| Literature DB >> 27771068 |
Juan José Palacios1, Yurena Navarro2, Beatriz Romero3, Ana Penedo1, Ángela Menéndez González1, M Dolores Pérez Hernández4, Ana Fernández-Verdugo4, Francisca Copano5, Aurora Torreblanca6, Emilio Bouza7, Lucas Domínguez8, Lucía de Juan8, Darío García-de-Viedma9.
Abstract
Human Mycobacterium bovis infections are considered to be due to reactivations, when involve elderly people, or to recent transmissions, when exposure is occupational. We determined the cause of M. bovis infections by genotyping M. bovis isolates in a population-based study integrating human and animal databases. Among the 1,586 tuberculosis (TB) cases in Asturias, Northern Spain (1,080,000 inhabitants), 1,567 corresponded to M. tuberculosis and 19 to M. bovis. The number of human isolates sharing genotype with cattle isolates was higher than expected (47%) for a setting with low prevalence of bovine TB and efficient control programs in cattle. The risk of exposure to infected animals was probable/possible in most of these matched cases (77.7%). Recent transmission was the likely explanation of most M. bovis infections in elderly people. A potential human-to-human transmission was found. Our study illustrates a model of collaboration between human and animal health professionals to provide a precise snapshot of the transmission of M. bovis in the human-animal interface.Entities:
Keywords: Genotyping; Human-animal; Molecular epidemiology; One health; Tuberculosis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27771068 DOI: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2016.08.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Microbiol ISSN: 0378-1135 Impact factor: 3.293