Epidemiology of Infectious Disease
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Transcript Epidemiology of Infectious Disease
February 11, 2013
Initiative
Ostensible: representing or appearing in a certain way,
but often not actually so; seeming
NO PHONES ALLOWED TODAY!!!
Do Now:
1. Identify 5 means of transferring the flu.
2. What is the real name for “flu?”
3. There was a flu epidemic during a war that killed more
people than the war. Which war was this?
The Epidemiology of
Infectious Disease
I. The Science of Epidemiology
Epidemiology:
The field of science concerned with the circumstances
under which diseases occur
An epidemiologist works in this field
Factors under investigation:
Incidence (morbidity rate) and spread of infectious and noninfectious diseases
Prevention and control of infectious and non-infectious
diseases
Effects of diseases on populations and individuals within a
population (measured by death rate = mortality rate)
Basic terms used in epidemiology
Sporadic disease
Occurs irregularly and only occasionally in a population
Example: Typhoid fever (Salmonella typhi)
Endemic disease
Occurs at regular intervals but at low levels
Example: Common cold (Rhinovirus)
Hyperendemic disease
When occurrence frequency rises, but not to epidemic
proportions
Example: Common cold in the winter months
Epidemic
Sharp increase in the incidence above the predicted/expected
level
Reservoir
Natural location of the organism
Can be animate or inanimate location
Examples:
Rabies – Dogs, foxes, raccoons (zoonoses)
Neisseria meningitidis (meningitis) – Humans
Malaria – Humans
Cryptococcus – Bird guano
Source
Immediate location from which infectious agent has
been transmitted
Examples:
Neisseria gonorrhea
Source = humans
Reservoir = humans
Salmonella typhi
Source = food and water
Reservoir = humans
Hepatitis C
Source = transfusion, blood products
Reservoir = humans
Carriers
Hosts that harbor a pathogen without clinical
symptoms and are capable of transmitting the
infectious agent (sometimes unknowlingly)
Carrier state may be short (transient) or longterm (chronic carrier – e.g. tuberculosis, herpes,
hepatitis B, typhoid)
Carrier state may also occur during:
Incubation period (before symptoms appear)
Convalescent period (recovery)
Define Carrier State
Vector
A biological or inanimate source that contributes to the
transmission of an infectious agent from one host to
another
Examples:
Arthropods
Mosquitoes – Malaria, West Nile Virus
Ticks – Lyme disease
Fleas – Bubonic plague
Flies - Trachoma
Birds
Lower vertebrates
Parrots – Psittacosis
Pigeons – Cryptococcus
Frogs and turtles – Salmonella
Inanimate objects (fomites)
Sporothrix schenkii (sporotrichosis)
February 20, 2013
Dependability
Deviate: to differ or move away from a specified course
or prescribed mode of behavior
Do Now: Make a 4 quadrant grid on your paper. You
will be writing in this, so consider the size carefully.
This is a “quadrant card.” Each quadrant will have
something different in it.
Topic of the Day
Definition
Associated Terms
Illustration
Index case - the first case in an epidemic
Outbreak - an epidemic-like increase in
frequency, but in a very limited (focal)
segment of the population
Rapid increase, usually localized
Example: Legionnaire’s disease
Pandemic - a long-term increase in frequency
in a large (usually worldwide or continental)
population
Disease frequency rises on a large scale
geographically
Epizootology
Deals with animal diseases affecting animal populations
Enzootic = moderate incidence
Epizootic = rapid increase
Panzootic = wide spread incidence
Zoonoses = if transferable to humans
II. Equations for Determining Frequency of
Disease
Statistical Analyses
The mathematics of collection, organization, and
interpretation of numerical data (rate
acoomparisons, chi-square, SEMs)
Used by state public health lab, CDC, WHO and
USPHS
Morbidity - the number of new cases in a
specific time period per unit of
population
# new cases within a specified period x 100
#individuals in a population
Indicator of new cases – critical for controlling spread of
disease
Prevalence - number of individuals
infected at any one time per unit of
population
Mortality - number of deaths from a disease per
number of cases of the disease
__# deaths ascribed to disease__ x 100
# individuals affected by disease
Proportion of all deaths assigned to a single cause
III. The Epidemiology of Infectious Disease
Recognition of an Infectious Disease in a
Population
Factors Affecting the Cycle of Disease
Causative agent
Source/reservoir
Method of Transmission
Influence of host or environment in the spread of the
disease
Goal of the Epidemiologist
Control the spread (dissemination)
Eliminate etiological agent
Surveillance and Data Collection for Control
Calculation of morbidity and mortality rates
Case studies
Field studies
Review clinical records and lab reports
Investigate source, reservoir and vectors
Review treatments/success rates
Employ demographic data to track the movement
of disease
Signs versus symptoms:
Sign = observable or measurable change in body function
Diarrhea, rash, fever, vomiting
Symptom = subjective
Pain, appetite loss, lethargy, depression
Disease syndrome - a set of signs and
symptoms that is characteristic of a disease
Phases of Infectious Disease Life Cycle
Incubation period
Variable length
Prior to development of signs of symptoms
Prodromal stage
Beginning of signs and symptoms
Often infectious/contagious
Innate immune response “kick in” (first line of defenses)
Illness stage
Most severe phase
Clear evidence of signs and symptoms
Acquired immune responses begin
Humoral – Antibodies and complement
Cell-mediated – T cells instruct destruction of infected cells
of destruction of intracellular bacteria
Decline stage
Alleviation of signs and symptoms
Recover/convalescence
IV. Two Major Types of Epidemic
Common Source Epidemic
Sharp increase to a peak, then a rapid resolution
Associated with common contaminated source
Examples
Food poisoning (food)
Legionnaire’s disease (water – air conditioning)
Propagated Epidemic
Extended rise with a gradual resolution
Frequently observed when one individual = source
Gradual dissemination
All susceptible individuals succumb
Examples
Mumps, chickenpox
# susceptible individuals eventually decreases due
to acquired immunity
Agent loses the ability to disseminate through the
population
V. Herd Immunity
Resistance a population acquires as a whole to infectious
disease
The number of individuals that must be immune to prevent
an epidemic outbreak of a disease is a function of:
Infectivity of the disease (I)
Duration of the disease (D)
Proportion of susceptible individuals in the population (S)
When 70% of individuals in a population are immune, the
propagation from individual to individual is not sustained
and epidemics do not occur
Opportunity for contact and transmission decreases as
the number of immune individuals increases
Susceptible individuals benefit from an indirect
immunity (not self-made immunity)
Acquisition of Herd Immunity through
Immunization
Immunization of large numbers of susceptible
individuals in a population can induce herd
immunity
Necessary to achieve a balance between immune
and susceptibles
Dynamic
Births, deaths, migratory patterns
Immune individuals can become susceptible again
if the pathogen mutates (antigenic shift or
antigenic drift)
VI. Antigenic Shift and Antigenic Drift
Caused by Mutations
Major genetic changes in a pathogen = Antigenic
Shift
Too great to be the result of simple mutations
Example: Influenza strains derived from mixing of
different influenza serovars
Can occur between animal and human virus (e.g. human and
avian influenza)
Co-infection of same cell
Genomes recombine (8 RNA strands/genome)
Mixing of gene pools, addition of new genes
New serovar is generated
No resistance in the population
Influenza pandemic outbreak of 1918 (“Swine Flu”)
Killed 20-40 million people
In the Far East, animal hosts for influenza viruses (ducks,
chickens and pork) live close together and close to
humans
Other examples:
1957 – “Asian Flu”
1968 – “Hong Kong Flu”
1977 – “Russian Flu”
1997 – All chickens killed in Hong Kong, 4 deaths, new strain
in chickens
Antigenic Drift
Minor genetic changes affecting critical epitopes
Point mutations in nucleic acids can cause single amino acids
to change in a protein
Gradual and cumulative
Therefore, major changes are apparent only with time
Herd immunity will decrease as the number of
susceptible individuals increases above a threshold
density
Example – Influenza virus – Types A, B and C (B and C
are more stable)
Inside of the virion
Nucleoprotein
Matrix protein (under the envelope)
Outside of the virion
Hemagglutinin spikes (HA)
Neuraminidase spike (NA)
RNA viruses have high rates of spontaneous mutations
because RNA synthesis is not proof-read as well as DNA
synthesis error prone (~1 base change per replication)
RNA viruses can adapt quickly to new environments
Point mutations in NA and HA change the antigenic
structure
Influenza A changes antigenic makeup often so vaccines
become ineffective
VII. The Infectious Disease Cycle: Story of a
Disease - Links in the infectious disease chain
Agent responsible
What pathogen caused the disease?
Epidemiologists must determine the etiology
(cause) of a disease
Koch’s postulates (or modifications of them) are
used if possible
The clinical microbiology laboratory plays an
important role in the isolation and identification
of the pathogen
Communicable disease - one that can be
transmitted from one host to another
Transmittable?
Source or reservoir of pathogen
Inanimate or animate
Human or non-human
Carriers
Carrier - an infected individual who is a potential
source of infection for others
Active carrier - a carrier with an overt clinical case of the
disease
Convalescent carrier - an individual who has recovered from
the disease but continues to harbor large numbers of the
pathogen
Healthy carrier - an individual who harbors the pathogen
but is not ill
Incubatory carrier - an individual who harbors the pathogen
but is not yet ill
Casual (acute, transient) carriers - any of the above carriers
who harbor the pathogen for a brief period (hours, days, or
weeks)
Chronic carriers - any of the above carriers who harbor the
pathogen for long periods (months, years, or life)
Route of transmission to susceptible host
Airborne
Direct contact
Indirect contact
Vehicle
Vectors
How was the pathogen transmitted?
Airborne - suspended in air; travels a meter or more
Droplet nuclei - may come from sneezing, coughing, or
vocalization
Dust particles - may be important in airborne transmission
because microorganisms adhere readily to dust
Contact - touching between source and host
Direct (person-to-person) - physical interaction between
infected person and host
Indirect - involves an intermediate, such as eating utensils,
thermometers, dishes, glasses, and bedding
Droplets - large particles that travel less than one meter
through the air
Vehicle (fomite) - food and water, as well as those
intermediates described for indirect contact
Vector-borne - living transmitters, such as
arthropods or vertebrates
External (mechanical) transmission - passive carriage of the
pathogen on the body of the vector with no growth of the
organism during transmission
Internal transmission - carried within the vector
Harborage - organism does not undergo morphological or
physiological changes within the vector
Biologic - organism undergoes morphological or
physiological changes within the vector
Immune status of host – susceptible?
Depends on defense mechanisms of the host
and the pathogenicity of the organism
Release of pathogen
Active escape - movement of organism to
portal of exit
Passive escape - excretion in feces, urine,
droplets, saliva, or desquamated cells
Virulence and mode of transmission
Virulence and the Mode of Transmission
A virus that is spread by direct contact (e.g.,
rhinoviruses) cannot afford to make the host
so ill it cannot be spread effectively
A virus that is vector-borne can afford to be
highly virulent
Pathogens that do not survive well outside the
host and that do not use a vector are likely to
be less virulent while pathogens that can
survive for long periods of time outside the
host tend to be more virulent
VIII. The Emergence of New Diseases and the
Resurgence of Old Diseases
New diseases have emerged in the past few
decades such as AIDS, Hepatitis C and E,
hantavirus, Lyme disease, Legionnaire’s
disease, toxic shock E. coli 0157:H7,
cryptosporidiosis and others
Systematic epidemiology focuses on the
ecological and social factors that influence
the development, emergence and resurgence
(TB, diphtheria) of disease
Systematic Epidemiology - Factors
Rapid transportation systems
Aid in the spread of disease out of areas where
they are endemic
Travelers to endemic areas should inquire about
vaccination prior to travel
Migration
Large populations migrating due to econimc
distress of political conflicts
Import/Export Commerce
Plants and animal trade – legal and illegal
Damaged or altered ecosystems
Decreases in predation
Generation of new vectors
Compromised populations at risk to new
disease
Drug users
Malnourished
Sexual promiscuity
HIV
Deforestation
New hosts for pathogens
IX. Control of Epidemics: Finding the
Weakest Link in the Chain
Reduce or eliminate the source or reservoir of
infection through:
Quarantine and isolation of cases and carriers
Eradication of an animal reservoir, if one exists
(poisoning, trapping)
Treatment of sewage to reduce water
contamination
Therapy that reduces or eliminates infectivity of
individuals
Interrupt the interaction between source and
susceptibles
Sanitization
Disinfection
Vector control (pesticides)
Chlorination of water supplies
Pasteurization of milk
Supervision and inspection of food and food
handlers
Destruction of insect vectors with pesticides
Increase resistant population, herd immunity
and vaccination programs
Public Health Authorities = Epidemiological
guardians - a network of health professionals
involved in surveillance, diagnosis, and control of
epidemics
Passive immunity – antiserum
Active immunity - vaccination
Remote sensing and Geographic Information Systems
(GIS)
Disease dynamic related to mapped environmental
variables
X. Acquisition of infectious in clinical
settings: Nosocomial Infections
Produced by infectious agents that develop
within a hospital or other clinical care facility
and that are acquired by patients while they
are in the facility
Infections that are incubating within the
patient at the time of admission are not
considered nosocomial
Source
Endogenous - patient’s own microbiota
Exogenous - microbiota other than the patient’s, animate or
inanimate source
Staff
Other patients
Visitor
Food
Catheters
IV
Respiratory aids
Water systems
Autogenous – caused by patient’s own microbiota, even if
acquired as a result of hospital stay
cannot be determined whether it is endogenous or exogenous
Control, prevention, and surveillance should
include:
proper handling of the patient and the materials
provided to the patient,
monitoring of the patient for signs of infection
The hospital epidemiologist (other terms are
also used) is an individual (usually a
registered nurse) responsible for developing
and implementing policies to monitor and
control infections and communicable disease
usually reports to an infection control committee or
other similar group
The CDC estimates that 5-10% of all hospital
patients acquire some form of nosocomial
infection – usually bacterial
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
(MMWR)
Lists the number of reportable diseases within the last
year and past 4 weeks
CDC monitors ~50 different bacterial, viral , fungal and
parasitic infections and intervenes with immunizations
or control measures in epidemic situations