| Literature DB >> 33540629 |
Yumi Kirino1,2, Keita Ishijima3, Miho Miura4, Taro Nomachi5, Eugene Mazimpaka6, Putu Eka Sudaryatma6, Atsushi Yamanaka7, Ken Maeda3, Takayuki Sugimoto4, Akatsuki Saito1,2,6, Hirohisa Mekata1, Tamaki Okabayashi1,2,6.
Abstract
Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus (SFTSV) is the causative agent of SFTS, an emerging tick-borne disease in East Asia, and is maintained in enzootic cycles involving ticks and a range of wild animal hosts. Direct transmission of SFTSV from cats and dogs to humans has been identified in Japan, suggesting that veterinarians and veterinary nurses involved in small-animal practice are at occupational risk of SFTSV infection. To characterize this risk, we performed a sero-epidemiological survey in small-animal-practice workers and healthy blood donors in Miyazaki prefecture, which is the prefecture with the highest per capita number of recorded cases of SFTS in Japan. Three small-animal-practice workers were identified as seropositive by ELISA, but one had a negative neutralization-test result and so was finally determined to be seronegative, giving a seropositive rate of 2.2% (2 of 90), which was significantly higher than that in healthy blood donors (0%, 0 of 1000; p < 0.05). The seroprevalence identified here in small-animal-practice workers was slightly higher than that previously reported in other high-risk workers engaged in agriculture and forestry in Japan. Thus, enhancement of small-animal-practice workers' awareness of biosafety at animal hospitals is necessary for control of SFTSV.Entities:
Keywords: Bandavirus; Japan; SFTS; cats; dogs; public health
Year: 2021 PMID: 33540629 PMCID: PMC7912989 DOI: 10.3390/v13020229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048