| Literature DB >> 24586679 |
Kate D Halsby1, Amanda L Walsh1, Colin Campbell2, Kirsty Hewitt3, Dilys Morgan1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Around 67 million pets are owned by households in the United Kingdom, and an increasing number of these are exotic animals. Approximately a third of pets are purchased through retail outlets or direct from breeders. A wide range of infections can be associated with companion animals.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24586679 PMCID: PMC3935869 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0089309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Cases of zoonoses associated with pet shops identified by the systematic literature review.
| Zoonosis/agent | Country | Year | Animal | Setting | Human casesassociatedwith pet shops | Age: child(≤16 years)/adult | Transmission | Probable type ofcontact: Occ/dom/visitor | Comment | Main ref |
| Bartonellosis | USA | 1994 | Cats | Animalshelter | 1 case | Adult | Multiplescratches | >1 category | Case adopted kittens from animal shelter.Case had high antibody titres to |
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| Blastomycosis | USA | 2009 | Kinkajou | Educationalorganisation | 1 case | Adult | Bitten onfinger | Dom | Case was bitten by a wild-born petkinkajou (a rainforest mammal relatedto a raccoon) from an educational organisation.The animal died shortly afterwards.Blastomycosis DNA sequences from the patient isolate andkinkajou tissues were indistinguishable. |
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| Cowpox | France | 2011 | Rats | Pet store | 1 case | Adult | Directcontact | Dom | Case fell ill after buying two ratsfrom a pet store. Other rats from thestore had died but were not investigated. |
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| Cowpox | Germany | 2009 | Rats | Pet shop | 5 cases | 2 × child, 3× adult | Directcontact | Dom | Five cases occurred in two familiesthat had purchased rats from thesame pet shop. Some of the ratsdeveloped skin lesions after purchase. |
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| Cowpox | France | 2009 | Rats | Pet store; pet breeder | 4 cases | 1× child, 3× adult | Scratches | Dom | Four cases of infection from sick petrats from the same pet store. The humancases were shown to be infected by aunique cowpox virus strain. All fourpet rats died. |
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| Cowpox | Germany | 2008 | Rats | Pet shops;wholesaler | 6 cases | 2× child, 4× adult | 3× directcontact, 3× notspecified | Dom | Five cases of cowpox, and oneputative case, among pet rat owners.All had contact with rats recentlypurchased from pet shops thathad sourced from same wholesaler. |
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| Cryptosporidiosis | USA | 2007 | Unknown | Pet shop | 1 case | Adult | Directcontact | >1 category | A pet shop employee was infectedwith |
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| USA | 1981 | Turtle | Pet shop | 1 case | Adult | Oral | Dom | The patient was infected with |
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| Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) | Romania | 2008 | Unknown | Pet shop | 2 cases | Adults | Notspecified | Occ | A case of LCMV infection in a petstore worker, and evidence of a previous infection in oneother employee. No samples were takenfrom rodents at the store. |
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| LCMV | USA | 2005 | Hamsters | Pet store; petdistributor | 1 case(plus 4 secondary cases via a common organ donor) | Not specified | Notspecified | Dom | Organ donor exposed to LCMV by hamsterrecently purchased from a pet store(although there was no evidence of LCMVinfection in the donor). Illnessoccurred in four organ transplant recipients,3 of whom died. More LCMV-infectedhamsters were found in both the pet store and the distributioncentre. Phylogenetic analysis linked thehuman and animal infections, includingthe donor hamster. |
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| LCMV | USA | 1974 | Hamster | Petdistributor | 181 cases | Not specified: ages ranged from 2 to 74 years | Notspecified | Dom | 181 symptomatic laboratory confirmed cases in persons withhamsters sourced from a single distributor. Breeder was anemployee of a biological products firm that hadpreviously been associated withoutbreaks of LCMV from hamsters used for tumor research. |
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| LCMV | USA | 1974 | Hamster | Pet shop | 6 cases | 2× child, 4× adult | All directcontact, incl 2×bite | Dom | Two individuals living in same householdcontracted severe infection from ahamster (proven to have LCMV)ecently purchased from a local pet shop.Three additional members of thefamily and a neighbor had a mild illnesswith raised antibody titres to LCMV (all handled thehamster and its bedding). |
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| Leptospirosis | UK | 2006 | Rats | Pet shop | 1 case | Adult | Notspecified | Dom | Case purchased two pet rats from a petshop three months prior to falling ill.Leptospiral DNA was detected in both rats,and other rats from same litter. |
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| Leptospirosis | Austria | 2001 | Unknown | Pet shop | 1 case | Adult | Notspecified | Occ | Case worked in a petshop. No discussionof possible exposures. |
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| Leptospirosis | USA | 1971 | Mice | Pet shop | 1 case | Adult | Oral | Dom | Case of leptospirosis acquired from petmice recently purchased from a petshop. Infection may have been acquired when the case’sdaughter used his toothbrush to cleanthe mouse-cage. |
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| Monkeypox | USA | 2003 | Prairie dogs | Pet store;distributor | 20 cases (part of an outbreak involving 72 cases ) | i) 11 cases: 3–43y, ii) 9 cases: 5× child, 4× adult | i) 11 cases: Alldirect contact, incl 2×scratch/bite, 3× openwounds, ii) 9 cases:not specified | i) 11 cases: >1 category, ii) 9 cases: >1 category | Outbreak of monkeypox,including two pet store employees and twoanimal distributors. Acquired from prairiedogs which entered the communitythrough pet shops and pet swap meets.Papers detail two clusters within theoutbreak: i) 11 cases and ii) nine cases. |
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| MRSA | Canada | 2006 | Cats | Rescuecentre | 4 cases | Not specified | 1× directcontact, 3× notspecified | >1 category | Two kittens from a rescue centre wereinfected with |
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| Psittacosis | Brazil | 2012 | Unknown | Pet shop | 1 case | Adult | Notspecified | Occ | Case contracted |
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| Psittacosis | Japan | 2004 | Birds | Pet shop | 2 cases | Adults | Notspecified | Occ | An elderly couple who ran a pet shop(selling psittacine birds) contractedpsittacosis. No bird sampling wasconducted. |
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| Psittacosis | Belgium | 1988–2003 | Birds | Breedingfacilities | 7 cases | Adults | Notspecified | >1 category |
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| Psittacosis | Japan | 2001 | Birds | Pet shop | 2 cases | Adults | Notspecified | Occ | Cases worked in a pet shop where someparakeets had recently died. [Article in Japanese] |
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| Psittacosis | Slovenia | Unclear: 1991–2001 | Birds | Pet shops;breeders | 9 cases | Not specified | Notspecified | Occ | Nine pet shop keepers/breeders(out of 86 pet shop keepers/breeders[10.5%]) were seropositive for |
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| Psittacosis | USA | 1980s | Birds | Pet shops | Unknown | Not specified | Notspecified | Occ | 10% of psittacosis cases reported toCDC during the 1980s (where the source ofinfection was known) occurred in pet shopemployees. |
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| Psittacosis | USA | 1997 | Birds | Pet stores | i) 1 case, ii) Unknown | Not specified | Notspecified | i) Dom, ii) >1 category | i) One individual with a positive antibodytitre was found amongst a groupof pet bird owners who were tested after the bird lot from which their pets came wasconfirmed to have chlamydiosis,ii) Birds from pet stores were tested for |
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| Psittacosis | USA | 1997 | Unknown | Pet shop | 1 case (also 7 secondary nosocomial cases) | Not specified | Notspecified | Occ | A pet shop worker was hospitalisedwith psittacosis. |
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| Psittacosis | USA | 1997 | Bird | Petdistributor | 1 case | Adult | Directcontact | Occ | A dealer in exotic animals became illafter handling a dead cockatiel. |
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| Psittacosis | USA | 1995 | Birds | Pet stores;distributor | Unknown (35 households) | Not specified | Notspecified | Dom | Avian chlamydiosis detected in ashipment of >700 pet birds to a particulardistributor. Among people who purchasedbirds sourced from this distributor,evidence of transmission of psittacosis was foundin 35 (30.7%) households when clinical andserological case definitions were combined. |
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| Psittacosis | Spain | 1993 | Birds | Pet shop | 4 cases | Not specified | 2× directcontact, 2× notspecified | Dom | Two cases each bought a parakeet at thesame pet shop. Additional serological evidence of infectionin two of the cases’ relatives. [Article inSpanish] |
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| Psittacosis | UK | 1991 | Birds | Pet shop | 7 cases | 1× child, 6× adult | Notspecified | >1 category | An outbreak of seven cases of |
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| Psittacosis | Sweden | 1977 | Unknown | Pet shop | 1 case (also 11 secondary cases, of which 9 nosocomial) | Adult | Notspecified | Visit | Case visited two pet shops prior to his(fatal) illness. Two parrots in the shopshad been bought from a wholesalerconnected with a previous outbreak |
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| Psittacosis | Japan | 1976 | Birds | Pet shop | 1 case | Adult | Notspecified | Visit | Case visited a pet shop 11 days prior tofalling ill with psittacosis.[Article in Japanese] |
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| Psittacosis | UK | 1974 | Birds | Pet shop | 3 cases | 1× adult, 2× not specified | 2× directcontact, 1× notspecified | Occ | The owner of a pet shop became illafter acquiring parrots from a dealerconnected with a previous outbreak |
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| Psittacosis | UK | 1973 | Birds | Privatepet distributor | 3 cases | Not specified | Notspecified | >1 category | A pet distributor and a husband-wifecouple fell ill after being in proximityto a sick parrot. |
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| Psittacosis | Sweden | 1967–1969 | Birds | Pet shop | 18 cases | Not specified | Notspecified | >1 category | 13/24 cases of ornithosis were probably infected from the same petshop and five more got their birds from awholesale dealer who provided birds to thepet shop. Attempts to culture from thebirds were not successful. |
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| Psittacosis | Sweden | 1963 | Birds | Pet shop | 13 cases | 1× child, 12× adult | Notspecified | >1 category | 13 cases of ornithosis were associated with a pet shop. Birds at the shop were culture positive for |
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| Rat bite fever | USA | 2004 | Rat | Pet shop | 1 case | Adult | Finger woundfrom cage | Occ | Pet shop employee sustained a minorfinger wound from a rat cage and diedfrom sepsis and multi-organ failure 59days later. |
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| Rat bite fever | UK | 2001 | Rat | Pet shop | 1 case | Child | Bitten onfinger | Visit | A case of septic arthritis of the hip in a teenager following a bite on the finger from a rat in a pet shop. |
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| Ringworm | Japan | 2006 | Unknown | Pet shop | 1 case | Adult | Directcontact | Occ | A case of tinea corporis ( |
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| Ringworm | Japan | 2002 | Unknown | Pet shop | 1 case | Not specified | Not specified | Occ | Pet shop worker with |
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| Ringworm | Japan | 2002 | Hedgehog | Pet shop | 1 case | Adult | Notspecified | Dom | Case had a lesion on her palm. Hadbought a hedgehog from a pet shop fouryears prior. Isolates from the patient andhedgehog were identified as |
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| Ringworm | Slovakia | 2002 | Guinea pig | Zoo | 2 cases | 1× adult, 1× child | Notspecified | Dom | Two cases of infection in a family whichkept a guinea pig obtained from a zoo.Samples from cases and guinea pig wereidentified as |
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| Ringworm | USA | 2000 | Hedgehogs | Pet store | 3 cases | Adults | 1× directcontact, 2×not specified | >1 category | Three patients developed culture positive ringwormafter handling or purchasing African pygmy hedgehogsfrom pet stores. Two isolates were atypical |
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| Ringworm | Japan | 1991 | Dog | Pet shop | 1 case | Adult | Notspecified | Dom | Case purchased a puppy from a petshop four weeks before presenting withsymptoms. The puppy was asymptomatic,but |
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| Salmonellosis | USA | 2009–2011 | African dwarf frogs | Breeder;petdistributor | 56 cases | Not specified | Notspecified | >1 category | 56/86 patients with |
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| Salmonellosis | USA | 2007 | Turtles | Pet store | 16 cases | Not specified (for the 16 linked to pet stores) | Not specified (forthe 16 linked to petstores) | Dom (possibly with additional exposures) | 16/78 cases with |
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| Salmonellosis | USA | 2004 | Rodents | Petdistributors | 13 cases | Not specified | Not specified | Dom | 13/22 cases of |
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| Salmonellosis | Canada | 2000–2003 | Fish | Pet shops | 33 cases | Not specified | Notspecified | Dom |
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| Salmonellosis | USA | 1999–2000 | Cats | Rescueshelter | 4 cases (and two secondary cases) | Not specified | Notspecified | Dom | Four people with |
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| Salmonellosis | Ireland | 1999 | Terrapins | Pet shop | 8 cases | 7× child, 1× adult | Not specified | Not specified (either dom or “close contact”) | Eight cases of |
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| Salmonellosis | Canada | 1995–1997 | Pygmy hedgehogs; sugar gliders | Stockfarm; breeders | 10 cases | 9× child, 1× adult | 1× directcontact, 9× notspecified | >1 category | Nine cases of |
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| Salmonellosis | USA | 1994 | Iguana | Pet stores; pet show | Unknown(17 households) | Not specified | Notspecified | Dom | 25/32 |
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| Salmonellosis | USA | 1994 | Hedgehogs | Breeders | 1 case | Child | No directcontact | >1 category | A case of |
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| Salmonellosis | Japan | 1985 | Turtle | Pet shops | 2 cases | 1× adult, 1× child | Notspecified | Dom | Two cases of |
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| Salmonellosis | USA | 1983 | Turtles | Pet shops | 12 cases | 11× child, 1× adult | 1× directcontact, 11× not specified | Dom | 12/83 cases of |
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| Salmonellosis | USA | 1970–1971 | Turtles | Pet shops;department store | i) 2 cases, ii) 36 cases (possibly more, but not stated) | i) 2× child, ii) not specified | Notspecified | Dom | i) Case study of two siblings with |
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| Toxocariosis | USA | 1989 | Dog | Pet store | 1 case | Child | Notspecified | Dom | Young girl suffered permanent loss ofvision due to ocular toxocariasis after herparents purchased a puppy from a petstore. |
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| Tularemia | USA | 2002 | Prairie dogs | Petdistributor | 1 case | Adult | Directcontact | Occ | 61 prairie dogs at a pet distributor testedpositive for |
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*Occ = occupational (exposure associated with case’s place of work); dom = domestic (pet owned by case or relative/friend of case), visitor = case visited place of likely exposure, outside of domestic setting).
**The original source paper for this incident (Murao T et al (1985) Ann Rep Fukuoka City Inst Hyg Environ, 10, 70–71) is only available in Japanese. The paper by Nagano contains sufficient information to include the incident in this review.
Incidents/outbreaks identified by the review, by zoonotic agent and animal category.
| Zoonosis/agent | Birds | Cats/dogs | Hamsters/guinea pigs | Hedgehogs | Rodents | Turtles | Other | Not known | Total |
| LCMV | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
| Leptospirosis | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| Pox virus | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 |
| Psittacosis | 15 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 18 |
| Ringworm | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 6 |
| Salmonellosis | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 5 | 0 | 12 |
| Other | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 9 |
| Total | 15 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 11 | 5 | 6 | 8 | 57 |