Transcript

Control Measures for Infectious Diseases

• Personal behavior

• Vaccination

• Vector control

• Disinfection– Removal– Inactivation

Prevention or Cure

Personal behavior

• Exposure avoidance

• Handwashing

• Skin protection

• Respiratory protection

• Prophylactic treatment

The body’s defenses

• Skin (passive)• Non-specific immune responses

– Inflammation (cytokines, macrophages, activated lymphocytes), fever

– Phagocytosis by macrophages– Antibody response: IgA, IgM

• Specific immune responses– Antibody production: IgG specific to target– Memory cells (B-lymphocytes)

BALL
Check B, T cells

Cells of the Immune SystemBone Marrow Stem Cells

Blood lineage

Red Blood Cells

Platelets

GranulocytesEosinophils, Neutrophils, Basophils

Monocytes

Macrophages

Lymphoid lineage (lymphocytes)

NK Cells

Pre-B Plasma cells

Memory B-cells

Pre-T(thymus)

T-helper cellsT-suppressor cells

Memory T cells

Cytotoxic T cells

Delayed hypersensitivity T cells

Vaccination

• Develop antibodies – attenuate disease

• Personal or public health measure ?

• Need to have “critical mass” vaccinated to achieve control of epidemic

• Practical considerations: cost, side-effects, duration of immunity

Some examples

• Smallpox

• Flu

• “Childhood diseases”– Measles, chickenpox

• Rotavirus

• Bacterial diseases ?– Tetanus– Anthrax

Routes of Transmission

• Person-to-person: Physical contact• Indirect person-to-person

– Aerosol– Fomites

• Vehicle-borne– Food, water

• Vector-borne– Insects

Vector-borne cycle of infection

• Disease agent is a microorganism

• Reproduces in a reservoir or host

• Is transmitted by a vector

Vector-borne cycle of infectionExample: West Nile

Flavivirus

Disease agentTarget organisms Reservoirs

?Vector

Vector control

• Vector-borne diseases– E.g. West Nile, malaria

• Identify vectors, reservoirs– Information on vector life-cycles

• Eradicate vectors, reservoirs– How ?

Mosquitos

• Pesticides

• Larvaecides

• Malathion

• Naled (an OP)

• Synthetic pyrethroids

• Mosquito traps

• Drain water pools

Insecticides

• Chlorinated hydrocarbons• Organophosphates• Carbamates

Animal Reservoirs

• Cryptosporidium parvum• Single host, eg Beef, calves

Oocyst

•Oocyst excysts, releases 4 sporozoites

•Sporozoites invade intestinal epithlial cells•Sporozoites replicate asexually, differentiate into microgametes and macrogametes•Sexual replication•More oocysts

BALL
This one needs to be redone

Cryprosporidium life-cycle

Is vaccination an option ?

• Vaccinate vectors ?

• Reservoirs ?

• Target species ?

Attack disease agent directly

• Inside host – antibiotics ?

• In transmission media– Fumigation, sanitization, sterilization

Disinfection

• Physical– Heat, pasteurize, autoclave– Time/temperature dependence

• Biological– Predation, competition

• Chemical– Destroy versus prevent reproduction

Water disinfectants

• Chlorine

• Chlorine dioxide

• Chloramines

• Ozone

• UV light

• Effectiveness differs with type of organism

Chlorine

• Strong oxidizing agent

• Chlorine gas, dissolved in water > hypochlorous acid HOCl at low pH, most effective form

• Maintains residual

• Formation of THMs

• Offensive taste/odor

Chlorine Dioxide

• Weaker oxidizing agent

• More effective at higher pH

• Poor residual

Chloramines

• Monochloramine, NH2Cl

• Need chlorine and ammonia gas, generated on-site

• Weaker oxidizing agent

• Fewer THMs

• Less offensive taste/odor

• Poor residual

Ozone

• O3

• Generated on-site

• Strong oxidizing agent

• Effective against Giardia

• Odor/taste not offensive

• Poorly water-soluble, no residual

Ultra-violet light

• UVA, UVB, UVC

• Attacks nucleic acids

• Less effective in opaque/colored waters

• No residual


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