Review Article: Plague Gives Surprises in the First Decade of the 21st Century in the United States and Worldwide

被引:68
作者
Butler, Thomas [1 ]
机构
[1] Ross Univ, Sch Med, Portsmouth, Dominica
关键词
PRIMARY PNEUMONIC PLAGUE; YERSINIA-PESTIS; RECOMBINANT F1; OUTBREAK; VACCINE; DIAGNOSIS; LESSONS; MODEL;
D O I
10.4269/ajtmh.13-0191
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Plague is an ancient disease caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis and transmitted by rodent flea bites that continues to surprise us with first-ever events. This review documents plague in human cases in the 1st decade of the 21st century and updates our knowledge of clinical manifestations, transmission during outbreaks, diagnostic testing, antimicrobial treatment, and vaccine development. In the United States, 57 persons were reported to have the disease, of which seven died. Worldwide, 21,725 persons were affected with 1,612 deaths, for a case-fatality rate of 7.4%. The Congo reported more cases than any other country, including two large outbreaks of pneumonic plague, surpassing Madagascar, which had the most cases in the previous decade. Two United States scientists suffered fatal accidental exposures: a wildlife biologist, who carried out an autopsy on a mountain lion in Arizona in 2007, and a geneticist with subclinical hemochromatosis in Chicago, who was handling an avirulent strain of Y. pestis in 2009. Antimicrobial drugs given early after the onset of symptoms prevented many deaths; those recommended for treatment and prophylaxis included gentamicin, doxycycline, and fluoroquinolones, although fluoroquinolones have not been adequately tested in humans. Fleas that do not have their guts blocked by clotted blood meals were shown to be better transmitters of plague than blocked fleas. Under development for protection against bioterrorist use, a subunit vaccine containing Fl and V antigens of Y pestis was administered to human volunteers eliciting antibodies without any serious side effects. These events, although showing progress, suggest that plague will persist in rodent reservoirs mostly in African countries burdened by poverty and civil unrest, causing death when patients fail to receive prompt antimicrobial treatment.
引用
收藏
页码:788 / 793
页数:6
相关论文
共 47 条
[41]   Lack of Antimicrobial Resistance in Yersinia pestis Isolates from 17 Countries in the Americas, Africa, and Asia [J].
Urich, Sandra K. ;
Chalcraft, Linda ;
Schriefer, Martin E. ;
Yockey, Brook M. ;
Petersen, Jeannine M. .
ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY, 2012, 56 (01) :555-558
[42]   A Dog-Associated Primary Pneumonic Plague in Qinghai Province, China [J].
Wang, Hu ;
Cui, Yujun ;
Wang, Zuyun ;
Wang, Xiaoyi ;
Guo, Zhaobiao ;
Yan, Yanfeng ;
Li, Chao ;
Cui, Baizhong ;
Xiao, Xiao ;
Yang, Yonghai ;
Qi, Zhizhen ;
Wang, Guojun ;
Wei, Baiqing ;
Yu, Shouhong ;
He, Duolong ;
Chen, Hongjian ;
Chen, Gang ;
Song, Yajun ;
Yang, Ruifu .
CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2011, 52 (02) :185-190
[43]   Plague [J].
Williamson, E. D. .
VACCINE, 2009, 27 :D56-D60
[44]   Human immune response to a plague vaccine comprising recombinant F1 and V antigens [J].
Williamson, ED ;
Flick-Smith, HC ;
LeButt, C ;
Rowland, CA ;
Jones, SM ;
Waters, EL ;
Gwyther, RJ ;
Miller, J ;
Packer, PJ ;
Irving, M .
INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, 2005, 73 (06) :3598-3608
[45]   Primary Pneumonic Plague Contracted from a Mountain Lion Carcass [J].
Wong, David ;
Wild, Margaret A. ;
Walburger, Matthew A. ;
Higgins, Charles L. ;
Callahan, Michael ;
Czarnecki, Lawrence A. ;
Lawaczeck, Elisabeth W. ;
Levy, Craig E. ;
Patterson, J. Gage ;
Sunenshine, Rebecca ;
Adem, Patricia ;
Paddock, Christopher D. ;
Zaki, Sherif R. ;
Petersen, Jeannine M. ;
Schriefer, Martin E. ;
Eisen, Rebecca J. ;
Gage, Kenneth L. ;
Griffith, Kevin S. ;
Weber, Ingrid B. ;
Spraker, Terry R. ;
Mead, Paul S. .
CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2009, 49 (03) :E33-E38
[46]  
WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION Geneva, 2006, WKLY EPIDEMIOL REC, V25, P241
[47]  
,, 2010, Weekly Epidemiological Record, V85, P40