澳大利亚悉尼罕见城市获得性人钩端螺旋体病及环境卫生调查。

Q3 Medicine
Mark J Ferson, Sinead Flanigan, Mark E Westman, Ana M Pastrana Velez, Benjamin Knobel, Toni Cains, Marianne Martinello
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:钩端螺旋体病是一种由啮齿动物或其他哺乳动物暴露于排泄到环境中的钩端螺旋体引起的人畜共患病。一名没有旅行史或与牲畜或啮齿动物接触史的成年男性出现钩端螺旋体病病例,这一通报引发了对其工作场所(当地一个高尔夫球场)的环境卫生调查。我们假设,在一段时间的强降雨后,流经高尔夫球场的小溪溅起的水花导致了钩端螺旋体暴露,可能是基于啮齿动物尿液污染了小溪的水。对环境水样的测试在11个样品中的10个样品中检测到致病性钩端螺旋体DNA,尽管培养呈阴性。然而,我们很难解释这一发现,因为我们在悉尼内部和东部远离工作场所的14个环境样本中发现了10个钩端螺旋体DNA,而这些样本与已报告的人类病例无关。当我们回顾2003-2022年20年间悉尼大都会居民报告的53例人类钩端螺旋体病病例时,在49例有钩端螺旋体暴露信息的病例中,46例有公认的暴露源:海外旅行(27)或热带澳大利亚北部(5);农村地区经常接触牲畜和/或啮齿动物(12);在屠宰场工作(1);并参与了覆盆子农场的爆发(1)。在悉尼郊区,包括上述病例在内,只有3人感染。人类钩端螺旋体病在悉尼郊区是罕见的事件;没有旅行或职业暴露史的真实病例可能被临床医生低估。然而,随着生物多样性丧失的加剧以及气候变化导致更强的降雨和更频繁的洪水,人类钩端螺旋体病很可能在城市和流行环境中变得更加常见。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rare urban-acquired human leptospirosis and environmental health investigation in Sydney, Australia.

Abstract: Leptospirosis is a zoonosis caused by exposure to Leptospira excreted into the environment by rodents or other mammals. A notification of a case of leptospirosis in an adult male with no history of travel or exposure to livestock or rodents triggered an environmental health investigation of his workplace, a local golf course. We hypothesised that a water splash in the eye from a creek running through the golf course, which occurred after a period of heavy rainfall, had led to Leptospira exposure, likely on the basis of contamination of the creek water by rodent urine. Testing of environmental water samples detected pathogenic Leptospira DNA in ten of eleven samples, although cultures were negative. However, we had difficulty interpreting this finding as we found Leptospira DNA in ten of 14 environmental samples in inner and eastern Sydney remote from the workplace, and these were not associated with notified human cases. When we reviewed the 53 human leptospirosis cases notified over the twenty-year period 2003-2022 in residents of metropolitan Sydney, of the 49 cases with Leptospira exposure information, 46 had recognised sources of exposure: travel overseas (27) or to tropical northern Australia (5); rural exposure often to livestock and/or rodents (12); work in an abattoir (1); and involvement in a raspberry farm outbreak (1). Only three, including the case described, acquired infection in suburban Sydney. Acquisition of human leptospirosis is a rare event in suburban Sydney; true cases without a travel or occupational exposure history may be under-recognised by clinicians. However, with increasing biodiversity loss and where climate change results in heavier rainfall and more frequent floods, it is likely that human leptospirosis will become more common in urban as well as endemic settings.

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1.90
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