Mycobacterium paratuberculosis zoonosis is a One Health emergency

被引:0
|
作者
Coad Thomas Dow
Briana Lizet Alvarez
机构
[1] McPherson Eye Research Institute,Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, 9431 Wisconsin Institutes for Medical Research (WIMR)
[2] University of Wisconsin-Madison,Biology and Global Health
[3] University of Wisconsin-Madison,undefined
来源
EcoHealth | 2022年 / 19卷
关键词
Mycobacterium avium ss. paratuberculosis; zoonosis; Johne's disease; Crohn's disease; autoimmune diabetes; One Health;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A singular pathogen has been killing animals, contaminating food and causing an array of human diseases. Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP) is the cause of a fatal enteric infectious disease called Johne’s (Yo’-nees), a disorder mostly studied in ruminant animals. MAP is globally impacting animal health and imparting significant economic burden to animal agriculture. Confounding the management of Johne’s disease is that animals are typically infected as calves and while commonly not manifesting clinical disease for years, they shed MAP in their milk and feces in the interval. This has resulted in a “don’t test, don’t tell” scenario for the industry resulting in greater prevalence of Johne’s disease; furthermore, because MAP survives pasteurization, the contaminated food supply provides a source of exposure to humans. Indeed, greater than 90% of dairy herds in the US have MAP-infected animals within the herd. The same bacterium, MAP, is the putative cause of Crohn’s disease in humans. Countries historically isolated from importing/exporting ruminant animals and free of Johne’s disease subsequently acquired the disease as a consequence of opening trade with what proved to be infected animals. Crohn’s disease in those populations became a lagging indicator of MAP infection. Moreover, MAP is associated with an increasingly long list of human diseases. Despite MAP scientists entreating regulatory agencies to designate MAP a “zoonotic agent,” it has not been forthcoming. One Health is a global endeavor applying an integrative health initiative that includes the environment, animals and humans; One Health asserts that stressors affecting one affects all three. Recognizing the impact MAP has on animal and human health as well as on the environment, it is time for One Health, as well as other global regulatory agencies, to recognize that MAP is causing an insidious slow-motion tsunami of zoonosis and implement public health mitigation.
引用
收藏
页码:164 / 174
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] CHEMICAL CONSTITUENTS OF MYCOBACTERIUM PARATUBERCULOSIS
    LARSEN, AB
    MERKAL, RS
    AMERICAN REVIEW OF TUBERCULOSIS AND PULMONARY DISEASES, 1958, 77 (04): : 712 - 715
  • [23] Mycobacterium paratuberculosis heat resistance
    Cerf, O
    Griffiths, MW
    LETTERS IN APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY, 2000, 30 (04) : 341 - 342
  • [24] Heat resistance of Mycobacterium paratuberculosis
    Lund, BM
    Donnelly, CW
    Rampling, A
    LETTERS IN APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY, 2000, 31 (02) : 184 - 185
  • [25] Mycobacterium paratuberculosis and autism: Is this a trigger?
    Dow, Coad Thomas
    MEDICAL HYPOTHESES, 2011, 77 (06) : 977 - 981
  • [26] Zoonosis: An Emerging Link to Antibiotic Resistance Under "One Health Approach"
    Dafale, Nishant A.
    Srivastava, Shweta
    Purohit, Hemant J.
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY, 2020, 60 (02) : 139 - 152
  • [27] Strengthened public awareness of one health to prevent zoonosis spillover to humans
    Wu, Yinglin
    Luo, Ling
    Wang, Yuxing
    Chen, Xiaoli
    Mo, Donghui
    Xie, Ling
    Sun, Aizhen
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2023, 879
  • [28] SURVIVAL OF MYCOBACTERIUM PARATUBERCULOSIS IN SLURRY
    JORGENSEN, JB
    NORDISK VETERINAER MEDICIN, 1977, 29 (06) : 267 - 270
  • [29] Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection of avian origin: Zoonosis and one health implications
    Abd El-Ghany, Wafaa A.
    VETERINARY WORLD, 2021, 14 (08) : 2155 - 2159
  • [30] The One Past Health workshop: connecting ancient DNA and zoonosis research
    Calvignac-Spencer, Sebastien
    Lenz, Tobias L.
    BIOESSAYS, 2017, 39 (07)