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Zoonoses are those diseases common to both animals and humans (often but not necessarily transmitted from animals to people). Common zoonotic diseases are described below. Download PDF
Ringworm is a fungus affecting the skin. Lesions in pets are typically non itchy, circular and expanding. In people lesions are typically itchy expanding circular areas of redness with associated scale and crust.
The most important animal reservoirs for ringworm are cats (especially kittens) but dogs, rodents and cattle can also be affected.
Transmission occurs by direct contact with infected animals or indirectly by means of contact with spores on hairs or dermal (skin) scales shed by infected animals into the environment. People at risk are those people (especially the young and elderly) handling cats with lesions. Microsporum canis can also result in asymptomatic carriers. These are animals (especially long haired cats) which do not show lesions themselves but remain a shedder of infective spores into the environment infecting people and other animals (this makes control difficult).
Fleas are usually transmitted to people from dogs and cats (but rabbits and rodents can also be affected). People can become infected directly from infected pets or from a contaminated environment.
Scabies is a burrowing mite affecting the skin of both dogs and cats. Affected animals and people are incredibly itchy. Signs occur due to a hypersensitivity reaction to saliva and excretions from the mites.
Transmission generally occurs through contact with infected animals but can also occur through contact with a contaminated environment.
Dogs and cats with hookworm infection may be asymptomatic or show signs of diarrhoea, weight loss, anaemia and inappetance. The source of infection to people is soil contaminated with infected faeces of dogs or cats. Eggs are shed in faeces and develop into infective larvae in the soil. Human contact with infected larvae occurs when gardening without gloves or when children play in sandpits soiled by cats. In people hookworm larvae penetrate exposed skin and lesions appear as tracks under the skin (referred to as cutaneous larval migrans).
Mites found on cats and dogs but mostly rabbits. Cheyletiella is also referred to as walking dandruff. Transmission is usually though direct contact with infected animals
Otodectic mange affects dogs, cats and ferrets resulting in an intense itch in the ears. Typically puppies and kittens are affected in litters. Human infection occurs by direct contact with infected animals – these mites normally affect people on the arms and torso (not ears)
Ticks affect domestic and native animals. Transmission to people may be by direct or indirect contact. In dogs and cats infection with a paralysis tick results in an ascending paralysis and death (hind limbs, forelimbs then respiratory muscles). In people tick attachment results in irritation and local swelling and may result in infection if inappropriately removed (mouth parts left beneath the skin).
Companion animals are rarely the animal reservoir for human contamination of the diseases above although have been implicated. Transmission normally occurs from large animals due to poor meat hygiene, undercooking poultry products etc. Human infection results in typical signs associated with food poisoning.
Transmission from domestic pets occurs through water and food contaminated with animal faeces (faeco-oral transmission) and possibly by the oral-oral route (helicobacter).
Echinococcus is an infection with the larval (cystic) stage of hydatid tapeworm (not the same tapeworm which is transmitted by fleas common to suburban pets). Cats are not affected by hydatid tapeworm.
Dogs may be infected either by:
Adult tapeworms live in the intestine of carnivores (dogs, dingos, foxes) and produce eggs. Eggs develop infective embryos in faeces. When ingested by susceptible intermediate hosts (sheep, kangaroos, pigs, people) eggs release their embryos which penetrate the intestines and migrate to organs where they form cysts. Inside the cyst, thousands of protoscolices (next development stage) develop. If the organs of a sheep, kangaroo or pig are consumed by a dog, each of these protoscolices develops into an adult worm and the cycle begins again.
Humans (especially children) are infected by ingestion of faeces containing eggs from infected dogs. Contamination of food occurs by contact with soil and water contaminated with infected faeces or by flies after feeding on infected faeces.
Cysts are tolerated well by animals and dogs can carry thousands of adult tapeworms without becoming unwell. Cysts in humans commonly affect the liver but also the lungs, kidney, spleen, nervous system, brain and eye. Signs depend on the location of the cyst.
Toxoplasmosis is a protozoal parasite which lives in the gastrointestinal tract of cats but can infect a wide range of intermediate hosts. Human infection is most significant for
Cats are infected by eating tissue cysts (found in internal organs and muscle) of intermediate hosts (rodents, birds, sheep, kangaroos and pigs). Cats are commonly infected as kittens when they start hunting. Infected cats shed eggs in their faeces. Intermediate hosts are infected through grazing soil contaminated with infected cat faeces. Cats are also infected by eating eggs in faeces of other cats.
Mostly subclinical – no signs of disease
Both dogs and cats can be infected with roundworm (80% of domestic pets have worms). Affected cats and dogs may show no signs or have a dull coat, vomiting or diarrhoea. Eggs are passed in faeces. People are infected by ingestion of infective larvae (develop after eggs incubate in soil). Infected people may develop granulomas (referred to as visceral larval migrans) in the heart, lung, eye, brain or liver. Typical signs are pain and fever.
Dog and cat bite wounds can transmit bacterial infections to people.
The bacteria Bartonella henselae is the bacteria commonly associated with cat scratch disease. Cats are infected by fleas and kittens are a prime source of infection to people. Affected cats have no clinical abnormalities and most cats ultimately rid themselves of infection. Infections to people result from cat scratches but can also be acquired from cats licking abraded or damaged skin and insect bites.
Dirofilariasis is transmitted to dogs, cats and people through bites from infected mosquitoes. Microfilaria (heartworm larvae) migrate through tissues until reaching the heart. In dogs and cats microfilaria develop into adult heartworm and cause heart and respiratory disease. In people microfilaria DO NOT SURVIVE but lung emboli can develop and cause mild respiratory infections.