes spp bites |
Nonspecific febrile illness early; target skin lesions in many; may progress to arthritis, neurologic, cardiac, and/ or skin signs (acrodermatitis chronica atrophicans); syndromes may vary with infecting agent |
—Tickborne relapsing fever |
B recurrentis, B crocidurae, B turicatae, B hermsii, B persica, B hispanica, others; some species such as B duttoni are human pathogens and not zoonotic |
Wild rodents, insectivores, possibly birds |
Africa, Asia, Europe, Americas; species varies with region |
Tick bites (mainly Ornithodoros spp) |
High fever, malaise, headache, myalgia, chills; neurologic signs or abortion possible; recurring episodes, often milder, after a symptom-free period; death in 2%–5% |
—Southern tick-associated rash illness |
Etiology uncertain; various Borrelia spp suggested |
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USA; most cases in southeast |
Tick bite (Amblyomma americanum) |
Resembles Lyme disease |
Brucellosis (see Brucellosis in Large Animals and see Brucellosis in Dogs) |
Brucella abortus |
Cattle, bison, water buffalo, African buffalo, elk, deer, sheep, goats, camels, South American camelids; other mammalian spillover hosts |
Once worldwide, now eradicated from domestic animals in some countries or regions; reservoirs in wildlife in some disease-free areas |
Ingestion (especially unpasteurized dairy products or undercooked meat), contact with mucous membranes and broken skin; strain 19 vaccine |
Extremely variable, subacute and undulant to sepsis; often nonspecific febrile illness with drenching sweats early; arthritis, spondylitis, epididymo-orchitis, endocarditis, neurologic, other syndromes if chronic; case fatality 5% in untreated |
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B melitensis |
Goats, sheep, camels; other mammalian spillover hosts |
Asia, Africa, Middle East, Mexico, Central and South America, some parts of Europe |
Ingestion (including unpasteurized dairy products or undercooked meat), contact with mucous membranes and broken skin; Rev 1 vaccine |
As above; this species highly pathogenic for people |
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B suis biovars 1–4; biovar 5 has not been reported in people |
Swine and wild pigs (biovars 1, 2, 3), European hares (biovar 2), reindeer and caribou (biovar 4); B suis also in some other mammals |
Biovars 1 and 3 worldwide in swine-raising regions except eradicated or nearly eradicated from domestic pigs in some countries; biovar 2 in wild boar in Europe; biovar 4 in Arctic |
Ingestion, direct contact with mucous membranes and broken skin |
As above |
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B canis |
Dogs; evidence of infection in wild canids including coyotes, foxes |
Worldwide; rare in people |
Probably via ingestion or contact with mucous membranes, broken skin; close contact, especially with animals that recently aborted or gave birth |
Probably as above |
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B pinnipedialis and B ceti |
Marine mammals |
Atlantic, Arctic, and Pacific oceans; Mediterranean sea |
Laboratory exposure; sources of other infections unknown (possibly contact with animals or exposure to seawater); rare or underdiagnosed in people |
Few cases known: mild to severe febrile illness, similar to that caused by other Brucella spp; neurobrucellosis with headache and chronic neurologic signs; spinal osteomyelitis |
Campylobacter enteritis (see Enteric Campylobacteriosis) |
C jejuni, C coli, occasionally other species; some strains of C jejuni seem to have broader host ranges than others |
Poultry, cattle, swine, dogs, cats, rodents, other mammals, wild birds |
Worldwide |
Foodborne (especially poultry and other meats, unpasteurized dairy products); waterborne; contact with infected animals (fecal/oral) |
Gastroenteritis from mild cases to fulminating or relapsing colitis; occasional sequelae such as reactive arthritis; occasionally, other syndromes, including sepsis |
Campylobacter fetus infection |
C fetus subsp fetus (most cases), C fetus subsp testudinum (proposed name); possibly C fetus subsp venerealis |
C fetus subsp fetus and C subsp venerealis in cattle, sheep, goats; C fetus subsp testudinum in reptiles |
Worldwide |
Probably direct contact or ingestion; often unknown |
Opportunist; sepsis, meningitis, endocarditis, abscesses, other systemic infections in elderly, immunocompromised, or infants; abortions, preterm births in pregnant women, neonatal sepsis; gastroenteritis not prominent in most cases |
Capnocytophaga infection |
C canimorsus, C cynodegmi |
Dogs, cats |
Probably worldwide |
Bites or scratches |
Fever, localized infections to bacteremia or sepsis, endocarditis, meningitis; often in immunocompromised or elderly |
Cat scratch disease |
Bartonella henselae; B clarridgeiae and other Bartonella species also implicated rarely in cat scratch disease or other conditions (eg, endocarditis) |
Cats and other felids; other Bartonella spp in canids, rodents, rabbits, other animals |
Worldwide |
Often associated with scratches, bites, especially from cats; potential for other exposures to broken skin via saliva; exposure of conjunctiva |
Lymphadenopathy (may be absent in elderly), fever, malaise, skin lesions at inoculation site in immunocompetent, usually self-limiting with complications (eg, endocarditis, neuroretinitis, neurologic disease) uncommon; inoculation into eye results in conjunctivitis ± ocular granuloma and local lymphadenopathy; risk of bacteremia, disseminated disease, bacillary angiomatosis in immunosuppressed |
Chlamydiosis (see also Psittacosis below) |
Chlamydia ( Chlamydophila) abortus, C felis |
C abortus in sheep, goats, cattle, other mammals; C felis in cats |
C felis worldwide; C abortus in most sheep-raising areas but not Australia or New Zealand |
Contact with animals; C abortus probably contact with pregnant or aborting ruminants |
C abortus: abortions, septicemia; C felis suspected agent of keratoconjunctivitis, also implicated in other conditions (controversial) |
Clostridial diseases (see Clostridial Diseases) |
Clostridium difficile; some ribotypes found in animals have been implicated as potential zoonoses |
Ribotypes from some calves, pigs, dogs are identical to some ribotypes found in people |
Worldwide |
Possible zoonosis; from contact or ingestion in contaminated meat; also from environment and contact with infected people |
Gastroenteritis, varying in severity from diarrhea to fulminant colitis, usually in conjunction with antibiotic use |
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Clostridium perfringens, type A (most common), C, or D; environmental or endogenous source, with some potential for zoonotic transmission |
Domestic and wild animals, people |
Worldwide |
Foodborne (usually type A); nonfood-associated intestinal infection; wound contaminant, usually environmental; may be endogenous in debilitated from GI or urogenital tract |
Foodborne gastroenteritis, usually brief, self-limited except in debilitated; nonfood-related intestinal infection with prolonged diarrhea, sometimes bloody, mainly in elderly after antibiotics; life-threatening necrotic enteritis, often in debilitated; gas gangrene, sepsis; necrotic enteritis, gas gangrene, sepsis are fatal if not treated |
Corynebacterium ulcerans and C pseudotuberculosis infections |
C ulcerans, C pseudotuberculosis |
C ulcerans in cattle, pigs, small ruminants, dogs, cats, ferrets, other domestic and wild animals; C pseudotuberculosis in sheep, goats, cattle, horses, camelids, other mammals |
Probably worldwide; uncommon in people but may be increasing |
Direct contact, consumption of unpasteurized milk products |
Acute upper respiratory illness with sinusitis, sore throat, tonsillitis, or more severe pharyngitis resembling diphtheria (pseudomembranous pharyngitis); cardiorespiratory complications possible; peritonitis; isolated skin infection; some cases serious or fatal |
Dermatophilosis (see Dermatophilosis) |
Dermatophilus congolensis |
Cattle, horses, deer, sheep, goats, other mammals |
Worldwide, especially in warmer regions |
Usually direct contact with lesions; mechanical transmission on arthropod vectors, fomites possible |
Pustular desquamative dermatitis, other skin lesions |
Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli infectionsb |
E coli O157:H7; also implicated are types O157:H, and members of serogroups O26, O103, O104, O111, O145, and others |
Especially cattle, sheep; also goats, bison, deer, pigs, other species of mammals, birds |
Worldwide |
Ingestion of undercooked meat (especially ground beef), vegetables or water contaminated with feces; direct contact with feces or contaminated soil |
Diarrhea or hemorrhagic colitis; up to 15% of patients with hemorrhagic colitis progress to hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS); case fatality rate for HUS is 3%–5%, higher in some populations (eg, 5%–10% in children, up to 50% in elderly) |
Erysipeloid (see Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae Infection) |
Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae |
Swine, sheep, cattle, rodents, marine mammals; many other domestic and wild mammals and marsupials, birds (including poultry), reptiles, fish, mollusks, crustaceans |
Worldwide |
Contact with animal products; via skin, usually after scratch or puncture wound; contaminated soil (survives for weeks to months) |
Localized cellulitis, usually self-limiting, often on hands; generalized skin lesions (uncommon); arthritis, often in finger joints near skin lesion; endocarditis (with high mortality, 38%); generalization with sepsis, other syndromes uncommon and often in immunocompromised |
Glanders (see Glanders) |
Burkholderia mallei |
Equids are reservoirs; felids, many other domesticated and wild mammals also susceptible |
Middle East, Asia, Africa and South America |
Contact with infected animals, tissues through broken skin, mucous membrane; ingestion; inhalation |
Mucous membrane or skin lesions; pneumonia and pulmonary abscess; sepsis; chronic abscesses, nodules, ulcers in many organs, weight loss, lymphadenopathy; case fatality rate varies with form, but >95% in untreated septicemia |
Helicobacter infection |
H pullorum, H suis, other species suspected as zoonoses |
Poultry (H pullorum), rodents (H pullorum and other species), pigs (H suis), dogs (H canis), many other mammals |
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Uncertain; possibly ingestion of undercooked meat or direct contact |
Gastroenteritis or diarrhea, liver disease; bacteremia in immunosuppressed patients |
Leprosy (see Mycobacterial Infections Other than Tuberculosis) |
Mycobacterium leprae |
Armadillos; nonhuman primates (rare) |
Armadillos in parts of southern USA, Mexico, South America; nonhuman primates in Africa, possibly other locations; only human reservoirs in other areas |
Transmission of animal leprosy to people likely |
Various skin lesions, sensory nerve lesions and deficits, nasal mucosal lesions; mild, self-limiting to progressive destruction |
Leptospirosis (see Leptospirosis) |
Leptospira spp |
Domestic and wild animals; reservoir hosts include rodents, dogs, cattle, pigs, farmed red deer, others |
Worldwide |
Occupational and recreational exposure, or exposure to rodent-contaminated material in urban locations; especially skin, mucous membrane contact with contaminated urine, infected fetuses, or reproductive fluids; water- and foodborne |
Asymptomatic to severe, sometimes biphasic; nonspecific febrile illness followed by aseptic meningitis or icteric form (especially liver, kidney, CNS involvement, hemorrhages possible); pulmonary hemorrhage and edema, other syndromes; uveitis can be sequela; case fatality rate varies with syndrome (uncommon in aseptic meningitis, 5%–15% in icteric form, 30%–60% in severe pulmonary form) |
Listeriosis (see Listeriosis) |
Listeria monocytogenes (types most often associated with disease are ½a, ½b, 4b), Listeria ivanovii (rare) |
Numerous mammals, birds, fish, crustaceans |
Worldwide |
Foodborne, especially unpasteurized dairy products, raw meat and fish, vegetables, processed foods contaminated after processing; ingestion of contaminated water, soil; direct contact with infected animals; nosocomial in hospitals, institutions |
Acute, self-limited febrile gastroenteritis or mild, flu-like illness; ocular disease, conjunctivitis; abortion, premature or septicemic newborn if infected during pregnancy; meningitis, meningoencephalitis, septicemia in elderly, immunosuppressed, and infants; papular or pustular rash ± fever, chills in healthy adults after handling infected fetuses |
Melioidosis (Pseudoglanders, see Melioidosis) |
Burkholderia pseudomallei (other species of soil-associated Burkholderia, such as B oklahomensis sp nov in North America, rarely linked to human infections) |
Sheep, goats, swine; occasional cases in many other terrestrial and aquatic mammals; also reptiles, some birds including parrots, tropical fish |
Asia, Africa, Australia, South America, Middle East, Caribbean |
Wound infection, inhalation, and ingestion; organisms live in soil and surface water; most cases are acquired from environment, but direct transmission from animals is possible |
Mimics many other diseases; acute localized infections, including skin lesions, cellulitis, abscesses, corneal ulcers; pulmonary disease, septicemia, internal organ abscesses; often occurs in immunocompromised; case fatality rate varies with form, >90% in untreated septicemia |
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections |
S aureus that carry mecA gene; some strains maintained in animals (eg, livestock-associated CC398), other strains mainly in people but animals can become carriers |
Pigs (major reservoirs for livestock-associated strain CC398, also carry ST9); cats, dogs mainly acquire strains from people; MRSA also reported in other mammals, including horses, cattle; birds, including poultry, psittacines; turtles |
Worldwide; can be reverse zoonosis or zoonosis; major strains in animals can vary with region |
Usually by direct contact (typically with asymptomatic carrier animals); other routes also described; can be nosocomial in hospitals |
Opportunist; localized skin and soft-tissue infections, invasive disease including septicemia, toxic shock syndrome; mortality varies with syndrome and success in finding antibiotic |
Mycobacteriosis (see Tuberculosis and other Mycobacterial Infections) |
Mycobacterium avium complex |
Many species of mammals, some birds |
Worldwide |
Environmental, mainly from water, and/or soil; infection common to people and animals |
Soft-tissue and bone infections; cervical lymphadenitis; pulmonary disease, often in immunocompromised or those with preexisting lung conditions; disseminated in immunocompromised, especially AIDS patients with uncontrolled disease |
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M avium paratuberculosis |
Cattle, sheep, goats, camelids, deer, other ruminants; rabbits and other nonruminants; corvids |
Worldwide |
Ingestion; accidental injection of vaccine |
Postulated involvement in Crohn’s disease after ingestion (controversial); severe local reaction if vaccine accidentally injected |
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Mycobacteria other than tuberculosis (includes M simiae, M kansasii, M xenopi, M scrofulaceum, M szulgai, M chelonae, M marinum, M ulcerans, others) |
Cattle, other ruminants; swine, cats, dogs, koalas, other mammals, amphibians, reptiles (uncommon), fish; predominant Mycobacterium spp vary with host |
Worldwide; distribution varies with the organism |
Environmental, from water and/or soil |
Same syndromes as M avium complex; some organisms tend to be associated with certain syndromes (eg, M marinum, M ulcerans, with ulcerative or nodular dermatitis) |
Mycoplasma infections |
Mycoplasma spp |
Livestock, nonhuman primates, marine mammals, cats, dogs, rodents, other mammals |
Worldwide; zoonotic infections rare |
Direct contact; bites; wound contamination, including accidental inoculation |
Asymptomatic carriage; cellulitis; other syndromes, including respiratory disease, septic arthritis, septicemia have been reported, especially in immunocompromised |
Pasteurellosis (see Pasteurellosis of Sheep and Goats and see Pasteurellosis) |
Pasteurella multocida and other species |
Many species of domestic and wild animals, including dogs, cats, livestock, rabbits, birds |
Worldwide |
Wounds, scratches, bites, close contact with mucus membranes |
Wound infections, cellulitis most common; other syndromes possible, including osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, sepsis, meningitis, respiratory disease; systemic conditions more common in immunocompromised |
Plague (see Plague) |
Yersinia pestis |
Rodents (eg, squirrels, prairie dogs, rats) and lagomorphs (pikas in Asia) are main reservoir; many mammals can be incidental hosts; cats and wild felids especially susceptible |
Foci in North and South America, Asia, Middle East, and Africa |
Flea bites, aerosols, handling infected animals or tissues (contact with broken skin or mucous membranes), bites or scratches, eating uncooked infected tissues |
Febrile flu-like syndrome with swollen, very painful draining lymph node(s) (buboes); pneumonia; sepsis can occur in either bubonic or pneumonic form; case fatality rate in untreated 40%–70% (bubonic) to 100% (pneumonic); < 5% mortality if bubonic form treated early |
Psittacosis and ornithosis (see Avian Chlamydiosis) |
Chlamydia (Chlamydophila) psittaci |
Psittacine birds (especially parakeets, cockatiels), pigeons, turkeys, ducks, geese, and other domestic or wild birds; mammalian strains of C psittaci also exist (zoonotic potential still undetermined) |
Worldwide |
Inhalation of respiratory secretions or dried guano |
Influenza-like febrile illness with nonproductive cough that may progress to pneumonia; complications, including endocarditis, myocarditis, meningoencephalitis, hepatitis, glomerulonephritis, and other organ dysfunction; sepsis; some cases fatal if untreated, <1% with treatment |
Rat bite fever |
Streptobacillus moniliformis |
Rodents; might also be transmitted by carnivores (eg, dogs, cats, ferrets), which are probably infected or transiently colonized from rodents |
Probably worldwide |
Bites and scratches; handling or kissing a rodent, exposure to rodent urine; can be waterborne or foodborne |
Fever, severe myalgia and joint pain, headache, rash, sometimes GI signs; complications, including polyarthritis (usually but not always sterile), hepatitis, endocarditis, focal abscesses, sepsis possible if untreated; overall case fatality rate 10%–13% if untreated |
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Spirillum minus |
Rodents; might also be transmitted by carnivores, which are probably infected or transiently colonized from rodents |
Organism is common only in Asia |
Mainly bites and scratches |
As above, but indurated, often ulcerated lesion at inoculation site; can relapse; some (minority) may have distinctive rash (large violaceous or reddish macules); polyarthritis is rare; overall case fatality rate 7%–10% if untreated |
Salmonellosis (see Salmonellosis) |
Salmonella enterica and S bongori (> 2,500 serovars) |
Widespread in mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, including domestic species; also in crustaceans; higher-risk pets for human exposure may include reptiles, amphibians, young poultry, some exotic mammals |
Worldwide |
Foodborne infection or fecal-oral; some cases of occupational and recreational exposure |
Gastroenteritis to sepsis; focal infections possible; especially severe in the elderly, young children, or immunocompromised |
Streptococcal infections |
Streptococcus spp, including S suis, S equi zooepidemicus, S canis, S iniae, possibly others |
S suis in swine; S equi zooepidemicus in horses; S canis in dogs, cats; S iniae in fish; each species can also be found in other animals |
Worldwide |
Ingestion, especially of unpasteurized dairy products, pork; direct contact often through broken skin; the human pathogen S pyogenes can also colonize bovine udder and be transmitted in milk |
Skin and soft-tissue infections; pharyngitis; other conditions, including pneumonia, meningitis, arthritis, endocarditis, streptococcal toxic shock syndrome, sepsis |
Tuberculosis (see also mycobacteriosis, above, see Tuberculosis and other Mycobacterial Infections, and see Tuberculosis) |
Mycobacterium bovis |
Cattle, bison, African buffalo, cervids, brushtail opossums, badgers, kudu can be reservoirs; swine and many other mammals can be spillover hosts |
Once worldwide, now eradicated or rare in some countries |
Ingestion (unpasteurized dairy products, undercooked meat including bushmeat), inhalation, contamination of breaks in the skin |
Skin lesions, cervical lymphadenitis (scrofula), pulmonary disease; genitourinary disease; can affect bones and joints, meninges; gastroenteritis |
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Mycobacterium caprae |
Mainly goats, also infects other ruminants; can occur in other mammals, including pigs, horses, cervids, camels, carnivores |
Reported mainly in Europe |
Thought to be ingestion or direct contact with livestock, similarly to M bovis |
Extrapulmonary conditions, including skin lesions, meningitis, lymphadenitis, pericarditis, urinary, dissemination; also pulmonary disease |
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Mycobacterium microti |
Rodents thought to be reservoir; can occur in domestic animals, including cats, dogs, ferrets, livestock |
Appears to be rare human zoonosis |
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Most reported cases have been pulmonary; can also cause extrapulmonary disease |
Tularemia (see Tularemia) |
Francisella tularensis subsp tularensis more virulent, F tularensis subsp holarctica (F tularensis type B) less virulent, F tularensis subsp mediasiatica, F tularensis subsp novicida |
Rabbits, rodents, cats, sheep, other mammals, birds, reptiles, fish; often in wild animals |
F tularensis subsp tularensis almost exclusively in North America; F tularensis subsp holarctica in North America, Europe, Asia; F tularensis subsp mediasiatica in Central Asia; F tularensis subsp novicida reported in North America, Australia, Spain |
Contact with mucous membranes, broken skin; insect bites (tabanids, mosquitoes, hard ticks); fomites; ingestion in food or water; inhalation |
Nonspecific febrile illness, lymphadenitis; ulcerative skin lesions, exudative pharyngitis and stomatitis, conjunctivitis, gastroenteritis, respiratory signs or pneumonia, sepsis; case fatality rate 5% (localized disease, untreated) to >50% (untreated typhoidal form or severe respiratory disease) |
Vibriosis |
Vibrio parahaemolyticus |
Marine and estuarine shellfish, fish; also environmental in aquatic environments |
Worldwide |
Ingestion; wound infections |
Gastroenteritis; dysentery (especially in some geographic regions); wound infections (mild to severe, including necrotizing fasciitis); sepsis; severe wound infections and sepsis usually in immunocompromised or those with liver disease (case fatality rate for sepsis 29%) |
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V vulnificus |
Marine shellfish, crustaceans (eg, shrimp), fish; also environmental in aquatic environments |
Worldwide; human cases have been reported in North America, Europe, Asia |
Ingestion (often raw oysters); wound infection from water or handling hosts |
Wound infections from mild, self-limited lesions, bullae to cellulitis, myositis; necrotizing fasciitis; gastroenteritis; sepsis, usually in immunocompromised or those with liver disease, other debilitating illnesses; case fatality rate for sepsis >50%, and up to 25% for wound infections |
Vibriosis (continued) |
V cholerae O1/O139 (epidemic strains) |
Oysters, crabs, shrimp, mussels; most cases acquired from people |
Rare/absent to epidemic in different regions; one focus along USA Gulf Coast in shellfish |
Ingestion |
Mild to severe, voluminous diarrhea, vomiting, dehydration; severe cases fatal if untreated, but low mortality if treated |
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V cholerae non-O1/O139 (nonepidemic strains) |
Oysters, other seafood; also environmental in aquatic environments |
Worldwide |
Ingestion; wound infection |
Gastroenteritis, usually mild and self-limited; wound infections; septicemia, usually in immunosuppressed or those with liver disease (case fatality rate for sepsis 47%–60% or higher) |
Yersiniosis |
Yersinia pseudotuberculosis |
Many species of mammals, including swine, dogs, cats, rodents, wild mammals, birds |
Agent probably worldwide; prevalence may vary between regions |
Ingestion of contaminated water, food (including meat [especially pork], vegetables); fecal-oral (animal contact); dog bite (rare) |
Gastroenteritis (enterocolitis); pseudoappendicitis (with mesenteric lymphadenitis, terminal ileitis, fever, abdominal pain); severe GI bleeding possible in some cases of colitis; pharyngitis; sequelae may include erythema nodosum, reactive arthritis; sepsis, especially in elderly or immunocompromised |
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Y enterocolitica; not all serotypes are pathogenic |
Many domestic and wild mammals, including rodents; some birds, reptiles, amphibians; zoonotic serotypes most common in pigs (major zoonotic source), pathogenic types also occur in dogs, cats |
Worldwide; prevalence of human disease may vary between regions (commonly reported in Europe) |
Ingestion |
Gastroenteritis with watery diarrhea especially in young children, bloody feces uncommon; pseudoappendicitis; sequelae may include erythema nodosum, reactive arthritis; sepsis, other syndromes |
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Rickettsial Diseases |
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Human ewingii ehrlichiosis (formerly granulocytic ehrlichiosis) |
Ehrlichia ewingii |
Dogs, deer proposed |
Southeastern and south central USA; has been detected in South America |
Ticks, including Amblyomma americanum |
Few cases described; fever, headache, malaise, myalgia, nausea, vomiting; many patients were immunosuppressed |
Human monocytic ehrlichiosis (see Ehrlichiosis, Anaplasmosis, and Related Infections in Animals) |
Ehrlichia chaffeensis |
Deer are probably major reservoir in North America, dogs and other canids, lemurs, other mammals can also be infected |
North America; also reported in South America, Asia, and Africa |
Ticks, including Amblyomma americanum |
Asymptomatic to nonspecific febrile illness; rash in many pediatric cases, some adults; may progress to prolonged fever, renal failure, respiratory distress, hemorrhages, cardiomyopathy, neurologic signs, multiorgan failure; more severe in immunosuppressed, elderly; estimated case fatality rate 2%–3% |
Human granulocytic anaplasmosis (formerly human granulocytic ehrlichiosis) |
Anaplasma phagocytophilum (formerly Ehrlichia phagocytophilum and E equi) |
Wild rodents, deer may be reservoirs in North America; livestock, wild ungulates, wild rodents may be reservoirs in Europe; many other animals (eg, equids, ruminants, dogs, cats, birds) can also be infected |
Worldwide |
Tick bites (Ixodes spp) |
Resembles human monocytic ehrlichiosis; often asymptomatic to mild in immunocompetent; rash uncommon; estimated case fatality rate <1% |
Infection by other Ehrlichia species |
E canis, E muris–like organism implicated rarely in human illness |
Dogs and other canids thought to be reservoirs for E canis, might also occur in felids; rodents may be reservoirs for E muris |
E canis worldwide; E muris Eastern Europe to Asia; E muris–like organism in North America |
Ticks (E canis transmitted by Rhipicephalus sanguineus, E muris by Haemaphysalis flava and Ixodes persulcatus complex) |
Rare cases of febrile illness, in both healthy and immunosuppressed |
Q fever (Query fever, see Coxiellosis) |
Coxiella burnetii |
Sheep, cattle, goats, cats, dogs, rodents, other mammals, birds, ticks |
Worldwide |
Mainly airborne; exposure to placenta, birth tissues, animal excreta; occasionally ingestion (including unpasteurized milk); tickborne infections probably rare or nonexistent in people |
Febrile influenza-like illness; atypical pneumonia, hepatitis, endocarditis in some; possible pregnancy complications; overall case fatality rate 1%–2% if untreated |
Sennetsu fever |
Neorickettsia sennetsu |
Uncertain, possibly fish |
Japan, Malaysia, Laos, possibly other Asian countries |
Thought to be ingestion of raw fish |
Relatively mild, nonspecific, febrile illness, resembles infectious mononucleosis |
Spotted fever group of Rickettsia |
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—African tick bite fever |
R africae |
Ungulates |
Sub-Saharan Africa, eastern Caribbean |
Bite of infected tick (mainly Amblyomma hebraeum, A variegatum, also A lepidum, possibly Rhipicephalus decoloratus,Rhipicephalus appendiculatus) |
Nonspecific febrile illness; painful regional lymphadenopathy in many; eschars often multiple; nuchal myalgia; sometimes sparse maculopapular and/or vesicular rash; deaths do not seem to occur |
—Mediterranean spotted fever; Boutonneuse fever; Tick bite fever; |
R conorii subsp conorii |
Dogs, rabbits implicated as reservoirs; other animals can be infected |
Europe, especially Mediterranean; cases reported in sub-Saharan Africa |
Bite of infected ticks (mainly Rhipicephalus sanguineus, also others), crushing tick |
Nonspecific febrile illness; eschar (typically single) may or may not be present; rash, often maculopapular, in most; life-threatening disseminated disease or neurologic signs possible but uncommon; case fatality rate 1%–3% if untreated |
—Israeli spotted fever, Astrakhan spotted fever, Indian tick typhus |
R conorii subsp israelensis (Israeli spotted fever), R conorii subsp caspia (Astrakhan spotted fever), R conorii subsp indica (Indian tick typhus) |
Reservoir hosts uncertain |
Israeli spotted fever in Middle East, reported in Europe; Astrakhan spotted fever in Russia, Kazakhstan; Indian tick typhus in Asia (Indian subcontinent) |
Bite of infected ticks (mainly Rhipicephalus spp), crushing tick |
Astrakhan spotted fever and Indian tick typhus resemble Mediterranean spotted fever, but Israeli spotted fever may be more severe |
—Fleaborne spotted fever; Cat flea typhus |
R felis (synonym ELB agent) |
Unknown; dogs have been suggested as possible amplifying hosts |
North and South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, probably worldwide |
Flea bites; mainly associated with Ctenocephalides felis (cat flea), also infects C canis and other fleas |
Few clinical cases have been described but resembles other spotted fevers; febrile illness; rash in most; eschar may be uncommon; most cases seem to be mild but CNS involvement, pneumonia possible |
—Queensland tick typhus |
R australis |
Bandicoots, rodents |
Australia |
Bite of infected Ixodes tick, especially I holocyclus, I tasmani |
Febrile illness, eschar may be present, rash (either maculopapular or vesicular) in most; mild in most, but serious disseminated disease, complications, death possible |
—Rickettsial pox |
R akari |
Mice; also rats, Korean voles |
Organism may be cosmopolitan; human cases seem to be uncommon |
Bite of infected rodent mites, Liponyssoides sanguineus |
Eschar (single) in most; febrile illness; maculopapular rash progresses to vesicular, pustular, resembles chickenpox; self-limiting |
—Rickettsia parkeri rickettsiosis |
R parkeri |
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North America, detected in parts of South America |
Bite of infected ticks, Amblyomma maculatum; also found in other Amblyomma spp |
Resembles Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) but seems to be milder in most cases; differs from RMSF in that eschars occur in most cases (may be multiple), petechial rash does not seem to be characteristic |
—Rocky Mountain spotted fever (see Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever in Dogs) |
R rickettsii |
Rodents, rabbits, opossums, and other small mammals might amplify; dogs can be infected |
Western hemisphere |
Bite of infected ticks, especially Dermacentor variabilis, D andersoni (D variabilis in USA); Amblyomma cajennense, A aureolatum in South America; Rhipicephalus sanguineus in Arizona, Mexico, and South America; also from crushing tick |
Moderate to severe febrile illness; macular to generalized petechial rash; edema in some; usually no eschar; neurologic, pulmonary, hemorrhagic, and kidney signs in some; sepsis; gangrene; case fatality rate 15%–30% or higher (up to 85%) if untreated, ~3% or less with treatment in North America but higher in parts of Brazil |
—Tickborne lymphadenopathy; Dermacentor necrosis-erythema-lymphadenopathy |
R slovaca, R raoultii |
Uncertain; wild boar may be involved |
Europe to Central Asia |
Bites of infected ticks; R slovaca especially in Dermacentor marginatus, D reticulatus; R raoultii in Rhipicephalus pumilio, D nuttalli, other Dermacentor spp |
Eschar, local lymphadenopathy; localized alopecia at bite site; mild illness, fever and rash uncommon; no deaths reported |
—Other tickborne species in spotted fever group |
R sibirica, R japonica, R helvetica, R honei, R heilongjiangensis, R aeschlimannii, R massiliae, R monacensi, R amblyommii, others |
Various vertebrates |
Worldwide; distribution varies by species |
Bites of ixodid ticks; specific vector varies by species |
Inoculation site eschar (most); febrile illness with headache, myalgia, sometimes other signs; rash; local lymphadenopathy (some species); major signs, risk of complications, severity vary with species of Rickettsia |
Typhus group of Rickettsia |
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—Murine typhus; Fleaborne typhus |
R typhi (formerly R mooseri) |
Rats are major reservoir; cats, opossums, possibly dogs, other species in peridomestic cycle |
Worldwide, especially warmer regions |
Infected rodent fleas, usually via flea feces; cat fleas seem to be involved in some cycles |
Fever, severe headache, central rash (not always observed); other signs, including arthralgia, cough, nausea/vomiting in some; mortality rate 4% without treatment |
—Scrub typhus; Chigger-borne rickettsiosis |
Orientia tsutsugamushi and related species |
Rodents, insectivores |
Asia, Australia, islands of southwestern Pacific Ocean; cases are usually concentrated regionally in “typhus islands” |
Bite of infected larval trombiculid mites (chiggers) |
Eschar in some; rash, headache, fever, painful lymphadenopathy, body aches, interstitial pneumonitis, GI signs; pneumonia, neurologic signs or cardiac complications in some; mild to severe; convalescence prolonged; case fatality rate up to 30%–50% if untreated |
—Typhus |
R prowazekii |
Flying squirrels |
Eastern USA |
Squirrel lice or fleas suspected |
Nonspecific febrile illness, rash; GI signs in some; sepsis possible; appears to be somewhat milder than non-zoonotic typhus, which has a mortality rate of 20%–60% if untreated |
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Fungal Diseases |
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Aspergillosis; Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (see Aspergillosis) |
Aspergillus spp |
Birds and mammals |
Worldwide |
Environmental exposure (decaying vegetation or grains); infection common to people and animals, insignificant as zoonosis |
Allergic respiratory signs, especially in people with certain respiratory conditions or immunodeficiencies; allergic sinusitis; pneumonia sometimes with dissemination in immunocompromised (can be fatal); chronic pulmonary disease ± aspergilloma (fungus ball); localized infections of other organs, tissues |
Blastomycosis (see Blastomycosis) |
Blastomyces dermatitidis |
Dogs, cats, horses, marine mammals, other mammals |
Distribution in environment uncertain; clinical cases focal; locally acquired cases reported in parts of North America, Africa, Middle East, India |
Environmental exposure, organism is most common in moist soil; infection common in people and animals; also reported rarely by animal exposure |
Acute to chronic pulmonary disease; skin or bone lesions; meningitis, other syndromes, disseminated disease possible; course mild to severe, some cases fatal |
Coccidioidomycosis (see Coccidioidomycosis) |
Coccidioides immitis, C posadasii |
Cattle, sheep, horses, llamas, dogs, many other mammals |
Especially southwestern USA, Mexico, Central and South America; in arid or semiarid foci; some cases might be acquired outside usual foci |
Principally environmental exposure (inhalation of arthrospores), including fungal cultures; infection common in people and animals, one unusual case reported after necropsy of horse with disseminated disease |
Self-limited, febrile, flu-like illness, sometimes with cough, chest pain in healthy host; serious, possibly life-threatening pulmonary disease or disseminated infection with cutaneous/subcutaneous lesions, persistent meningitis or osteomyelitis, especially in immunocompromised |
Cryptococcosis (see Cryptococcosis) |
Cryptococcus neoformans var grubii, C neoformans var neoformans, C gattii |
Birds including pigeons, psittacines (mainly grows in guano; temporary colonization of intestinal tract also possible); clinical cases in cats, other mammals |
Worldwide |
Principally environmental exposure, especially pigeon nests for C neoformans, trees for C gattii; via inhalation or through the skin; infection common in people and animals, insignificant as zoonosis |
Respiratory signs, mild to severe, often self-limiting in healthy host but more likely to be severe in immunocompromised; dissemination with CNS disease, ocular signs, other syndromes, most often in immunocompromised; skin lesions, either localized from inoculation (uncommon) or from disseminated disease |
Histoplasmosis (see Histoplasmosis) |
Histoplasma capsulatum var capsulatum |
Dogs, cats, bats, cattle, sheep, horses, many other domestic and wild mammals, birds |
Worldwide; clinical cases often cluster in regional foci |
Principally environmental exposure, avian or bat feces encourage growth of organism; infection common in people and animals; insignificant as zoonosis |
Flu-like, febrile illness, usually self-limiting in healthy hosts; skin lesions; chronic pulmonary disease, usually with preexisting lung disease; dissemination in very young, elderly, immunocompromised |
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H capsulatum var duboisii |
As above |
Africa |
As above |
Usually skin and subcutaneous lesions, osteolytic bone lesions but can disseminate |
Malassezia infection |
Malassezia spp |
Dogs, cats, other animals |
Worldwide |
Exposure to symptomatic animals; normal levels on skin not thought to be a significant risk |
Dermatitis; zoonotic strains might be implicated in fungemia in preterm neonates, other immunocompromised |
Ringworm (Dermatophytosis, see Dermatophytosis) |
Microsporum and Trichophyton spp |
Dogs, cats, hedgehogs, cattle, sheep, goats, horses, rodents, other mammals, birds, very rarely reptiles |
Worldwide |
Direct skin/hair contact with infected animals, fomites |
Skin and hair lesions, usually pruritic; rare skin dissemination in immunocompromised |
Sporotrichosis (see Sporotrichosis) |
Sporothrix schenckii |
Cats, other mammals, birds |
Worldwide; epizootics in cats in South America |
Primarily environmental in vegetation, wood, soil; inoculation from environment in penetrating wounds (splinters, bites, pecks), skin contact with lesions, especially in cats; bites, scratches, other close contact implicated during feline epidemics; inhalation rare |
Papules, pustules, nodules, ulcerative skin lesions, may follow course of draining lymphatics; mucosa can be affected; extracutaneous involvement, especially bones, joints; disseminated disease (including meningitis) can be seen in immunocompromised; acute or chronic pulmonary disease resembling tuberculosis after inhalation, especially with underlying lung disease (rare) |
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Parasitic Diseases—Protozoans |
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Babesiosis (see Babesiosis) |
Babesia microti complex, B duncani (formerly WA-1), and other species |
Rodents, insectivores, lagomorphs, some other mammals; reservoirs uncertain for some species |
Babesia spp worldwide in wild animals, many agents not identified to species; human illness due to B microti complex reported in North America (most), Europe, Asia, Australia |
Bite of infected Ixodes ticks for B microti |
Many immunocompetent patients may have mild to moderate flu-like, febrile illness; mild to severe hemolytic anemia, especially severe in immunocompromised and elderly; respiratory, hepatic, renal, and other organ dysfunction; recurrent or chronic infection may develop; dual infection with B burgdorferi may worsen both diseases; death possible in severe cases |
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B divergens |
Cattle; B divergens or closely related organism in farmed reindeer, wild cervids |
Europe, possibly North Africa; similar organisms might be present in North America; reported in Asia (China) |
Tick bites (Ixodes ricinus) |
Usually in splenectomized; acute, severe hemolysis; persistent high fever, headache, myalgia, abdominal pain, sometimes GI signs; shock and renal failure; cases progress rapidly; usually fatal if untreated; milder flu-like cases have been reported in immunocompetent patients |
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B bovis; uncertain zoonosis; some historical cases were probably B divergens |
Cattle, water buffalo, African buffalo, possibly other species |
Africa, Asia, Central and South America, Mexico, Australia, parts of Europe |
Tick bites (Rhipicephalus microplus and R annulatus) |
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Balantidiasis |
Balantidium coli and related species |
Swine, rats, nonhuman primates, other animals |
Worldwide |
Ingestion, especially of water contaminated with feces |
Asymptomatic to mucoid, bloody feces; intestinal hemorrhage and perforation possible; rare extraintestinal cases |
Chagas’ disease (American trypanosomiasis, see Chagas’ Disease) |
Trypanosoma cruzi |
Opossums, lagomorphs, rodents, armadillos, dogs, cats, other wild and domestic mammals |
Western hemisphere—southern USA, Mexico, Central and South America |
Fecal material of reduviid bug in family Triatomidae contaminates bite wounds, abrasions, or mucous membranes; ingestion in contaminated food |
Acute disease—erratic fever, adenopathy, headache, myalgia, hepatosplenomegaly, swelling at inoculation site and eyelid; myocarditis or encephalitis in some; worse in immunocompromised Chronic form (in 10%–30% of patients)—cardiomyopathy, megaesophagus, megacolon, other forms; reported annual mortality rate in chronic form 0.2%–19% (higher rates from studies that include only cardiac patients) |
Cryptosporidiosis (see Cryptosporidiosis) |
Cryptosporidium parvum, C canis, C felis, C meleagridis, C cuniculus, C viatorum, C muris, and other species (C hominis and likely some genotypes of C parvum are adapted mainly to people) |
Cattle and other ruminants, dogs, cats, rabbits, other domestic and wild mammals, birds, reptiles, fish |
Worldwide |
Fecal-oral; ingestion of contaminated food and water; inhalation |
Self-limiting gastroenteritis in healthy; can be cholera-like and persistent in immunocompromised, with weight loss, wasting; cholecystitis; respiratory signs, pancreatitis, other syndromes mainly in immunosuppressed |
Giardiasis (see Giardiasis (Giardia)) |
Giardia intestinalis, also known as G duodenalis (formerly G lamblia); only some genotypes seem to have zoonotic potential |
Many domestic and wild mammals, including dogs, cats, ruminants, aquatic mammals such as beavers |
Worldwide |
Ingestion of water and less often food; direct fecal-oral (hands or fomites) |
Gastroenteritis, may be persistent |
Leishmaniosis —Visceral (Kalaazar; see Leishmaniosis) |
Leishmania infantum |
Wild canids and dogs are primary reservoirs, also in other mammals |
Asia, South America, Caribbean, Africa, the Middle East, Europe (Mediterranean spreading north), North America |
Bite of sand flies Phlebotomus and Lutzomyia spp |
Undulating fever, hepatosplenomegaly; some have cough, diarrhea, lymphadenopathy, weight loss, petechiae or hemorrhages on mucous membranes, nodular lesions or darkening of skin; pancytopenia; mild cases with only a few signs may resolve on their own, but most other cases fatal if untreated |
—Cutaneous and mucocutaneous |
L tropica complex (except L tropica, which is maintained in people), L braziliensis complex, L mexicana complex, others |
Dogs (L peruviana), rodents, various wild mammals act as reservoir hosts; other mammals can be infected |
Mediterranean, Asia, Africa, Middle East, Mexico to South America, Caribbean; localized focus in USA (Texas and Oklahoma) |
As above |
Papules to ulcers or nodules on skin ± mucous membranes; single or multiple lesions; localized or disseminated; may persist or recur; atypical forms in immunosuppressed; cutaneous form rarely fatal, mucocutaneous form can be disfiguring and may be fatal if pharynx affected |
Malaria of nonhuman primates |
Nonhuman primate–associated Plasmodium spp, P knowlesi, rarely P cynomolgi, others also potential zoonoses |
Old and New World monkeys, apes |
P knowlesi in Asia; other species exist in Central and South America, Asia, Africa |
Bite of anopheline mosquitoes |
Febrile episodes with chills; headache, myalgia, malaise, cough, nausea, vomiting, and other symptoms in some; cases range from mild, self-limiting to fatal (3% case fatality rate for P knowlesi) |
Microsporidiosis |
Microsporidia of Enterocytozoon bieneusi, Encephalitozoon cuniculi, E intestinalis, E hellem, others; both zoonotic and anthropnotic transmission reported for some agents |
Widespread in vertebrates, including primates, rabbits, rodents, dogs, cats, cattle, pigs, goats, birds, fish; also in invertebrates |
Worldwide |
Fecal-oral; direct contact; ingestion of contaminated food or water; aerosols; possibly vector-transmitted |
Keratitis; acute diarrhea (traveler’s diarrhea); chronic diarrhea in immunocompromised; may disseminate to systemic disease with variable symptoms in immunocompromised |
Rhinosporidiosis (see Rhinosporidiosis) |
Rhinosporidium seeberi; some strains may be host specific |
Natural hosts thought to be fish and amphibians; also found in various mammals, including horses, cattle, mules, dogs, and cats; birds |
Worldwide, especially in tropics; endemic in South America, Asia, and Africa |
Environmental exposure, probably water |
Nasal and other mucous membrane masses and polyps (mainly nose, nasopharynx, eye); may cause obstruction; rare disseminated disease with osteolytic lesions or affecting viscera; rare skin and subcutaneous lesions |
Sarcocystosis (Sarcosporidiosis, see Sarcocystosis) |
Sarcocystis suihominis, also called S meischeriana |
People, nonhuman primates are definitive hosts; swine are intermediate host |
Worldwide |
Ingestion of raw pork |
Gastroenteritis, usually mild, or asymptomatic |
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S hominis, also called S fusiformis |
People, nonhuman primates are definitive hosts; cattle are intermediate host |
Worldwide |
Ingestion of raw beef |
Gastroenteritis, usually mild or asymptomatic |
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Sarcocystis spp; S nesbitti may be one cause |
People are intermediate host; species of Sarcocystis and definitive host(s) are often unknown; definitive host for S nesbitti thought to be snakes |
Worldwide; symptomatic cases mainly in Asia, probably because of distribution of definitive host |
Assumed to be ingestion of oocysts shed in feces of definitive host(s) or sporocysts |
Main syndrome is myositis, acute and self-limited to chronic, moderately severe; also cough, arthralgia, transient pruritic rashes, headache, malaise, lymphadenopathy in some |
Toxoplasmosis (see Toxoplasmosis) |
Toxoplasma gondii |
Felidae, including domestic cats, are definitive hosts; essentially all other mammals (including livestock) and birds thought to be susceptible as intermediate hosts |
Worldwide |
Ingestion of oocysts shed in feces of infected cats (including contaminated soil, food, water) or ingestion of tissue cysts in undercooked meat or unpasteurized milk |
Lymphadenopathy or mild, febrile, flu-like syndrome or uveitis in immunocompetent, nonpregnant host; often severe in immunocompromised, with neurologic disease, chorioretinitis, myocarditis, pneumonitis, or disseminated disease; infection of fetus may result in CNS damage or generalized infection; abortions and stillbirths |
Trypanosomiasis (African sleeping sickness, see Trypanosomiasis) |
Trypanosoma brucei; T brucei rhodesiense is zoonotic; T brucei gambiense is primarily a human pathogen, although some animals (eg, pigs) can be infected and might serve as minor reservoirs |
T brucei rhodesiense reservoirs may include cattle, sheep, antelope, hyenas, lions, other wildlife, people; also isolated from other mammals |
Africa; common below the Sahara desert |
Bite of infected tsetse fly (Glossina spp) |
Painful chancre at bite site in some patients; intermittent fever, headache, adenopathy, rash, arthralgia; neurologic signs such as somnolence, seizures; cardiac complications possible; gambiense disease may last years; rhodesiense disease acute, may last weeks to months; both usually fatal without treatment |
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Parasitic Diseases—Trematodes (Flukes) |
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Clonorchiasis |
Clonorchis sinensis (Chinese liver fluke) |
Dogs, cats, swine, rats, other mammals are definitive hosts; fish (and snails) are intermediate hosts |
Asia |
Ingestion of undercooked infected freshwater fish or shrimp containing encysted larvae |
Cholecystitis symptoms, indigestion, diarrhea, mild fever; chronic infections associated with cirrhosis, pancreatitis, or cholangiocarcinoma |
Dicrocoeliasis |
Dicrocoelium dendriticum, possibly D hospes (lancet flukes) |
Ruminants, especially sheep, goats, cattle, occasionally other domestic and wild mammals are definitive hosts; land snails (first) and ants (second) are intermediate hosts |
D dendriticum on all major continents (may be focal); D hospes in Africa south of Sahara desert |
Ingestion of infected ants |
Abdominal discomfort, flatulent indigestion; occasionally GI signs (diarrhea, constipation, vomiting, pain); weight loss, fatigue; biliary obstruction, cholangitis, hepatomegaly, or acute urticaria possible |
Echinostomiasis |
Echinostoma revolutum, E ilocanum, E hortense, and other Echinostoma spp; Echinochasmus japonicus and other members of Echinostomatidae can also be zoonotic |
Cats, dogs, rodents, pigs, other mammals; birds, including poultry, are definitive hosts; fish, shellfish, tadpoles, snails are intermediate hosts |
Most human cases in Asia, Western Pacific; this group of parasites is widely distributed, including Europe, Americas, Middle East |
Ingestion of undercooked fish, shellfish, snails, or amphibians (frogs) |
Abdominal discomfort; diarrhea, especially in heavy infestation; malnutrition, anemia, edema may occur, especially in children; intestinal perforation has been reported |
Fascioliasis |
Fasciola hepatica |
Cattle, sheep, water buffalo, horses, rabbits, other herbivores are definitive hosts; snails are intermediate hosts |
Worldwide or nearly worldwide; previously thought to be mainly in temperate areas but may be more widely distributed |
Ingestion of contaminated greens, eg, watercress, or water that contains metacercariae |
Gastroenteritis, hepatomegaly, fever, urticaria possible acutely; biliary colic and obstructive jaundice in chronic cases; aberrant migration with extrahepatic signs (eg, pulmonary infiltrates, neurologic signs, lymphadenopathy, skin lesions or subcutaneous swelling) in some |
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F gigantica |
Cattle, buffalo, goats, sheep, zebras, other mammals are definitive hosts; snails are intermediate hosts |
Thought to occur mainly in tropical areas: Africa, Asia, Middle East, and western Pacific |
As above |
Signs resemble fascioliasis caused by F hepatica |
Fasciolopsiasis |
Fasciolopsis buski |
Swine, people are definitive hosts; snails are intermediate hosts |
Asian pig-raising regions |
Ingestion of aquatic vegetables or contaminated drinking water containing metacercariae |
Often asymptomatic; gastroenteritis; intestinal bleeding, obstruction, or perforation possible; facial, abdominal, extremity edema may occur |
Gastrodiscoidiasis |
Gastrodiscoides hominis; uncertain whether people and swine carry the same strains |
Swine, people, nonhuman primates, rodents, other mammals are definitive hosts; snails are intermediate hosts |
Asia (including the Philippines), also reported in Africa, Volga delta in Russia |
Possibly ingestion of water or aquatic plants |
Mild diarrhea if high parasite burden |
Heterophyiasis |
Heterophyes spp, Haplorchis spp, other heterophids |
Cats, dogs, foxes, wolves, cattle, other mammals, fish-eating birds are definitive hosts (host varies with species of parasite); fish (and snails) are intermediate hosts |
Middle East (especially Nile delta), Turkey, Asia |
Ingestion of undercooked fish containing encysted larvae |
Diarrhea with mucus, colicky pain; heart or CNS involvement possible; severity of signs may vary with species |
Metagonimiasis |
Metagonimus yokogawai, M miyatai, M takahashii, and other Metagonimus spp |
Cats, dogs, rats, other fish-eating mammals, possibly birds are definitive hosts; fish (and snails) are intermediate hosts |
Human illness mainly in Asia, also reported in Siberia; parasites have been found in Europe |
Ingestion of undercooked freshwater fish containing encysted larvae |
Diarrhea with mucus, anorexia, mild epigastric pain or abdominal cramps; malabsorption, weight loss if high parasite burden |
Metorchiasis |
Metorchis conjunctus, Canadian liver fluke |
Dogs, foxes and other canids, cats, raccoons, muskrats, mink, other fish-eating mammals are definitive hosts; fish (and snails) are intermediate hosts |
North America; human infection rare |
Ingestion of undercooked freshwater fish containing encysted larvae |
Fever, abdominal pain (mainly epigastric), anorexia during acute stage; effects of chronic infection uncertain |
Nanophyetiasis |
Troglotrema salmincola (also called Nanophyetus salmincola) |
Raccoons, foxes, dogs, cats, skunks, and other fish-eating mammals and birds are definitive hosts; salmonid and some non-salmonid fish (and snails) are intermediate hosts |
North America along Pacific coast, Russia |
Ingestion of undercooked fish or roe |
Mild gastroenteritis |
Opisthorchiasis |
Opisthorchis felineus (cat liver fluke) |
Cats, dogs, foxes, swine, seals, other fish-eating mammals are definitive hosts; fish (and snails) are intermediate hosts |
Europe, Kazakhstan, Russia, Ukraine |
Ingestion of undercooked freshwater fish containing encysted larvae |
Acute febrile illness with arthralgia, lymphadenopathy, skin rash; suppurative cholangitis and liver abscess in subacute, chronic stages; possible increased risk of cholangiocarcinoma |
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O viverrini (small liver fluke); zoonotic transmission can occur, but people are important hosts |
People, dogs, cats, rats, pigs, fish-eating mammals are definitive hosts; fish and snails are intermediate hosts |
Southeast Asia |
Ingestion of undercooked freshwater fish containing encysted larvae |
Upper abdominal pain, diarrhea, fever, jaundice possible acutely; chronic infections with cirrhosis, pancreatitis, high incidence of cholangiocarcinoma |
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Amphimerus pseudofelineus |
Various mammals, birds, reptiles are definitive hosts; fish suspected as intermediate hosts |
North and South America |
Undetermined but probably ingestion of undercooked fish |
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Paragonimiasis (Lung fluke disease) |
Paragonimus westermani, P heterotremus, P africanus, P mexicanus, and other species |
Dogs, cats, swine, wild carnivores, opossums, and other mammals are definitive hosts; snails and freshwater crustaceans are intermediate hosts; wild boars, sheep, goats, rabbits, birds, other animals are paratenic hosts |
Flukes are worldwide (distribution varies with species); most human infections in Asia, Africa, tropical America |
Ingestion of undercooked, infected freshwater crustaceans (crabs, crayfish); metacercariae on contaminated hands, fomites after preparing crustaceans, or undercooked meat from paratenic hosts such as wild boars |
Chills, fever possible during migration to lungs; pulmonary disease resembling tuberculosis with cough, blood-tinged sputum; abdominal form with dull pain, tenderness, possibly diarrhea; less often, neurologic signs, migratory skin nodules, other organ-specific symptoms; predominant signs vary with species of fluke |
Schistosomiasis, intestinal and hepatic |
Schistosoma japonicum |
Many mammals, including cattle, water buffalo (important host in Asia), swine, dogs, cats, deer, horses, nonhuman primates, and rodents, are definitive hosts; snails are intermediate hosts |
Asia |
Penetration of unbroken skin by cercariae from infected snails in water |
Acute disease can include urticarial rash, mild signs, isolated pulmonary signs, or Katayama syndrome (occurs especially after first infection; febrile illness, sometimes with cough, diarrhea, abdominal pain, hepatosplenomegaly, and/or rash/urticaria); apparent clinical recovery may be followed by chronic intestinal schistosomiasis with abdominal pain/discomfort, diarrhea ± blood; chronic hepatic schistosomiasis with hepatosplenomegaly followed by liver fibrosis, ascites, portal hypertension with hematemesis and/or melena, portocaval shunting with pulmonary signs; ectopic parasites can cause seizures, paralysis, meningoencephalitis; intestinal and hepatic lesions tend to progress rapidly; death can occur |
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S mansoni |
People, nonhuman primates are major reservoir (definitive) hosts; also in rodents, insectivores, cattle, dogs; snails are intermediate hosts |
Africa, Middle East, South America, Caribbean |
Penetration of unbroken skin by cercariae from infected snails in water |
Acute disease in some; intestinal (most often) and/or hepatic schistosomiasis similar to S japonicum but not as rapidly progressive; glomerulonephritis a possible complication; ectopic CNS parasites tend to cause transverse myelitis; also causes genital schistosomiasis with reproductive problems; death can occur |
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S mattheei; S bovis and S margrebowiei might also be zoonotic |
Definitive hosts are artiodactylid ruminants (cattle, sheep, goats, waterbuck, wildebeest, antelope, buffalo), also found in nonhuman primates; snails are intermediate hosts |
Southern Africa; seems to be rare in people, and some infections may have been misidentified |
Penetration of unbroken skin by cercariae from infected snails in water |
Suggested agent in intestinal and hepatic schistosomiasis |
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S mekongi |
People are reservoir (definitive) hosts; also found in dogs, pigs; snails are intermediate hosts |
Southeast Asia |
Penetration of unbroken skin by cercariae from infected snails in water |
Acute disease absent or very rare; intestinal and hepatic schistosomiasis; death can occur |
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S intercalatum, S guineensis |
Primarily people, rodents may also be definitive hosts; some other mammals, including nonhuman primates, susceptible to infection; snails are intermediate hosts |
Africa |
Penetration of unbroken skin by cercariae from infected snails in water |
Intestinal schistosomiasis only, often mild or asymptomatic; occasionally bloody feces, diarrhea |
Schistosomiasis, urinary |
S haematobium |
People are main reservoir (definitive host); occasionally infects nonhuman primates, pigs, buffalo, sheep, rodents, or other mammals; snails are intermediate hosts |
Africa (including Madagascar, Mauritius), the Middle East |
Penetration of unbroken skin by cercariae from infected snails in water |
Acute disease in some; chronic disease—hematuria, dysuria, kidney failure; calcification of bladder wall, ureter, and bladder can lead to bladder cancer; ectopic CNS parasites tend to cause transverse myelitis; genital schistosomiasis; death can occur |
Swimmer’s itch (Cercarial dermatitis) |
Schistosome cercariae from Schistosoma spp (mammals); Gigantobilharzia, Trichobilharzia, and Austrobilharzia spp (birds) |
Birds, mammals are definitive hosts; snails are intermediate hosts |
Worldwide |
Penetration of unbroken skin by cercariae from infected snails in fresh- and saltwater |
Self-limiting urticaria, pruritus, rash; fever, local lymph node swelling possible in some cases |
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Parasitic Diseases—Cestodes (Tapeworms) |
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Bertielliasis |
Bertiella studeri, B mucronata |
Nonhuman primates are usual hosts; other mammals, including dogs, people can be infected |
Asia, South America, Africa; can occur in imported primates in other areas |
Ingestion of infected oribatid mites in food |
Most cases asymptomatic; abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, weight loss |
Coenuriasis (Coenurosis) |
Taenia multiceps |
Definitive hosts are canids; intermediate hosts are sheep, other herbivores |
Worldwide in scattered foci; mainly reported from Europe, Asia |
Ingestion of tapeworm eggs in canine feces, may be via water, vegetables, soil |
Painless skin swelling; possible CNS involvement (signs of mass lesion in brain) or larva in eye |
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T serialis |
Definitive hosts are canids; intermediate hosts are lagomorphs, rodents, occasionally other mammals |
Africa, Europe, North America, Australia; rare in people |
As above |
Painless skin swelling; also in muscles and retroperitoneally; CNS involvement possible |
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T brauni |
Definitive hosts are canids; intermediate hosts are gerbils, wild rodents, also people |
Africa |
As above |
Most often in subcutaneous tissues (skin swelling) or eye, also CNS |
Cysticercosis |
Taenia solium (see also Taeniasis) |
People are definitive hosts; swine, other mammals are intermediate hosts (people can be both definitive and intermediate hosts) |
Worldwide where swine are reared; most cases seen in Africa, Asia, Central and South America |
Ingestion of eggs (including autoinfection from adult parasite in human intestine) |
Inflammation in CNS caused by death of small larva or growth to large size (often years after infection); can cause seizures, other CNS signs; less often in eye or heart; massive numbers in muscles can also be symptomatic |
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T crassiceps |
Foxes, also other canids and carnivores, including dogs, are definitive hosts; rodents, insectivores, rabbits, occasionally other mammals are intermediate hosts |
North America, Europe, Asia, and other areas where foxes are present |
Ingestion of eggs |
Tissue invasion (mainly subcutaneous, muscle), ocular; one paravertebral pseudohematoma with local bleeding, one CNS larva; many but not all cases in immunocompromised |
Diphyllobothriasis (Fish tapeworm infection) |
Diphyllobothrium latum (Dibothriocephalus latus), D nihonkaiense, D pacificum, D dendriticum, and other Diphyllobothrium spp |
Dogs, bears, seals, sea lions, gulls, and other fish-eating mammals and birds are definitive hosts; freshwater or marine fish (and copepods) are intermediate hosts |
Worldwide; distribution of species varies |
Ingestion of undercooked infected fish |
Usually asymptomatic; may cause mild abdominal distress, diarrhea (chronic relapsing diarrhea possible in some cases) |
Dipylidiasis (Dog tapeworm infection) |
Dipylidium caninum |
Dogs, cats, wild canids, some other wild carnivores are definitive hosts; fleas are intermediate hosts |
Worldwide; uncommonly reported in people |
Ingestion of dog or cat fleas |
Usually in children; asymptomatic or mild abdominal distress, diarrhea; proglottids in feces resemble cucumber seeds |
Echinococcosis |
Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato |
Dogs, other canids, hyenas are definitive hosts; sheep, goats, cattle, water buffalo, swine, camels, cervids, rodents, other mammals, or marsupials are intermediate or aberrant hosts; strains of parasite can be adapted to different intermediate hosts |
Worldwide, strains differ in distribution |
Ingestion of tapeworm eggs in food or water, to mouth on hands; eggs stick to fur and hands |
Cause space-occupying lesions of organs, especially lung, liver, also other organs, rarely CNS; cyst grows slowly, can cause death if untreated; rupture can cause allergic reactions, dissemination of cysts |
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E multilocularis |
Foxes and other wild canids and felids are usual definitive hosts, but parasite can also mature in dogs, cats; intermediate hosts are usually rodents, insectivores, some other mammals |
North America (mainly Canada to north central USA), northern and central Eurasia |
Ingestion of tapeworm eggs in food or water, to mouth on hands; eggs stick to fur and hands |
Usually involves liver with mass lesions, occasionally lung or CNS; primary lesion can metastasize to many organs; without treatment, 70%–100% cases are fatal |
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E oligarthrus |
Wild felids are definitive hosts, can mature in cats; agouti, pacas, spiny rats are intermediate hosts |
Central and South America; rare in people |
Ingestion of tapeworm eggs in food or water, to mouth on hands; eggs stick to fur and hands |
Has been seen in a variety of internal organs, eyes |
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E vogeli |
Bush dogs are usual definitive host, can mature in other canids, including dogs; pacas, agouti, nutria, nonhuman primates, and other mammals can be intermediate hosts |
Central and South America |
Ingestion of tapeworm eggs in food or water, to mouth on hands; eggs stick to fur and hands |
Usually involves liver, may invade adjacent tissues; mortality high in advanced cases, even with treatment (22% in one study) |
Hymenolepiasis |
Hymenolepis nana (dwarf tapeworm); most human infections probably transmitted from people, but zoonoses possible |
People, nonhuman primates, rodents are definitive hosts; insects, including fleas, flour beetles, cereal beetles are intermediate hosts |
Worldwide |
Accidental ingestion of tapeworm eggs or infected insects; autoinfection possible |
Mainly in children; mild abdominal distress, decreased appetite, irritability are most common; weight loss, flatulence, diarrhea possible |
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H diminuta (mouse tapeworm, rat tapeworm) |
Rats, mice are definitive hosts; insects, including fleas and cereal beetles are intermediate hosts |
Worldwide |
Ingestion of infected insects in food |
Mild abdominal symptoms of short duration |
Inermicapsifer infection |
Inermicapsifer spp |
Rodents, people are definitive hosts in Africa; people may be exclusive host outside Africa |
Africa, southeast Asia, tropical America |
Probably ingestion of infected arthropods |
Mild abdominal symptoms, if any |
Raillietina infection |
R celebensis, R demerariensis; most Raillietina spp have not been reported in people |
Rodents, nonhuman primates are definitive hosts for R celebensis, R demerariensis; other species in birds, mammals; arthropods, including ants, are intermediate hosts |
R demerariensis in tropical America (human cases mainly Ecuador, Cuba, Guyana, Honduras); R celebensis in Asia, Australia, Africa |
Probably ingestion of infected arthropods in food |
Vague discomfort, many cases asymptomatic; gastroenteritis, possibly other signs; mainly in children |
Sparganosis |
Spirometra spp (pseudophyllidean tapeworms, second larval stage) |
Dogs, cats, wild canids and felids are definitive hosts; copepods are first intermediate host; fish, frogs, reptiles are second intermediate hosts; primates, pigs, weasels, rodents, insectivores, other mammals, birds are paratenic hosts |
Worldwide; human cases most common in Asia |
Ingestion of infected cyclops (in water) or undercooked intermediate or paratenic host; application of contaminated tissues to skin (eg, as poultice) |
Nodular, itchy skin lesions that can migrate; conjunctival and eyelid lesions; urticaria, painful edema; other organ involvement, including CNS, eye |
Taeniasis |
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—Asian taeniasis |
Taenia asiatica (also called T taiwanensis, T saginata asiatica |
Domestic and wild pigs, occasionally cattle, goats, monkeys are intermediate hosts; people are definitive hosts |
Asia |
Ingestion of undercooked animal products, usually visceral organs such as liver and lung |
Vague abdominal complaints and proglottid passage; anal pruritus; possible that ingestion of eggs may be followed by larval migration and disseminated disease (uncertain/controversial) |
—Beef tapeworm disease |
T saginata |
Cattle, water buffalo, llamas, reindeer, camels, other domestic and wild ruminants are intermediate hosts; people are definitive host |
Worldwide |
Ingestion of undercooked meat containing larvae |
Mild abdominal discomfort and proglottid passage; gravid proglottids may travel to ectopic sites and cause symptoms; eggs do not cause disseminated disease |
—Pork tapeworm disease; cysticercosis and neurocysticercosis |
T solium |
People are definitive host; swine, occasionally other mammals, including people, are intermediate hosts |
Worldwide where swine are reared; most cases seen in Africa, Asia, Central and South America |
Ingestion of undercooked pork containing larvae causes taeniasis; ingestion of eggs (including autoinfection from adult worm in intestine) causes cysticercosis |
Adult stage in intestine (taeniasis) mild or asymptomatic; cysticercosis usually asymptomatic for years until cysticercus becomes large or death of small cysticerci result in inflammation in CNS (seizures, other CNS signs) or infrequently in eye or heart; massive numbers in muscles can also be symptomatic |
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Parasitic Diseases—Nematodes (Roundworms) |
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Angiostrongyliasis |
Angiostrongylus costaricensis, also called Parastrongylus costaricensis |
Cotton rats and other rodents are definitive hosts; slugs are intermediate hosts |
Mainly in Central and South America, Caribbean parasite has also been reported in North America |
Accidental ingestion of slugs or possibly plants contaminated by their secretions |
Acute abdominal angiostrongyliasis; severe pain resembles appendicitis, especially in children; rarely, more insidious disease with liver involvement; complications can include intestinal ischemia, perforation; fatalities possible |
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Angiostrongylus cantonensis, also called Parastrongylus cantonensis |
Rodents (rats, including Rattus and Bandicota spp) are definitive hosts; snails, slugs are intermediate hosts; land planarians, crustaceans (crabs, shrimp, prawns), amphibians, fish, reptiles are paratenic hosts |
Originated in Asia, spread to many other regions, mainly tropics, including Americas, Caribbean, Middle East, Australia |
Ingestion of raw/undercooked intermediate or paratenic host (or accidental ingestion on vegetables); possibly ingestion of plants contaminated by secretions of intermediate host |
Eosinophilic meningitis or meningoencephalitis, spinal cord involvement; ocular involvement with decreased vision; transient abdominal pain, pruritus in some; most cases relatively mild and self-limiting, but some fatal |
Anisakiasis |
Anisakis, Pseudoterranova, and Contracaecum spp |
Marine mammals (cetaceans and pinnipeds) and fish-eating birds are definitive hosts; fish, crustaceans, and cephalopod mollusks are intermediate or paratenic hosts |
Worldwide but many cases in northern Asia and western Europe |
Ingestion of undercooked marine fish, squid, octopus |
Gastroenteritis with upper quadrant pain; parasite usually in stomach; small-intestinal infections unusual but can occur; colon, esophagus rarely involved; oropharyngeal worm can cause hematemesis, cough; urticaria and other allergic signs after ingestion of live or dead worms |
Ascariasis |
Ascaris suum; potentially zoonotic (controversial) |
Pigs, also reported occasionally in other mammals, including nonhuman primates, sheep, cattle |
Worldwide, prevalence varies |
Ingestion of eggs from environment (shed in feces) |
Visceral larva migrans (respiratory signs, fever during larval migration); GI signs |
Capillariasis |
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—Hepatic capillariasis |
Capillaria hepatica (also called Calodium hepaticum) |
Rodents major host, also in many other wild and domestic mammals |
Worldwide in scattered foci |
Ingestion of embryonated eggs in soil |
Acute or subacute hepatitis with marked eosinophilia; subclinical to fatal |
—Intestinal capillariasis |
C philippinensis (also called Paracapillaria philippinensis) |
Aquatic birds, people can be definitive hosts; freshwater fish are intermediate host |
Philippines, Thailand, also reported occasionally in other parts of Asia, Middle East, Cuba |
Ingestion of undercooked infected fish |
Enteropathy with protein loss and malabsorption; diarrhea, abdominal pain; weight loss can be severe; death possible |
—Pulmonary capillariasis |
C aerophila (also called Eucoleus aerophilus) |
Dogs, cats, other carnivores |
Worldwide; rare in people |
Accidental ingestion of infective eggs in soil or contaminated food |
Fever, cough, bronchospasm, bronchitis, dyspnea; can mimic bronchial carcinoma |
Dioctophymosis (Giant kidney worm infection) |
Dioctophyma renale |
Mink, dogs, and other carnivores are definitive hosts; annelids are intermediate hosts; frogs, fish are paratenic hosts |
Worldwide; rare in people |
Ingestion of infected fish, frog, or annelid |
Renal colic, hematuria, pyuria, ureteral obstruction, various kidney complications can be fatal; subcutaneous nodule |
Dracunculiasis (Guinea worm infection) |
Dracunculus medinensis; people are most important host but possible role for zoonotic transmission in some locations |
People, nonhuman primates are definitive hosts; infections have also been reported in animals, but parasite identification sometimes uncertain; domestic animals not thought to maintain parasite but possible exceptions (eg, dogs in Chad); copepods are intermediate hosts |
Asia (mainly Indian subcontinent) and Africa |
Ingestion of infected cyclops in water |
No symptoms until just before larviposition (~1 yr); papule to vesicular skin lesion to ulcer that opens in water to reveal worm; allergic reaction common at this time, and secondary infection may occur |
Filariasis |
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—Dirofilariasis |
Dirofilaria immitis |
Dogs, cats, other mammals especially carnivores, mustelids, primates are definitive hosts (mainly patent in dogs and wild canids); mosquitoes are intermediate hosts |
Worldwide |
Bite of infected mosquitoes |
Fever, cough acutely, larvae result in infarct or coin lesion in the lungs; often asymptomatic; rarely involves eye or other body sites |
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D tenuis, D repens, rarely other species |
D tenuis in raccoons; D repens mainly patent in dogs and some wild canids (eg, foxes); also infects cats but not usually patent |
D tenuis in North America; D repens in Asia, Europe, Africa |
Bite of infected mosquitoes |
Subcutaneous nodule or submucosal swelling, some migratory and/or painful; subconjunctival (rarely intraocular); internal location (mainly lung but also brain, other organs) possible |
—Malayan filariasis |
Brugia malayi; subperiodic form is of uncertain origin, thought to be zoonotic or maintained in both animals and people; periodic form is exclusive to people |
Cats, wild felids, pangolins, other carnivores, nonhuman primates susceptible |
Asia; subperiodic form limited to peninsular Malaysia, Thailand, and parts of Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines in swamp-forest environments |
Bite of infected mosquitoes, Mansonia spp mainly associated with subperiodic form |
Lymphatic filariasis: recurrent painful lymphadenitis, lymphangitis, often preceded by prodromal illness with malaise or urticaria; may progress to elephantiasis, usually of legs; hypersensitivity syndrome with cough, chest pain, asthmatic attacks especially at night |
Filariasis caused by other Brugia species |
Brugia spp other than B malayi, including B pahangi |
Various domestic and wild mammals, including dogs and cats, are definitive hosts |
Asia, Africa, Americas |
Mosquitoes |
Occasional zoonotic infections (eg, cutaneous nodules, granuloma in lymph nodes) |
Gnathostomiasis |
Gnathostoma spinigerum, G binucleatum, and some other Gnathostoma spp |
Dogs, cats, wild carnivores are definitive hosts (G doloresi and G hispidum in pigs and wild boars); copepods, freshwater fish, eels, frogs, snakes, chickens, snails, pigs are intermediate or paratenic hosts |
Worldwide; most human cases from Asia; emerging along Pacific coast of Mexico, Ecuador, Peru, Argentina |
Ingestion of undercooked fish, poultry, or other intermediate or paratenic host, drinking water contaminated with copepods containing larvae; handling meat that contains larvae |
Fever, malaise, gastroenteritis, urticaria, soon after ingestion; migratory skin lesions (intermittent swelling, often painful or pruritic, or linear erythematous lesions) after weeks to years; may involve viscera, eye, or CNS; CNS involvement can be fatal or result in permanent damage with reported case fatality rates of 7%–25% |
Gongylonemiasis |
Gongylonema pulchrum |
Ruminants, domestic and wild swine, other mammals, birds are definitive hosts; coprophagous insects (eg, beetles, cockroaches) are intermediate hosts |
Worldwide; rare in people |
Ingestion of infected beetles, probably on vegetables; possible inhalation of small beetles |
Movement of parasite in submucosa of mouth is sensed; local irritation; pharyngitis, stomatitis possible |
Larva migrans, cutaneous (see alsognathostomiasis, above) |
Ancylostoma braziliense, A caninum, A ceylanicum, Uncinaria stenocephala |
Cats, dogs, wild carnivores are definitive hosts |
Worldwide; distribution varies with the species |
Contact with infective larvae that penetrate skin, usually via soil |
Itchy, serpiginous, migrating skin lesions; papules, nonspecific dermatitis, vesicles; wheezing, cough, and urticaria may occur; myositis or ocular lesions possible; eosinophilic enteritis after ingestion of A caninum; A ceylanicum can also become patent in intestine, causing GI signs, anemia |
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Bunostomum phlebotomum |
Cattle |
Temperate regions |
As above |
As above |
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Strongyloides stercoralis and other Strongyloides spp found in animals |
S stercoralis in dogs, cats, primates, including people; other species in swine, sheep, goats, cattle, horses, raccoons, and other domestic and wild mammals |
Worldwide, more common in tropics and subtropics |
Contact with infective larvae that penetrate skin, from soil or direct contact with feces; autoinfection possible with S stercoralis |
Larva currens (linear, serpiginous urticarial inflammation, often rapidly progressive); S stercoralis may also mature in intestine, causing enteritis and other signs (see below) |
Larva migrans, visceral (see alsoangiostrongyliasis and anisakiasis, above) |
Toxocara canis, T cati, possibly others |
Dogs and wild canids (T canis), cats and wild felids (T cati) are definitive hosts; many species can be paratenic hosts |
Worldwide |
Ingestion of embryonated eggs shed in feces of dogs and cats; via soil, water, food, fomites |
Fever, wheezing cough, upper abdominal discomfort; other symptoms, including neurologic signs, skin rashes also possible; may wax and wane for months; eye involvement (ocular migrans) may resemble retinoblastoma |
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Baylisascaris procyonis, possibly other species of Bayliscascaris |
Raccoons, kinkajous are definitive hosts; dogs can be definitive or intermediate host; many mammals (including people), marsupials, and birds are intermediate or paratenic hosts |
North America, Europe, Japan |
Accidental ingestion of embryonated eggs in soil, water, or fecal-contaminated material |
Nonspecific signs, including fever, lethargy; hepatomegaly, pneumonitis, parasitic meningoencephalitis (may be fatal in infants, young children), ocular disease; other syndromes, including cardiac disease |
Oesophagostomiasis, Ternidensiasis |
Oesophagostomum spp, Ternidens deminutus; zoonotic potential may vary with parasite species/strain and geographic area |
Primates, including people |
Parasites found in Africa, Asia, South America; human cases mainly reported in Africa |
Ingestion of infective larvae in soil, often in food or water |
Abdominal pain and one or more masses ± mild fever; intestinal obstruction or abscessation possible; multinodular form (less common) with abdominal pain, persistent diarrhea, weight loss; rarely ectopic in omentum, liver, or skin |
Onchocercosis |
Onchocerca gutturosa, O cervicalis, O jakutensis, O dewittei japonica, O reticulata, O lupi, others |
Definitive hosts include cattle, horses, cervids, wild boars, dogs and other canids, camels, other species |
Distribution varies with species |
Probably transmitted by black flies (Diptera: Simuliidae), possibly other vectors |
Ocular disease, subcutaneous nodules |
Strongyloidiasis |
Strongyloides stercoralis; most human infections thought to be from strains adapted to people; frequency of maturation of canine S stercoralis in people undetermined, thought to be rare |
S stercoralis in dogs, cats, foxes, primates, including people |
S stercoralis worldwide; more common in tropical and subtropical climates |
Contact with infective larvae that penetrate skin, in soil or direct contact with feces; autoinfection possible |
Frequently asymptomatic in healthy; possible larva currens (seelarva migrans, above); respiratory signs in some (cough to bronchopneumonia), especially in elderly, immunocompromised; abdominal pain, diarrhea, sometimes with periodic urticarial or maculopapular rash; disseminated strongyloidiasis, neurologic complications, septicemia, and death may occur in immunocompromised |
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S fuelleborni |
Primates, including people |
Africa, Asia, and in captive primates in other areas |
As above |
Associated with abdominal pain, occasional diarrhea, not well studied |
Thelaziasis (Eyeworms) |
Thelazia callipaedia, T californiensis, possibly T rhodesii |
Definitive hosts are dogs and other canids, cats (T callipaedia); dogs, wild mammals, occasionally cats (T californiensis); flies are intermediate hosts |
T callipaedia in Asia, Europe; T californiensis in North America (western USA); rarely in people |
Flies release parasite larvae on conjunctiva |
Conjunctivitis; corneal scarring, opacity in chronic cases |
Trichinosis (Trichinellosis) |
Trichinella spiralis and subspecies, T nativa, T britovi, T nelsoni, T pseudospiralis, possibly others |
Main reservoir may be wild carnivores (foxes, badgers, wolves, lynx), omnivores (bears, boars); also in any mammal that eats (or is fed) meat, including domestic swine, rodents, cats, dogs, horses, marine mammals; also birds (T pseudospiralis); T zimbabwensis (zoonotic potential unknown) can infect reptiles |
Worldwide, especially in temperate regions; some species are limited in their distribution |
Ingestion of undercooked pork, horse meat, game, and other tissues containing viable cysts |
Gastroenteritis in some; followed by fever, headache, severe myalgia, facial swelling (especially eyelids); ocular pain, rashes, or pruritus possible; pneumonitis, CNS, or myocardial involvement can occur; inapparent to fatal |
Trichostrongyliasis |
Trichostrongylus spp |
Cattle, sheep, other domestic and wild ruminants, sometimes other mammals |
Worldwide |
Ingestion of infective larvae on vegetables or in contaminated water, soil |
Asymptomatic or mild gastroenteritis |
Trichuriasis (Whipworm infection) |
Trichuris suis, possibly T vulpis and other species; main species in people is T trichiura, but zoonotic infections are unusual |
T vulpis in canids; T suis in domestic and wild swine |
Worldwide, especially warm, humid climates |
Ingestion of embryonated eggs on plant foods, water, or in soil |
T suis can colonize people, who develop GI signs; rare larva migrans or intestinal infections suggested from T vulpis (controversial identification) |
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Parasitic Diseases—Acanthocephalans |
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Acanthocephaliasis, Macracanthorhynchosis |
Macracanthorhynchus hirudinaceus and other species |
Hosts vary with parasite species; definitive hosts include domestic and wild pigs, rodents, muskrats, arctic foxes, dogs, sea otters, other terrestrial and marine mammals; intermediate hosts are beetles, cockroaches, crustaceans; fish are paratenic hosts |
Worldwide |
Ingestion of infected beetles, other intermediate hosts, or fish |
Gastroenteritis, may lead to gut perforation or intestinal obstruction; some cases asymptomatic |
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Parasitic Diseases—Annelids (Leeches) |
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Hirudiniasis (internal) |
Limnatis nilotica and other aquatic leeches |
Cattle, buffalo, other domestic and wild mammals, probably frogs |
Africa, Asia, southern Europe, Middle East |
Drinking unfiltered water (leech enters nares or mouth), wading in deep water (enters genitourinary tract) |
Attaches to nasopharynx, pharynx, esophagus, occasionally deeper in respiratory tract, or in genitourinary tract; pressure and/or pain at attachment site; bleeding (eg, hemoptysis, hematemesis, epistaxis, vaginal bleeding), anemia (can be severe); other signs depend on location |
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Arthropod Diseases |
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Acariasis (Mange) |
Mites of Sarcoptes, Cheyletiella, Dermanyssus, and Ornithonyssus spp, Notoedres cati, Trixacarus caviae, Liponyssoides sanguineus; possibly others (uncommon) |
Mammals and birds |
Worldwide |
Contact with infected animals, fomites |
Itchy skin lesions |
Myiasis |
Cochliomyia hominivorax and Chrysomya bezziana (screwworms) |
Mammals; rare in birds |
C hominivorax in South America, Caribbean; C bezziana in Asia, Africa, Middle East |
Flies lay eggs on host, larvae enter wounds (as small as a tick bite), mucous membranes |
Painful, pruritic, foul-smelling, enlarging dermal and subdermal wounds or nodules, often with serosanguineous discharge; some infestations in cavities, including nasal cavity; larvae can invade living tissue, locally destructive (including bone, eye, sinuses, or cranial cavity); can be fatal if untreated |
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Cordylobia anthropophaga, rarely C rodhaini (Tumbu flies) |
Mammals, often found in dogs, rodents |
Africa, Middle East; also reported in Mediterranean region of Europe |
Larvae from environment invade unbroken skin |
Furuncular swelling at site of invasion, often feet; fever, malaise, focal lymphadenopathy possible |
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Cuterebra spp |
Rodents, lagomorphs, occasionally other mammals |
North America |
Larvae from vegetation enter host in natural cavities or invade intact skin |
Subcutaneous furunculoid nodule(s); creeping skin eruption (uncommon); ocular lesions; rarely larvae might be found in upper respiratory tract |
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Dermatobia hominis(human botfly) |
Mammals, some birds |
South and Central America, Mexico |
Eggs carried by other insects (eg, mosquitoes); larvae hatch and penetrate skin of mammalian host when insect lands |
Nonmigratory larvae in furuncles; episodes of pain, intense pruritus, sometimes with lymphangitis or lymphadenitis; can invade eyelids, eye sockets, mouth, especially in children |
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Gasterophilus spp (equine botfly) |
Equids, occasionally other mammals |
Worldwide |
Accidental exposure to larvae |
Serpiginous, pruritic red stripes on skin resembling cutaneous larva migrans; very rarely might reach stomach (nausea, vomiting) |
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Hypoderma lineatum, H bovis (warbles), and other Hypoderma spp |
H bovis and H lineatum in cattle, sometimes other mammals; other species primarily parasites of deer, caribou, or yaks |
North America, Europe, Asia; species distribution varies |
Eggs laid on host, larvae invade skin |
Usually subcutaneous (slowly moving furuncles that can appear and disappear) or similar to cutaneous larva migrans; endophthalmia uncommon; H lineatum may also cause an eosinophilic syndrome with fever, muscle pain, sometimes respiratory, cardiac, or neurologic signs |
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Oestrus ovis, Rhinoestrus purpureus |
O ovis mainly in sheep, goats, also other mammals; R purpureus mainly in equids |
O ovis worldwide, usually in warmer climates; R purpureus in Asia, Africa, Europe |
Larvae are deposited in nares, conjunctiva, occasionally lips/mouth by adult fly |
Conjunctival form, with lacrimation and sensation of irritating foreign body in eye, ocular destruction rare; nasal form with localized pain or pruritus, congestion, headache; also reported in pharynx (inflammation, vomiting, dysphagia), rarely ear; usually self-limiting (except inside eye), because larvae cannot develop beyond first stage in people |
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Wohlfahrtia spp, Wohlfahrtia vigil, W magnifica |
W vigil in rabbits, rodents, mink, foxes, dogs, and other carnivores, other mammals; W magnifica in sheep, cattle, dogs, other mammals, some birds, especially geese |
W vigil in North America; W magnifica in Europe (mainly Mediterranean), north Africa, Asia |
Larvae deposited on host or nearby, penetrate lesions (both agents) or intact skin (W vigil) and natural orifices |
W vigil causes subcutaneous abscesses, furuncles; W magnifica has been reported from skin, eye, vulva, ear, orotracheal region |
Pentastomid infections |
Armillifer spp (tongue worms) |
Definitive hosts are snakes; intermediate hosts are rodents and other wild animals |
Africa, Asia |
Ingestion, via water or vegetables contaminated with eggs (from feces or saliva of snakes); undercooked snake meat; contaminated hands, fomites after handling snake meat |
Usually asymptomatic; large numbers of parasites can cause multifocal abscesses, masses, or obstruction of ducts in internal organs; symptoms vary with location; death rare |
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Linguatula serrata |
Definitive hosts are dogs and other canids, felids; intermediate hosts are herbivores (especially sheep, goats, lagomorphs) and people |
Worldwide |
Ingestion of water or vegetables contaminated with eggs (from feces, saliva, or nasal discharge of definitive host); ingestion of larvae in undercooked liver or lymph nodes from intermediate hosts |
Ingestion of eggs—usually asymptomatic; ocular or pulmonary signs, abdominal pain, icterus, and other symptoms possible from invasion of internal organs Ingestion of larvae—throat irritation, pain; edema, congestion of nasopharynx may cause dyspnea, difficulty swallowing; most severe cases are probably in people who have been sensitized |
Tick paralysis (see Tick Paralysis) |
More than 40 species of ticks are capable of causing this disease; Dermacentor andersoni, D variabilis most common in North America |
Various animals carry ticks |
Worldwide |
Tick attachment |
Ascending flaccid paralysis, may be preceded by prodromal flu-like illness (malaise, weakness); can cause respiratory paralysis, also paresthesia; ends when tick is removed |
Tunga infections |
Tunga penetrans(sand fleas, jiggers) |
People, dogs, pigs, other mammals |
Africa, Central and South America, Caribbean, south Asia |
Skin contact with contaminated soil |
Penetration of skin and burrowing result in pain and itching around discrete sores, often on feet; may be secondarily infected |
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Viral Diseases |
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Alkhurma virus infection |
Alkhurma virus (family Flaviviirdae, genus Flavivirus); may be a variant or strain of Kyasanur Forest virus |
Sheep, goats, camels |
Middle East, mainly reported in Saudi Arabia, also Egypt |
Ticks (Ornithodoros and Hyalomma spp); direct contact with animal meat via broken skin or ingestion of unpasteurized camel milk linked to some cases |
Febrile illness, often with GI signs (eg, vomiting, abdominal pain); encephalitic/neurologic and hemorrhagic signs in some; case fatality up to 25% in early reports, recently <1% |
Barmah Forest virus infection; epidemic polyarthritis |
Barmah Forest virus (family Togaviridae, genus Alphavirus) |
Natural hosts unknown; horses, brushtail possums may be hosts |
Australia |
Mosquito bites; Culex annulirostris and Aedes spp implicated |
Resembles disease caused by Ross River virus (see entry later in this table) but seems to persist longterm in fewer patients, rash more common |
Buffalopox virus infection |
Vaccinia virus, Buffalopox virus strain (family Poxviridae, genus Orthopoxvirus) |
Water buffalo, cattle |
Indian subcontinent (south Asia), Egypt, Indonesia |
Skin contact with infected animals, often when milking |
Pox skin lesions mainly on hands, face, legs, buttocks; occasionally lymphadenopathy, fever, malaise |
California encephalitis virus serogroup (California serogroup) infections |
California encephalitis virus serogroup (family Bunyaviridae, genus Orthobunyavirus); includes California, La Crosse, Tahyna, Inkoo, Jamestown Canyon, Morro Bay, Snowshoe hare, Guaroa, Lumbo, Chatanga, and other viruses |
Many wild and domestic mammals |
North and South America, Europe, Africa, Asia; possibly worldwide; distribution of each virus varies |
Mosquito bites |
Syndromes, severity vary with the virus; flu-like illness, meningitis, or encephalitis common with North American viruses |
—La Crosse encephalitis |
La Crosse virus (California encephalitis virus serogroup) |
Chipmunks, squirrels are major amplifying hosts; rabbits, foxes, and other mammals can be infected |
North America |
Mosquito bites |
Many cases mild and flu-like; meningitis or encephalitis with seizures, paralysis, and focal neurologic signs possible; most cases in children; estimated case fatality rate <1% in cases with encephalitis |
—Tahyna fever |
Tahyna virus (California encephalitis virus serogroup) |
Hares, rabbits, rodents, hedgehogs, and other mammals |
Europe, Asia, Africa |
Mosquito bites (culicine and anopheles) |
Influenza-like illness, sometimes including GI signs; arthritis or respiratory signs, including bronchopneumonia in some; meningitis possible; most often in children; does not appear to cause fatal disease |
Camelpox |
Camelpox virus |
Old World camelids, possibly other species |
Middle East, Asia, Africa, possibly other areas; human cases recently described in India in camel handlers, rare unconfirmed cases suggested in other locations |
Direct contact |
Skin lesions similar to cowpox, variola virus infections |
Chikungunya virus infection |
Chikungunya virus (family Togaviridae, genus Alphavirus) |
Sylvatic cycle in nonhuman primates, possibly rodents in Africa; virus thought to be maintained in people in Asia, but sylvatic cycle may also exist |
Asia, Africa |
Mosquito bites (especially Aedes spp) |
Febrile illness, may have rash and/or GI signs; arthralgia, especially in small joints, and myalgia prominent, may persist for months; myocarditis, neurologic signs, hemorrhages reported in a few cases |
Colorado tick fever |
Colorado tick fever virus (family Reoviridae, genus Coltivurus; Salmon River virus and California hare coltivirus may be variants |
Rodents; also found in porcupines, lagomorphs, deer, elk, and other mammals |
Rocky Mountain region of North America |
Tick bites (primary vector is Dermacentor andersoni) |
Nonspecific febrile illness; pharyngitis, rash, or GI signs possible; biphasic or triphasic in some; complications (eg, neurologic signs, hemorrhages, pericarditis, myocarditis, orchitis) uncommon but can occur in severe cases; deaths rare |
Contagious ecthyma (Orf, see Contagious Ecthyma) |
Orf virus (family Poxviridae, genus Parapoxvirus) |
Sheep, goats, camelids, reindeer, wild ungulates; rare cases in dogs |
Worldwide |
Occupational exposure via contact with broken skin (both live animals and meat processing) |
Papule(s) that umbilicate and ulcerate, usually on hands; dissemination rare; large lesions refractory to treatment can be seen in immunosuppressed |
Cowpox (see Pox Diseases) |
Cowpox virus (family Poxviridae, genus Orthopoxvirus) |
Rodents are usual reservoir host; also in domestic and wild cats, occasionally cattle, other mammals |
Parts of Europe and Asia |
Contact exposure via broken skin, bites, scratches |
Papules, vesicles that become pustular, to ulcerative nodules, scars; single or multiple lesions, often on hands; regional adenopathy and malaise, flu-like symptoms in some; lesions remain localized in healthy people; more extensive or generalized disease may be seen in children, people with eczema,immunocompromised; severe cases can involve respiratory mucosa; rare fatal cases (eg, complications of encephalitis) |
Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (see Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever) |
Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (family Bunyaviridae, genus Nairovirus) |
Cattle, rodents, sheep, goats, hares, other mammals, some birds |
Africa, Middle East, central Asia, southeastern Europe; appears to be spreading |
Tick bites, especially Hyalomma but also Rhipicephalus, Dermacentor, other species; skin contact with animal or human blood or tissues or crushed ticks; ingestion of unpasteurized milk |
Fever, headache, pharyngitis, abdominal symptoms, petechial rash, hemorrhage, hepatitis, other organ involvement in some cases; very severe in pregnant women; case fatality rate 3%–50%, varies with region |
Eastern equine encephalomyelitis (see Equine Arboviral Encephalomyelitis) |
Eastern equine encephalomyelitis virus (family Togaviridae, genus Alphavirus); North American lineage 1 strains more virulent than South American lineages |
Birds are principal reservoir hosts in North America, snakes might have role in overwintering virus; rodents, marsupials might be reservoir hosts in South America; clinical cases seen in equids and occasionally other mammals and birds; mammals are almost always dead-end hosts |
Western hemisphere |
Mosquito bites; Culiseta melanura important in maintenance cycle in birds in North America; various mosquito species (Aedes, Coquillettidia, Culex) can transmit to people |
Nonspecific febrile illness may be followed by severe encephalitis, especially with North American lineage; neurologic sequelae common after encephalitis; case fatality rate 30%–70% with North American lineage; more severe in infants and elderly |
Ebola hemorrhagic fever |
Zaire ebolavirus, Sudan ebolavirus, Ivory Coast ebolavirus, Bundibugyo ebolavirus (family Filoviridae, genus Ebolavirus); Reston ebolavirus does not seem to affect people |
Bats are reservoir hosts for Zaire ebolavirus and suspected reservoir hosts for others; primates, duikers, possibly other mammals can be infected |
Africa |
Contact with infected tissues (especially nonhuman primates and duikers); probable transmission from bats in caves |
Initially nonspecific febrile illness; maculopapular rash with desquamation; mild to severe bleeding tendency develops a few days after onset; mortality rate 36%–90%, varies with isolate |
Encephalomyocarditis |
Encephalomyocarditis virus (family Picornaviridae, genus Cardiovirus); thought to be zoonotic |
Rodents may be reservoir hosts; also in swine, nonhuman primates, elephants, other mammals, and wild birds |
Worldwide in animals |
Uncertain |
Nonspecific febrile illness, sometimes with GI signs, and/or decreased reflexes have been reported in adults, with recovery within several days; CNS signs, including paralysis, have been reported in children |
Foot-and-mouth disease (see Foot-and-Mouth Disease) |
Foot-and-mouth disease virus (family Picornaviridae, genus Aphthovirus, types A, O, C, SAT 1, SAT 2, SAT 3, and Asia 1) |
Cattle, swine, sheep, goats, other cloven-hoofed animals (Artiodactyla), a few mammals in other orders |
Asia, Africa, Middle East, South America |
Contact exposure, often in laboratories or other high concentrations of virus |
People may become temporary nasal carriers of virus but do not usually become ill; mild influenza-like disease with vesicular lesions occurs very rarely |
Hantaviral diseases |
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—Hantaviral pulmonary syndrome |
Sin Nombre, Black Creek Canal, Bayou, Andes, Bermejo, Choclo, Araraquara, Juquitiba, Laguna Negra, and Castelo dos Sonhosviruses, others (family Bunyaviridae, genus Hantavirus) |
Rodents; each virus tends to be associated with a single reservoir host |
North and South America |
Aerosols from rodent excretions and secretions; contact with broken skin and mucous membranes; rodent bites |
Prodromal stage with nonspecific febrile illness; followed by respiratory failure, cardiac abnormalities; hemorrhagic signs possible with South American viruses; significant kidney disease uncommon; mortality rate varies with the virus, but can reach 40%–60% |
—Hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome |
Hantaan virus, Dobrava virus, Puumala virus, Seoul virus, Saaremaa virus, others (family Bunyaviridae, genus Hantavirus) |
Rodents; each virus tends to be associated with a single reservoir host, but Seoul virus is carried by both Rattus norvegicus and R rattus |
Europe, Asia; Seoul virus is worldwide |
Aerosols from rodent excretions and secretions; contact with broken skin and mucous membranes; rodent bites |
Prodromal stage with abrupt onset of fever, headache, back pain, sometimes petechiae, GI signs (may be severe); followed by hypotension, renal signs to renal failure with oliguria; hemorrhage, other syndromes in some; mortality rate varies with the virus, from <1% (Puumala virus) to 10%–15% (Hantaan virus) |
Hendra virus infection (see Hendra Virus Infection) |
Hendra virus (family Paramyxoviridae, genus Henipavirus) |
Fruit bats are normal reservoir host; horses can be infected |
Australia |
Direct contact with infected animals (all human cases have been linked with horses) or contaminated tissues |
Respiratory infection, encephalitis (including recurrent encephalitis); few cases described but several were fatal |
Hepatitis E |
Hepatitis E virus, mammalian isolates (family Hepeviridae, genus Hepevirus); genotypes 3 and 4 zoonotic; genotypes 1 and 2 maintained in people |
People; animals, including swine, wild boar, deer, rabbits, ferrets, rats, mongoose, others; swine and probably other hosts are reservoirs for human infections |
Worldwide; human and zoonotic genotypes may differ in prevalence between areas |
Fecal-oral spread; consumption of raw or undercooked meat and liver; waterborne, contact with animal reservoirs |
Mild, self-limiting hepatitis to liver failure, more severe in pregnancy and can result in abortion, death of newborn, premature birth; usually acute, but can be chronic in organ-transplant patients; case fatality rate <1% to 4% in general population, up to 20% in pregnant |
Herpes B virus disease |
Cercopithecine herpesvirus 1 (McHV, Herpesvirus simiae, B virus) (family Herpesviridae, genus Simplexvirus) |
Carried in genus Macaca (Old World macaques), with lifelong latency and potential for periodic shedding after infection; other nonhuman primates susceptible; cell cultures |
Worldwide, can be common, especially in closed groups of macaques; human cases rare |
Monkey bites and scratches, contamination of mucous membranes with infected saliva, secretions |
Influenza-like symptoms; vesicular skin lesions, pain, or itching around wound, followed by severe encephalitis with seizures, paralysis, coma; 85% mortality rate |
Influenza virus infections |
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—Avian influenza |
Influenza A virus (family Orthomyxoviridae, genus Influenzavirus A); avian influenza viruses; many severe human cases linked to Asian lineage H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) viruses, but other viruses also cause illness |
Avian influenza viruses in wild and domestic birds, especially poultry; uncommon in mammals |
Worldwide, distribution of strains varies |
Usually by contact with infected poultry; avian viruses may be shed in respiratory secretions and feces |
Avian influenza viruses can cause conjunctivitis, human influenza-like illness, or severe disease with multiorgan dysfunction, death; severity of disease varies with influenza strain |
—Swine influenza |
Influenza A virus (family Orthomyxoviridae, genus Influenzavirus A); swine influenza viruses |
Usually in pigs; also turkeys; can infect mink, ferrets |
Worldwide |
Usually by contact with infected animals; swine influenza viruses occur in respiratory secretions |
Seems to resemble human influenza; severity of disease varies; fatal cases have been reported uncommonly |
Japanese encephalitis (Japanese B encephalitis) |
Japanese encephalitis virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus) |
Swine, wild birds are important maintenance hosts; horses ill but epidemiologically unimportant in amplification; other mammals, reptiles, amphibians may be infected, usually asymptomatically |
Asia, Australia, Papua New Guinea, Pacific islands from Japan to the Philippines |
Mosquito bites (Culex tritaeniorhynchus) important in maintenance cycle, other Culex and Aedes spp can transmit); also through broken skin or mucous membranes after direct contact with infected tissues |
Fever, chills, myalgia, severe headache, GI symptoms; can progress to severe encephalitis; neurologic sequelae very common in survivors of encephalitis; case fatality rate 15%–30% |
Kyasanur Forest disease |
Kyasanur Forest virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus) |
Rodents, shrews, other small mammals might be reservoirs (uncertain); affects monkeys; possible infections in other mammals, birds |
India |
Tick bites (especially Haemaphysalis spinigera, also others) |
Nonspecific febrile illness; course may be biphasic; hemorrhagic signs (eg, ecchymoses, purpura, petechiae, GI bleeding, epistaxis) and/or neurologic signs possible in second stage; prolonged convalescence in many; case fatality rate ~3% |
Lassa fever |
Lassa virus (family Arenaviridae, genus Arenavirus) |
Wild rodents, usually multimammate mouse |
West Africa |
Contact with rodent excretions, secretions, or tissues; aerosols |
Gradual onset of nonspecific febrile illness, may be followed by chest pain, cough, GI signs, hepatitis; severe swelling of head and neck, hypotension/shock can develop; pleural/pericardial effusions; hemorrhagic syndrome less common; overall mortality rate 1% in endemic areas; case fatality rate 20% among hospitalized patients |
Louping ill (Ovine encephalomyelitis, see Louping Ill) |
Louping ill virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus) |
Sheep, goats, also in llamas, cattle, horses, other domestic and wild mammals, grouse, ptarmigan |
UK, Northern Ireland; also reported in Norway, Spain; uncommon in people |
Tick bites (Ixodes ricinus); aerosol exposure in laboratory, contamination of skin wounds, contact with infected animals; possibly ingestion of milk |
Biphasic influenza-like illness, sometimes followed by meningitis or meningoencephalitis, paralysis, joint pain in second phase; not usually fatal |
Lymphocytic choriomeningitis |
Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (family Arenaviridae, genus Arenavirus) |
Reservoir mainly house mouse; can be maintained in some other mice, hamster populations; also infects guinea pigs, chinchillas, rats, nonhuman primates, some other mammals |
Worldwide |
Contact with host excretions and secretions; bites; possibly ingestion |
Ranges from mild flu-like illness to biphasic with meningitis in second phase; complications (eg, arthritis, parotitis, orchitis) possible; can cause congenital defects (CNS defects, chorioretinitis, and other ocular lesions) or abortion; rarely fatal in immunocompetent (overall case fatality rate <1%) |
Marburg hemorrhagic fever |
Marburg virus (family Filoviridae, genus Marburgvirus) |
Bats are reservoir hosts; primates can be infected |
Africa |
Contact with infected tissues (especially nonhuman primates); probable transmission from bats in caves |
Initially nonspecific febrile illness; maculopapular rash with desquamation; hepatitis; mild to severe bleeding tendency develops a few days after onset; mortality rate 20%–88%, varies with isolate |
Menangle virus infection |
Menangle virus (family Paramyxoviridae) |
Fruit bats are normal reservoir host; pigs can also be reservoir |
Australia |
Close direct contact with tissues, amniotic fluid or blood of pigs reported in human cases |
Severe illness with fever, severe headache, myalgia, lymphadenopathy, drenching sweats, macular rash |
Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) |
MERS coronavirus |
Unknown reservoir host, possibly bats; source of infection for people uncertain, camels implicated |
Middle East |
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Pneumonia, more likely in people with coexisting illness or immunosuppression but also in healthy; ~50% of known cases were fatal |
Milker’s nodules (Pseudocowpox, see Pseudocowpox) |
Pseudocowpox virus (family Poxviridae, genus Parapoxvirus) |
Cattle |
Worldwide |
Skin contact (especially broken skin) with lesions on cow’s udder or mouth of calf; also from fomites |
Papular to nodular red skin lesions; self-limiting |
Monkeypox |
Monkeypox virus (family Poxviridae, genus Orthopoxvirus); Congo Basin clade causes more severe illness than West African clade |
Nonhuman primates, some wild and pet rodents, including Gambian rats, dormice, prairie dogs, African squirrels, some other mammals such as opossums; full host range uncertain |
West and central Africa |
Contact with lesions, blood or body fluids, fomites; bites; aerosols during close contact |
Smallpox-like disease; flu-like symptoms followed by maculopapular rash, which develops into vesicles, pustules, scabs; lymphadenopathy prominent; respiratory signs, encephalitis possible; case fatality rate varies with strain, <1% to 10%–17% or higher; milder in those vaccinated for smallpox |
Murray Valley encephalitis |
Murray Valley encephalitis virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus) |
Wild water birds |
Australia, New Guinea |
Mosquito bites (Culex annulirostris) |
Asymptomatic or mild nonspecific febrile illness in majority; encephalitis, often with neurologic sequelae, or poliomyelitis-like flaccid paralysis in small number of patients; case fatality rate 15%–30% in encephalitic form |
Newcastle disease |
Newcastle disease virus/Avian paramyxovirus 1 (family Paramyxoviridae, genus Avulavirus) |
Domestic and wild birds |
Mildly virulent (lentogenic, mesogenic strains) are found worldwide; highly virulent (velogenic) strains found in Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Central and South America, parts of Mexico; also in cormorants in USA |
Occupational exposure, usually after contact with large amounts of virus |
Highly virulent (velogenic) strains can cause self-limiting conjunctivitis, possibly other syndromes |
New World hemorrhagic fever (Argentinean, Bolivian, Venezuelan and Brazilian hemorrhagic fevers [HF]) |
Arenaviruses in Tacaribe complex (family Arenaviridae, genus Arenavirus): Juin virus (Argentine HF), Machupo virus (Bolivian HF), Guanarito virus (Venezuelan HF), Sabiá virus (Brazilian HF), Chapare virus; possibly others |
Rodents |
South America, related viruses might exist among rodents in Mexico |
Viruses found in rodent excretions, secretions, tissues; inhalation of aerosolized virus or direct contact with mucous membranes or broken skin |
Gradual onset of nonspecific signs, including myalgia, headache, and fever; may develop petechial or ecchymotic hemorrhages, bleeding, CNS signs, hypotension/shock; case fatality rate in untreated Bolivian hemorrhagic fever 5%–30%, untreated Argentine hemorrhagic fever 15%–30% |
Nipah virus infection (see Nipah Virus Infection) |
Nipah virus (family Paramyxoviridae, genus Henipavirus) |
Fruit bats are normal reservoir; swine can be reservoir; occasionally in other mammals (spillover hosts) |
Malaysia, Bangladesh, and Northern India; virus is probably endemic in southeast Asia, but outbreaks seem to cluster in certain geographic areas |
Direct contact with infected pigs or contaminated tissue; direct or indirect (eg, contaminated fruit juice) bat-to-human transmission |
Initial signs flu-like with fever, headache, myalgia, sometimes vomiting; encephalitis and meningitis; respiratory disease, including acute respiratory distress syndromes in some; septicemia; other complications in severely ill; case fatality rate 33%–75% |
Omsk hemorrhagic fever |
Omsk hemorrhagic fever virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus) |
Voles, muskrats; also found in other animals |
Siberia |
Tick bites (Dermacentor spp); direct contact with body fluids or carcasses of muskrats and possibly other animal hosts |
Biphasic febrile illness with headache, GI signs, ± hemorrhages (nose, gums, lungs, uterus); CNS signs in minority of patients; mortality rate <3% |
Powassan virus encephalitis |
Powassan virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus); two closely related lineages in different reservoirs |
Rodents (groundhog, squirrels, mice) and other small mammals thought to be reservoirs |
North America, eastern Russia |
Ixodes spp ticks, also found in Dermacentor andersoni |
Nonspecific febrile illness; may progress to neurologic signs, which may be severe; some cases fatal |
Rabies and rabies-related infections (see Rabies) |
Lyssaviruses:rabies virus (family Rhabdoviridae, genus Lyssavirus) and the related lyssaviruses, Duvenhage virus, Mokola virus, Australian bat lyssavirus, European bat lyssaviruses 1 and 2, Irkut virus, possibly others |
Wild and domestic canids, Mustelidae, Viverridae, Procyonidae, and order Chiroptera (bats) are important reservoir hosts; all mammals are susceptible; bats are reservoir hosts for Duvenhage virus, Australian bat lyssavirus, and European bat lyssaviruses; Mokola virus carried in rodents and shrews |
Rabies is worldwide with some exceptions: completely absent from some islands; countries also considered rabies-free if no cases in people or domestic animals for 2 yr; rabies-related lyssaviruses found only in Eastern Hemisphere (distribution varies) |
Bites of diseased animals; aerosols in closed environments |
Paresthesias or pain at bite site; nonspecific prodromal signs such as fever, myalgia, malaise; mood changes progress to paresthesias, paresis, seizures, and many other neurologic signs; survival in clinical cases thought to be very rare |
Rift Valley fever (see Rift Valley Fever) |
Rift Valley fever virus (family Bunyaviridae, genus Flavivirus) |
Sheep, goats, cattle, buffalo, African buffalo, camels, nonhuman primates; squirrels and other rodents; puppies and kittens |
Africa, foci on Arabian peninsula, Indian subcontinent |
Mosquito bites (Aedes spp and Culex triteniorynchus); contact with tissues |
Influenza-like febrile illness in most; complications, including hemorrhagic fever, meningoencephalitis in <5%; ocular disease in 1%–10%; other syndromes include acute renal failure or thrombosis; death uncommon except with hemorrhagic syndrome |
Ross River virus infection, Ross River fever; epidemic polyarthritis |
Ross River virus (family Togaviridae, genus Alphavirus) |
Marsupials, including wallaby, brushtail possum, might be natural hosts; dusky rat also proposed; people, horses, ruminants, pigs, rabbits, other mammals (minor hosts) may also be a source of virus during epidemics |
Australia, South Pacific Islands |
Mosquito bites (especially Culex annulirostris and Aedes spp) |
Mild fever, arthralgia ± arthritis, headache, rash; small joints most affected but large joints can also be involved; arthralgia, myalgia, lethargy may persist for months |
St. Louis encephalitis |
St. Louis encephalitis virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus) |
Wild birds, domestic fowl; rodents, bats, other mammals might also maintain viruses in South America |
Western hemisphere |
Mosquito bites (Culex tarsalis, C pipiens-quinquefasciatus complex, C nigripalpus, also reported in other genera) |
Flu-like illness sometimes followed by meningitis or encephalitis, focal neurologic signs, dysuria; more severe in elderly and those with debilitating diseases; case fatality rate of 5%–20% reported in epidemics |
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) |
SARS coronavirus (family Coronaviridae, genus Coronavirus) |
Bats are thought to be reservoir hosts; can also infect palm civets, raccoon dogs, cats, pigs, ferrets, rodents, nonhuman primates, other mammals |
China, southeast Asia |
Contamination of mucous membranes with respiratory droplets or virus on fomites; possibly aerosol transmission |
Fever, myalgia, headache, diarrhea, cough; viral pneumonia with rapid deterioration; case fatality rate 15% |
Sindbis virus disease |
Sindbis virus (family Togaviridae, genus Alphavirus) |
Birds (passeriforms suspected as main reservoirs/amplifying hosts); occasionally found in other vertebrates |
Virus widespread in Eastern hemisphere; human cases tend to occur in limited geographic regions |
Mosquito bites; Culex and Culiseta, also others |
Fever, arthritis, rash, prominent myalgia; nausea, vomiting, mild jaundice in some; joint pain can persist for months; seems to be mild or asymptomatic in most children; no fatal cases reported |
Tanapox |
Tanapox virus (family Poxviridae, genus Yatapoxvirus); Yaba-like disease virus may be a variant of tanapox virus |
Nonhuman primates |
Asia, Africa, and in monkey colonies |
Direct contact through broken skin; mosquitoes suspected to be vector in Africa |
Nonspecific febrile illness and papulovesicular or nodular lesions (lesions may be pruritic or tender), often on extremities; more than one or two skin lesions uncommon |
Tickborne encephalitis (Far eastern tickborne encephalitis, Russian spring-summer encephalitis, Central European tickborne encephalitis) |
Tickborne encephalitis virus (TBEV) (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus); three subtypes: European (TBEV-Eu [least virulent]), Siberian (TBEV-Sib), Far Eastern (TBEV-FE) |
Small mammals especially rodents; also in goats, sheep, dogs, and other mammals; birds |
Eurasia; TBEV-Eu mainly Europe to former USSR; TBEV-FE mainly Asia to former USSR; TBEV-Sib mainly in Siberia |
Tick bites (mainly Ixodes ricinus and I persculatus; also other species); may be ingested in milk |
Often biphasic, with flu-like febrile illness in initial stage; neurologic signs from mild meningitis to severe encephalitis in some; myelitis or flaccid poliomyelitis-like paralysis (usually arms, shoulders, levator muscles of head); possibility of chronic and progressive forms, especially with TBEV-Sib; case fatality rate <2% (TBEV-Eu), 2%–3% (TBEV-Sib); case fatality rate 20%–30% in TBEV-FE may be based on severe cases |
Usutu virus infections |
Usutu virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus) |
Birds |
Africa, Europe |
Mosquito bites (Culex spp) |
Very few cases identified: fever with rash, fever with jaundice, or meningoencephalitis |
Vaccinia-related poxviruses |
Vaccinia or vaccinia-like viruses (family Poxviridae, genus Orthopoxvirus) of uncertain origin |
Reservoir uncertain; found in wild rodents, cattle, horses, nonhuman primates |
Appear to be endemic in Brazil |
Direct contact |
Pox skin lesions (papules, pustules, ulcerative nodules), may be accompanied by fever, lymphadenopathy |
Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis |
Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (family Togaviridae, genus Alphavirus) |
Enzootic subtypes maintained in rodents, other small mammals, bats; epizootic subtypes amplified in equids; occasionally in other mammals and birds |
Western hemisphere; enzootic strains Florida to South America; epizootic strains emerge in South America, spread |
Mosquito bites (Aedes, Culex, and Psorophora spp); exposure to aerosolized debris from infected laboratory rodents; laboratory accidents |
Most have nonspecific febrile illness, can be followed by neurologic signs; <5% children, <1% adults progress to encephalitis with case fatality rate of 10%–35% (highest rates in children <5 yr old) |
Vesicular stomatitis |
Vesicular stomatitis Indiana virus, vesicular stomatitis New Jersey virus, vesicular stomatitis Alagoas virus, and Cocal virus (family Rhadboviridae, genus Vesiculovirus) |
Swine, cattle, horses; occasionally in South American camelids, sheep, and goats; also rodents; serologic evidence of infection in many wild mammals, especially bats |
North and South America; most likely not endemic north of Mexico but sporadic outbreaks |
Contact with animals or in laboratory, probably also from insect bites, including mosquitoes and biting flies (Phlebotomus spp, Lutzomyia spp, and black flies) |
Usually asymptomatic; may develop acute, febrile, flu-like illness; vesicles can be found in mouth, pharynx, or inoculation site (eg, hands); self-limiting |
Wesselsbron fever |
Wesselsbron virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus) |
Ruminants, especially sheep, goats; also evidence of infection in other mammals, including lemurs; can infect birds |
Southern Africa, southeast Asia |
Mosquito bites (mainly Aedes spp, possibly others); also by contact with contaminated material |
Nonspecific febrile illness ± maculopapular rash or ocular signs in some; few cases described but seems to be self-limiting |
West Nile fever and neuroinvasive disease (see Equine Arboviral Encephalomyelitis) |
West Nile virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus); lineage 1 and lineage 2 viruses are both pathogenic |
Birds are primary reservoir hosts; also affects horses, other mammals, alligators, possibly other reptiles and amphibians |
Eastern and Western hemisphere |
Mosquito bites (primarily Culex univittatus, Culex spp); also by handling infected birds or reptiles or their tissues |
Nonspecific febrile illness, occasionally with rash; some cases progress to encephalitis, meningitis, and/or acute flaccid paralysis that resembles poliomyelitis; occasionally other syndromes; worse in elderly and immunocompromised; case fatality rate ~10% in all patients with neurologic disease, but higher in elderly |
Western equine encephalomyelitis (see Equine Arboviral Encephalomyelitis) |
Western equine encephalomyelitis virus (family Togaviridae, genus Alphavirus) |
Birds are reservoir hosts, may also cycle in jackrabbits, rodents; equids, other mammals are incidental hosts; virus also found in reptiles, amphibians |
Americas |
Mosquito bites (Aedes, Culex, and Ochlerotatus spp); Culex tarsalis important in maintenance cycle in birds |
Nonspecific febrile illness may be followed by encephalitis in infants and children, uncommonly in adults; case fatality rate 3%–4% |
Yellow fever |
Yellow fever virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus); only jungle cycle is zoonotic (people are reservoir for urban cycle) |
Nonhuman primates |
South America, Africa |
Mosquito bites (Haemagogus spp and Sabethes spp in jungle cycles in South America, Aedes spp in jungle cycles in Africa) |
Nonspecific, mild to severe febrile illness followed by liver and renal failure in some; hemorrhages (eg, epistaxis, hematemesis, melena, uterine hemorrhage) and often jaundice in severe cases; cases with hemorrhages often fatal |
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Prion Disease |
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Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease |
Bovine spongiform encephalopathy prion |
Cattle are most important host; also infects other ruminants, cats and other felids, lemurs |
Most cases in the UK but also in many other countries |
Ingestion of bovine products, especially those contaminated with CNS tissues |
Neurodegenerative disorder similar to sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease but often in younger patients and progresses more rapidly; always fatal |
a Many proven zoonoses, including some relatively rare arthropodborne viral infections and helminth infections, have been omitted, as well as those diseases caused by fish and reptile toxins. |
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b Enterotoxigenic, enteroinvasive, enteropathogenic, and enteroaggressive strains are not considered zoonotic. |