Plague from eating raw camel liver.We investigated a cluster of 5 plague cases; the patients included 4 with severe pharyngitis pharyngitis Inflammation and infection (usually bacterial or viral) of the pharynx. Symptoms include pain (sore throat, worse on swallowing), redness, swollen lymph nodes, and fever. and submandibular submandibular /sub·man·dib·u·lar/ (sub?man-dib´u-ler) below the mandible. submandibular (sub´mandib´y lymphadenitis Lymphadenitis Definition Lymphadenitis is the inflammation of a lymph node. It is often a complication of a bacterial infection of a wound, although it can also be caused by viruses or other disease agents. . These 4 case-patients had eaten raw camel liver. Yersinia pestis was isolated from bone marrow of the camel and from jirds (Meriones libycus) and fleas Xenopsylla cheopis captured at the camel corral. ********** Human plague is acquired most often from the bites of infected fleas that leave their rodent hosts. Sporadic plague has also been attributed to domestic dogs and cats that may transport either Yersinia pestis in their mouths or infected fleas from rodent hosts to humans (1). Bubonic bu·bon·ic adj. Of or relating to a bubo. bubonic characterized by or pertaining to buboes. bubonic plague a highly contagious and severe disease caused by the bacillus , pneumonic pneumonic /pneu·mon·ic/ (noo-mon´ik) 1. pulmonary (1). 2. pertaining to pneumonia. pneu·mon·ic adj. 1. Relating to, affected by, or similar to pneumonia. , or pharyngeal pharyngeal /pha·ryn·ge·al/ (fah-rin´je-al) pertaining to the pharynx. pha·ryn·geal or pha·ryn·gal adj. Of, relating to, located in, or coming from the pharynx. plague may develop in domestic cats and infect humans directly (2). However, humans rarely become infected when handling and preparing the carcasses of wild animals (3). Although domestic cats and other carnivores may be infected by eating infected animals, only 1 previous report raises the possibility of human plague infection from eating meat of an infected animal (4). The Study In February 1994, we investigated a cluster of 5 plague cases in Goriat, a town of 50,000 persons in a remote desert area in northwestern Saudi Arabia. On February 18, a 26 year-old-woman was admitted to the provincial hospital for severe pharyngitis and tonsillitis tonsillitis Inflammatory infection of the tonsils, usually with hemolytic streptococci (see streptococcus) or viruses. The symptoms are sore throat, trouble in swallowing, fever, and enlarged lymph nodes on the neck. . Given the striking swelling of her neck, local clinicians suspected diphtheria. Since 2 of the patient's relatives had also been hospitalized in the previous 2 days with similar illnesses, the hospital called for assistance from the local preventive medicine specialist. He had seen similar cases in 1984 and suspected pharyngeal plague. Through interviews with physicians and review of hospital admissions, we identified 5 patients, including the index case, who had been hospitalized with suspected plague or plague pharyngitis. The patients included a 9-year-old girl and 4 adults (2 men and 2 women, age range 18-35 years). Symptoms developed in 1 patient on February 15 and in 4 patients on February 16. All had fever (39[degrees]-40[degrees]C), chills, malaise, myalgias, vomiting, headache, and delirium. Leukocyte counts ranged from 11,000 to 88,000/[micro]L. Chest radiographs were normal in all 5 patients. Four had severe pharyngitis; 3 of them had dysphagia, tender submandibular lymphadenitis, and tonsillar tonsillar /ton·sil·lar/ (ton´si-lar) of or pertaining to a tonsil. ton·sil·lar or ton·sil·lar·y adj. Of or relating to a tonsil, especially the palatine tonsil. enlargement. The fourth patient, the 9-year-old girl, had severe abdominal pain and tenderness on abdominal palpation palpation /pal·pa·tion/ (pal-pa´shun) the act of feeling with the hand; the application of the fingers with light pressure to the surface of the body for the purpose of determining the condition of the parts beneath in physical diagnosis. , profound hypotension (blood pressure 60/30 mm Hg), and a generalized hemorrhagic Hemorrhagic A condition resulting in massive, difficult-to-control bleeding. Mentioned in: Hantavirus Infections hemorrhagic pertaining to or characterized by hemorrhage. rash. This patient and the 26-year-old index patient (blood pressure 90/60 mm Hg) died. These 4 patients with pharyngitis did not have buboes Buboes Smooth, oval, reddened, and very painful swellings in the armpits, groin, or neck that occur as a result of infection with the plague. Mentioned in: Plague or lymphadenitis at any other site. The patient without pharyngitis had axillary ax·il·lar·y n. Relating to the axilla. Axillary Located in or near the armpit. Mentioned in: Mastectomy axillary of or pertaining to the armpit. lymphadenitis and cellulitis Cellulitis Definition Cellulitis is a spreading bacterial infection just below the skin surface. It is most commonly caused by Streptococcus pyogenes or Staphylococcus aureus. of his right arm; he had cut his arm while killing a sick camel on February 13. None of the patients had skin lesions that suggested recent flea bites. Y. pestis was isolated from the blood of the patient with pharyngitis who died and from the spinal fluid of the patient with abdominal pain. Identification was confirmed by phage lysis and direct fluorescent antibody Direct fluorescent antibody (DFA or dFA) is a laboratory test that uses antibodies tagged with fluorescent dye to detect the presence of microorganisms. This is the main test used to detect rabies in animals and requires the examination of brain tissue. staining. Indirect hemagglutination hemagglutination /he·mag·glu·ti·na·tion/ (he?mah-gloo-ti-na´shun) agglutination of erythrocytes. he·mag·glu·ti·na·tion n. for plague was positive in convalescent-phase sera from the 3 survivors from whom Y. pestis was not isolated. The patients were from 4 related families, 2 from Goriat and 2 from a village 20 km from this town. The adult family members denied seeing rodents around their homes or being bitten by fleas or other biting insects. All families owned camels. The male head of each family traveled to the desert daily to allow his camels to graze. These men reported that several of their camels had recently died. We observed 3 camel carcasses in the desert near a corral where the camels were fed grain and hay to supplement their grazing. The meat from the sick camel that had been butchered on February 13 was shared among 11 families (106 members). No other food was shared among these families. The 4 patients with pharyngeal plague were among 37 people who had eaten this camel meat; 1 patient with bubonic plague (the man who slaughtered the camel) was among the 69 people who had not eaten the meat (risk ratio [RR] 7.7, p<0.05, Fisher exact test). Moreover, pharyngeal plague developed in 4 of 6 patients who had eaten raw camel liver, but not in 31 persons who had eaten only cooked camel meat or liver (RR not defined, p<0.01, Fisher exact test). We isolated Y. pestis from a sample of leftover camel meat containing bone and marrow. Jirds (Meriones libycus), jird carcasses, rodent burrows, and rodent excreta excreta /ex·cre·ta/ (eks-kret´ah) excretion (2). ex·cre·ta pl.n. Waste matter, such as sweat or feces, discharged from the body. were found at the camel corral. Y. pestis was isolated from the blood and liver of live jirds collected from the camel corral and from fleas (Xenopsylla cheopis) combed from these jirds. Conclusions This investigation confirms that human plague with pharyngeal and gastrointestinal symptoms can result from eating infected raw camel liver. Only 1 published report has proposed this method of infection. In 1976, in a small, remote Libyan village, 13 plague cases occurred after a sick camel was slaughtered and its meat eaten (4). However, as a source of infection eating camel meat could not be distinguished from droplet transmission, percutaneous exposure during camel killing or handling fresh meat, or flea bites. Moreover, plague infection was not found in the camel, and the human pharyngeal plague might have resulted from crushing fleas between the teeth while grooming (5). The 4 patients with pharyngeal plague had symptoms similar to those of domestic cats with plague in New Mexico, where 46% of plague-infected cats had submandibular lymphadenitis (2). These feline cases were thought to result from eating infected prey. Similarly, since human plague patients had submandibular lymphadenitis, tonsillitis, pharyngitis and dysphagia, or severe gastrointestinal symptoms, this suggests ingestion as the route of exposure. Christie et al. suggested that among domestic animals, camels may be an important plague host because their wide-ranging behavior increases the chance of coming into contact with natural plague loci (4). Our investigation indicates another scenario, with evidence of a plague epizootic ep·i·zo·ot·ic adj. Affecting a large number of animals at the same time within a particular region or geographic area. Used of a disease. ep at a fixed site where camels were corralled. Russian investigators have proposed several methods of natural infection of camels: bites from rodent fleas, mechanical transmission from ticks, eating feed contaminated with excreta of infected rodents, and eating dead rodents along with their feed (6). All of these possibilities existed in this outbreak. This unusual profile of human plague was recognized because several related patients with life-threatening illnesses were seen at a hospital over a 2-day period and a medical officer recognized the illness. Sporadic cases of pharyngeal or gastrointestinal plague would be less likely to attract the attention of medical or public health workers. Clinicians and public health officers, particularly in the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia, should be alert for sporadic cases of pharyngeal or gastrointestinal plague so that curative and preventive measures can be promptly initiated. Dr Bin Saeed is a graduate of the Saudi Arabian Field Epidemiology Training Program, where he performed this investigation. He has a doctorate in epidemiology from the University of Texas. His current research interest is the epidemiology of infectious diseases. References (1.) Mann JM, Martone W J, Boyce JM, Kaufmann AF, Barnes AM, Weber NS. Endemic plague in New Mexico: risk factors associated with infection. J Infect Dis. 1979;140:397-401. (2.) Eidson M, Tierney LA, Rollag O J, Becker T, Brown T, Hull HF. Feline plague in New Mexico: risk factors and transmission to humans. Am J Public Health. 1988;78:1333-5. (3.) Von Reyn CF, Barnes AM, Weber NS, Hodgin UG. Bubonic plague from exposure to a rabbit: a documented case, and a review of rabbit-associated cases in the United States. Am J Epidemiol. 1976;104:81-7. (4.) Christie AB, Chen TH, Elberg SS. Plague in camels and goats: their role in human epidemics. J infect Dis. 1980;141:724-6. (5.) Conrad FG, LeCocq FR, Krain R. A recent epidemic of plague in Vietnam. Arch Intern Med. 1968:122:193-7. (6.) Federov VN. Plague in camels and its prevention in the USSR USSR: see Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. . Bull World Health Organ. 1960;23:275-81. Abdulaziz A. Bin Saeed,* ([dagger])([double dagger]) Nasser A. Al-Hamdan, ([dagger]) and Robert E. Fontaine ([dagger])([section]) * King Saud University King Saud University (جامعة الملك سعود) is Saudi Arabia's oldest and premier university, located in the capital Riyadh. College of Medicine, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; ([dagger]) Ministry of Health, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; ([double dagger]) King Faisal Specialist Hospital History King Faisal Specialist Hospital was established on 450,000 square meters of land which was donated by King Faisal who laid the cornerstone of this hospital in 1970 (the current total land of the hospital is 920,000 square meters). and Research Centre, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; and ([section]) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. , Atlanta, Georgia, USA Address for correspondence: Abdulaziz A. Bin Saeed, Department of Family and Community Medicine, King Saud University College of Medicine, PO Box 2925, Riyadh 11461, Saudi Arabia; fax: 966-1-4671967; email: abinsaeed2001@yahoo.com |
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