Tularemia: a re-emerging tick-borne infectious disease

被引:0
|
作者
Derya Karataş Yeni
Fatih Büyük
Asma Ashraf
M. Salah ud Din Shah
机构
[1] Bacterial Disease Laboratory,Veterinary Control Central Research Institute
[2] University of Kafkas,Department of Microbiology, Veterinary Faculty
[3] Government College University,Department of Zoology
[4] Nuclear Institute for Agriculture and Biology (NIAB),undefined
来源
Folia Microbiologica | 2021年 / 66卷
关键词
Tularemia; Vector-borne infection;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Tularemia is a bacterial disease of humans, wild, and domestic animals. Francisella tularensis, which is a Gram-negative coccobacillus-shaped bacterium, is the causative agent of tularemia. Recently, an increase in the number of human tularemia cases has been noticed in several countries around the world. It has been reported mostly from North America, several Scandinavian countries, and certain Asian countries. The disease spreads through vectors such as mosquitoes, horseflies, deer flies, and ticks. Humans can acquire the disease through direct contact of sick animals, consumption of infected animals, drinking or direct contact of contaminated water, and inhalation of bacteria-loaded aerosols. Low infectious dose, aerosol route of infection, and its ability to induce fatal disease make it a potential agent of biological warfare. Tularemia leads to several clinical forms, such as glandular, ulceroglandular, oculoglandular, oropharyngeal, respiratory, and typhoidal forms. The disease is diagnosed through the use of culture, serology, or molecular methods. Quinolones, tetracyclines, or aminoglycosides are frequently used in the treatment of tularemia. No licensed vaccine is available in the prophylaxis of tularemia and this is need of the time and high-priority research area. This review mostly focuses on general features, importance, current status, and preventive measures of this disease.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 14
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Tick-borne infectious diseases of dogs
    Shaw, SE
    Day, MJ
    Birtles, RJ
    Breitschwerdt, EB
    TRENDS IN PARASITOLOGY, 2001, 17 (02) : 74 - 80
  • [42] Emerging and Re-emerging Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases and the Challenges for Control: A Review
    Chala, Bayissa
    Hamde, Feyissa
    FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 9
  • [43] TRENDING NOW: RE-EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASE UPDATE
    Almeida, Sherri-Lynne
    JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY NURSING, 2015, 41 (02) : 104 - 108
  • [44] New emerging tick-borne diseases
    Granström, M
    BULLETIN DE L ACADEMIE NATIONALE DE MEDECINE, 1999, 183 (07): : 1391 - 1398
  • [45] Pertussis: a re-emerging or under diagnosed infectious disease?
    Cantarelli, Vlademir V.
    Hoffmann, Elias R.
    Fitarelli, Douglas B.
    Comerlato, Liriane
    Baungarten, Claudio C.
    BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2013, 17 (03): : 385 - 386
  • [46] Leptospirosis in the Tohoku Region: Re-emerging Infectious Disease
    Saitoh, Hiroki
    Koizumi, Nobuo
    Seto, Junji
    Ajitsu, Satoshi
    Fujii, Akio
    Takasaki, Satoshi
    Yamakage, Shu
    Aoki, Satoshi
    Nakayama, Keisuke
    Ashino, Yugo
    Chagan-Yasutan, Haorile
    Kiyomoto, Hideyasu
    Hattori, Toshio
    TOHOKU JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE, 2015, 236 (01): : 33 - 37
  • [47] Granulocytic anaplasmosis — emerging tick-borne disease of humans and animals
    Mária Nováková
    Bronislava Víchová
    Biologia, 2010, 65 : 925 - 931
  • [48] Emerging Tick-Borne Bacterial Pathogens
    Kernif, Tahar
    Leulmi, Hamza
    Raoult, Didier
    Parola, Philippe
    MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM, 2016, 4 (03):
  • [49] Granulocytic anaplasmosis - emerging tick-borne disease of humans and animals
    Novakova, Maria
    Vichova, Bronislava
    BIOLOGIA, 2010, 65 (06) : 925 - 931
  • [50] Two Cases of Tick-Borne Tularemia in Yozgat Province, Turkey
    Yesilyurt, Murat
    Kilic, Selcuk
    Cagasar, Ozlem
    Celebi, Bekir
    Gul, Serdar
    MIKROBIYOLOJI BULTENI, 2011, 45 (04): : 746 - 754