| Literature DB >> 35041681 |
Bronwyn Orr1, Mark E Westman1,2, Richard Malik3,4, Auriol Purdie1, Scott B Craig5, Jacqueline M Norris1,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Leptospirosis is a zoonotic disease with a worldwide distribution, caused by pathogenic serovars in the genus Leptospira. Feral pigs are known carriers of Leptospira species and pig hunting using dogs is a common recreational activity in Queensland, Australia. METHODOLOGY AND PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35041681 PMCID: PMC8797170 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0010100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Location of the eight participating veterinary clinics in a serosurvey of pig-hunting dogs from above the Tropic of Capricorn (black line) in the state of Queensland, Australia (Source: https://d-maps.com/carte.php?num_car=63942&lang=en).
Signalment, Leptospira serovar and titre of unvaccinated pig-hunting dogs with positive Leptospira titres.
| Breed or type | Age (years) | Sex | Titre of primary serovar(s) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pitbull X Boxer | 3 | FN |
| 1/50 |
| Bull Arab X | 3 | M | 1/50 | |
| Bull Arab X Cattle Dog | 6 | F |
| 1/50 |
| Bull Arab X | 7 | F |
| 1/50 |
| Bull Mastiff X Bull Arab | 3 | M | 1/100; 1/50 | |
| Mastiff X | 7 | M | 1/100 | |
| Bull Arab | 13 | M |
| 1/100 |
| Ridgeback X | 0.5 | M |
| 1/100 |
| Bull Terrier X Bull Arab | 3 | F |
| 1/100 |
| Smithfield Cattle Dog X | 3 | M |
| 1/200; 1/100 |
| Bull Arab X Staffy | 6.5 | M |
| 1/200; 1/100 |
| Great Dane X Mastiff | 3 | M |
| 1/200 |
| Bull Mastiff X | 9 | M |
| 1/200 |
| Cattle Dog X | 4 | F |
| 1/200 |
| Mastiff X Great Dane | 5 | M |
| 1/200 |
| Bull Terrier X Cattle Dog | 3.5 | F |
| 1/200; 1/200 |
| Bull Arab | 2.5 | F | 1/400; 1/200 | |
| Ridgeback X | 6 | FN | 1/400 | |
| Cattle Dog X | 2 | F |
| 1/400 |
| Cattle Dog X | 2 | M | 1/800 | |
| Bull Arab X Catahoula | 3 | M |
| 1/800 |
| Greyhound X Staghound | 3 | MN |
| 1/800 |
| Bull Arab | 1 | M |
| 1/1600 |
* (titre >1/50) with primary serovar(s) in bold; abbreviations: X crossbred; M male intact; F female intact; FN spayed female; MN male castrated
Fig 2Serovars of leptospirosis cases in humans notified to Queensland Health from 2015–2018 (blue histograms) and primary serovar(s) of 23 unvaccinated pig-hunting dogs sampled for Leptospira spp. (orange histograms) as part of a serosurvey in 2018 from above the Tropic of Capricorn in Queensland, Australia.
Five dogs had more than one primary Leptospira serovar detected and ‘other’ includes serovars such as Zanoni, Szwajizak, Djasiman and Canicola.
Survey of 40 pig-hunting dog owners in 2018 regarding zoonotic disease risk posed by pig hunting with dogs.
| Question | Answer (number of respondents) |
|---|---|
| Q30 Have you ever become sick and been diagnosed with Q fever, brucellosis or leptospirosis? | Yes (2) |
| No (36) | |
| Not sure (2) | |
| Q31 If yes, which disease(s) have you been diagnosed with? | Leptospirosis (2) |
| Q32 Did you know that feral pigs can carry all three of these diseases? | Yes (35) |
| No (5) | |
| Q33 Did you know that pig-hunting dogs can become infected with all three of these diseases? | Yes (34) |
| No (6) |
Results from the survey of 40 pig-hunting dog owners in 2018 to Question 34, ‘Do you take any precautions when killing pigs to avoid contracting these diseases [Brucellosis, Q Fever, Leptospirosis]?’.
| Precaution | Number (percentage) of hunters that take precautions during hunts |
|---|---|
| None | 6 (15%) |
| Wash hands | 28 (70%) |
| Wear protective clothing (e.g., long shirts) | 15 (38%) |
| Wash equipment | 8 (20%) |
| Avoid feral pig organs | 13 (33%) |
| Wear gloves | 1 (3%) |
Fig 3(A) Distribution of human cases of leptospirosis notified to Queensland Health from 2015–2018; (B) Distribution of unvaccinated canine seropositives on microscopic agglutination testing (MAT) for (Source: https://www.nationalmap.gov.au/. Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia) 2020. Released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License).
Fig 4Gender distribution of human leptospirosis cases notified to Queensland Health from 2015–2018.