IF 1.3 3区 农林科学 Q2 VETERINARY SCIENCES
Janet Foley, Andrés M López-Pérez, Gerardo Álvarez-Hernández, Marcelo B Labruna, Rodrigo Nogueira Angerami, Oscar E Zazueta, Sergio Bermudez, Francesca Rubino, Johanna S Salzer, Maureen Brophy, Adriano Pinter, Christopher D Paddock
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引用次数: 0

摘要

立克次体蜱虫病是一种由立克次体引起的蜱媒传染病,会给人类和狗带来严重的致命疾病。自 21 世纪初以来,病例急剧上升,其中最突出的是墨西哥和巴西,这两个国家的疫情多发生在城市中心,包括人口超过 100 万的城市。报告的病例死亡率可超过 50%。导致高病死率的因素包括缺乏对疾病生态学的认识、诊断能力有限以及延误适当的抗菌治疗。城市高流行病疫点的出现受到两个不同但相似的人为事件的影响,这两个人为事件导致立克次体的脊椎动物扩增者以及在密集人群附近传播这种病原体的蜱虫物种数量过高。这种情况通常发生在高危人群高度边缘化的社区,这些人群包括贫困人口,尤其是儿童,而健康管理系统资源不足。我们讨论了减少宿主狗数量(尤其是在墨西哥)和巴西水豚数量的策略。我们回顾了在这些环境中控制蜱虫数量所面临的挑战。需要建立强大的系统,以提高医疗从业人员和高危人群对 RMSF 的认识。公共卫生运动应结合创新的行为科学(如多样化的学习模式、激励性访谈和游戏化),以提高社区内的预防和理解能力。虽然抗立克次体疫苗或抗蜱疫苗是解决这一 "一体健康 "危机的必要条件,但要实施有影响力的疫苗,还需要以数据为导向的多目标创新,以应对宿主、蜱虫、医疗系统和公共福利方面的挑战。Foley、Backus 和 López-Pérez 合著的《一体健康的潮流》(Currents in One Health)(JAVMA,2025 年 3 月出版)为执业兽医提供了有用的信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A wolf at the door: the ecology, epidemiology, and emergence of community- and urban-level Rocky Mountain spotted fever in the Americas.

RMSF, a tickborne infection caused by Rickettsia rickettsii, produces severe and fatal disease in humans and dogs. Since the beginning of the 21st century, cases have risen dramatically, most notably in Mexico and Brazil, where outbreaks occur in urban centers including cities with populations of > 1,000,000 persons. Reported case fatality rates can exceed 50%. Factors consistent with high case fatality include lack of awareness of disease ecology, limited capacity for diagnosis, and delay in appropriate antimicrobial treatment. The emergence of urban hyperendemic foci has been leveraged by 2 distinct but similar anthropogenic events that create disproportionately high numbers of vertebrate amplifiers of R rickettsii, as well as the tick species that transmit this pathogen in proximity with dense human populations. This often occurs in neighborhoods with a highly marginalized at-risk population that includes persons in poverty and particularly children, and health management systems that are under-resourced. We discuss strategies to reduce host dog populations, particularly in Mexico, and capybaras in Brazil. We review challenges to the control of tick populations in these settings. Robust systems are required to enhance awareness of RMSF among medical practitioners and people at risk of RMSF. Public health campaigns should incorporate innovative behavioral science (eg, diverse learning models, motivational interviews, and gamification) to increase prevention and understanding within communities. While anti-Rickettsia or anti-tick vaccines will be necessary to resolve this One Health crisis, impactful implementation will require data-driven and multiple-target innovations to address challenges with hosts, ticks, medical systems, and public welfare. The companion Currents in One Health by Foley, Backus, and López-Pérez, JAVMA, March 2025, addresses helpful information for the practicing veterinarian.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
10.00%
发文量
186
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Veterinary Research supports the collaborative exchange of information between researchers and clinicians by publishing novel research findings that bridge the gulf between basic research and clinical practice or that help to translate laboratory research and preclinical studies to the development of clinical trials and clinical practice. The journal welcomes submission of high-quality original studies and review articles in a wide range of scientific fields, including anatomy, anesthesiology, animal welfare, behavior, epidemiology, genetics, heredity, infectious disease, molecular biology, oncology, pharmacology, pathogenic mechanisms, physiology, surgery, theriogenology, toxicology, and vaccinology. Species of interest include production animals, companion animals, equids, exotic animals, birds, reptiles, and wild and marine animals. Reports of laboratory animal studies and studies involving the use of animals as experimental models of human diseases are considered only when the study results are of demonstrable benefit to the species used in the research or to another species of veterinary interest. Other fields of interest or animals species are not necessarily excluded from consideration, but such reports must focus on novel research findings. Submitted papers must make an original and substantial contribution to the veterinary medicine knowledge base; preliminary studies are not appropriate.
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