| Literature DB >> 23687940 |
Geraldine Boseret1, Bertrand Losson, Jacques G Mainil, Etienne Thiry, Claude Saegerman.
Abstract
Pet birds are a not-so-well known veterinarian's clientship fraction. Bought individually or in couples, as families often do (which is a lucrative business for pet shops or local breeders) or traded (sometimes illegally) for their very high genetic or exotic value, these birds, commonly canaries, parakeets or parrots, are regularly sold at high prices. These animals, however, are potential carriers and/or transmitters of zoonotic diseases. Some of them could have an important impact on human health, like chlamydophilosis, salmonellosis or even highly pathogenic avian influenza A H5N1. This review paper, although non exhaustive, aims at enlightening, by the description of several cases of bird-human transmission, the risks encountered by bird owners, including children. Public health consequences will be discussed and emphasis will be made on some vector-borne diseases, known to be emergent or which are underestimated, like those transmitted by the red mite Dermanyssus gallinae. Finally, biosecurity and hygiene, as well as prevention guidelines will be developed and perspectives proposed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23687940 PMCID: PMC3668993 DOI: 10.1186/1297-9716-44-36
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.683
Main pet bird species according to the International Ornithologic Congress (IOC) classification 3.1 (2012)
| Fringillidae | Canary | Canari/serin des canaries | |||
| | | Gold finch | Chardonneret | ||
| | | | Green finch | Verdier | |
| | | | siskin | Tarin | |
| | | Bullfinch | Bouvreuil | ||
| | | Chaffinch | Pinson des arbres | ||
| | Estrildidae | Zebra finch | Moineau mandarin | ||
| | | Long-tailed finch | Diamant à longue queue | ||
| | | Gouldian Finch | Diamant de Gould | ||
| | | Bengalese finch | Bengali/moineau du japon | ||
| | Sturnidae | Mynah | Mainate | ||
| | | Starling | Etourneau | ||
| Psittacidae | Budgerigar | Perruche ondulée | |||
| | | Lovebird | Inséparable | ||
| | | Alexandrine parakeet | Perruche alexandrine | ||
| | | Lories | Loris | ||
| | | African or Timneh grey parrot | Gris du Gabon | ||
| | | Senegal parrot | Perroquet Youyou | ||
| | | Macaw | Ara | ||
| | | Conure | Conure | ||
| | | Amazon | Amazone | ||
| | Cacatuidae | Cockatoo | Cacatoës | ||
| Cockatiel | Calopsitte |
Main transmission routes of diseases
| yes | yes | no | no | no | no | |
| yes | yes | yes | yes | no | no | |
| yes | no | yes | no | yes | no | |
| Chlamydophilosis | Tuberculosis | West Nile Fever | Cryptosporidiosis | Lyme disease | Genetic disorders | |
Summary of main pet bird zoonotic diseases
| Systemic | Fatal | yes | D/I/V | Yes | high | |
| Digestive to systemic | Treatable | yes | D/I/V | No | moderate | |
| Respiratory to systemic | Fatal | no | D/I/V | Yes | high | |
| Digestive to systemic | Treatable | yes | D/I/V | No | moderate | |
| | None | no | V | No | low | |
| Systemic | Fatal | no | D/V? | Yes | high | |
| Respiratory to systemic | Fatal | yes | V | Yes (WNF) | moderate | |
| Digestive/nervous to systemic | Fatal | no | D | No | null | |
| Ocular To Systemic | Mild to fatal | yes | D/I/V | Yes | low | |
| Digestive | Digestive | yes | I | No | Null to low | |
| Digestive to systemic | Treatable | yes | I | No | moderate | |
| Digestive | Treatable | yes | I | No | moderate | |
| Digestive | Treatable | yes | I | No | moderate |
*when handling a bird without hygienic precautions.
Legend: D = direct contact; I = Indirect contact; V = vector-mediated contact.
Summary of clinical data associated with main pet bird zoonotic diseases [[41]]
| All | None | Direct examination | Ivermectine, permethrins in spray. Total disinfection of cages and facilities (see also chapter 4) | Dermatitis, pruritus | |||
| Psittacines – canaries – finches | AA, SBS, diarrhea, nasal discharge, dehydration, Ocular signs | Air sac lesions, hepato-splenomegaly | CSw, OSw, FE/BC, serology (paired serology 2 weeks apart),IMF, PCR | Asymptomatic carriage (up to 40%), false negative | Tetracyclins (1st of 2d generation) | Flu-like syndrome, genital, articular, skin symptoms | |
| All (open-air aviaries) | AA, WL, diarrhea, mild respiratory symptoms | Congestive gastro-intestinal tract, hepato-splenomegaly | CSw, FE | Mostly in winter and in outdoor aviaries; hard to differentiate from pseudo-tuberculosis | Not recommended (high probability of antibio-resistance) | Gastro-intestinal infection | |
| Psittacines (canaries?) | Progressive AA, WL, respiratory symptoms, long bone lesions | Cachexia, osteolysis spots in long bones, lung lesions (non caseous) | RX (bone lesions), OSw/MO (Ziehl-Nielsen), BC, HP | Chronic development, sometimes during months to years; human origin infection | Not recommended (high probability of antibio-resistance) | Chronic pulmonary symptoms (caseous lung knots), generalized infection | |
| Estrildidae mostly. | Apathy, yellow feces (solid or liquid) | Cachexia, congestive gastro-intestinal tract, containing a yellow amylum or undigested seeds. | FE/MO (curved rods in stained smears), BC | Canaries and psittacines are asymptomatic carriers | Not recommended (high probability of antibio-resistance) | Gastro-intestinal infection, Gillain-Barré syndrome | |
| Passerines | Sudden death, SBS, respiratory and neurological signs | Dehydration, respiratory lesions | OSw, CSw, BS/HP, PCR | Mostly in outdoor aviaries | None | Mild to severe respiratory and systemic infection | |
| All | Ocular and neurological signs | | OSw, CSw/PCR | Mostly asymptomatic carriage | None: prevention based on limitation of exposure to mosquitoes (vectors) | Mild to severe respiratory and systemic infection, encephalitis, septicaemia, death | |
| All | SBS, AA, ocular, respiratory and neurological signs | Dehydration, respiratory lesions | OSw, CSw/serology | | None; prevention by vaccination | Cunjunctivitis, mild flu-like symptoms | |
| Canary, finch, budgerigar minah | SBS, AA, respiratory and neurological signs, blindness | iridocyclitis, panophthalmia, catarrhal pneumonia, hepato-splenomegaly | CSw/MO, serology, HP, PCR | Systemic symptoms sometimes unseen; detection of the disease 3 months later (blindness) | Trimetoprim-sulfamids | Mostly asymptomatic. Abortion, congenital malformation. | |
| | None | None | | | | Sometimes asymptomatic. WL, diarrhoea, abdominal pain | |
| All | Rare; acute diarrhoea | Gastro-enteric lesions | CsW/MO | | Ronidazole | Gastro-intestinal symptoms; liver, pancreas, respiratory tract lesions | |
| Parrots, little pet birds | Rare | None | CSw/MO | Possible aerosol-borne contamination | Mostly asymptomatic. Respiratory and nervous symptoms. |
AA apathy-Anorexia, WL weight loss, FE feces examination, BC bacterial culture, MO microscopic observation, SBS sick bird signs (ruffled feathers, standing at the bottom of the cage, depression), HP histopathology (including immunocytochemistry), BS blood sample, CSw cloacal swab, OSw oral swab, IMF Immunofluorescence, PCR polymerase chain reaction.
Classification of emerging zoonoses [[106]]
| Yes | No | No | No | None | |
| Yes | Yes | No | No | None | |
| Yes | No | Yes | No | West Nile fever | |
| Newcastle disease | |||||
| Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Avian Influenza | |
| Salmonellosis | |||||
| Chlamydophilosis | |||||
| Tuberculosis |