Subclinical infection and asymptomatic carriage of gastrointestinal zoonoses: occupational exposure, environmental pathways, and the anonymous spread of disease

Asymptomatic carriage of gastrointestinal zoonoses is more common in people whose profession involves them working directly with domesticated animals. Subclinical infections (defined as an infection in which symptoms are either asymptomatic or sufficiently mild to escape diagnosis) are important wit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Epidemiology and infection 2013-10, Vol.141 (10), p.2011-2021
Hauptverfasser: QUILLIAM, R. S., CROSS, P., WILLIAMS, A. PRYSOR, EDWARDS-JONES, G., SALMON, R. L., RIGBY, D., CHALMERS, R. M., THOMAS, D. Rh, JONES, D. L.
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container_end_page 2021
container_issue 10
container_start_page 2011
container_title Epidemiology and infection
container_volume 141
creator QUILLIAM, R. S.
CROSS, P.
WILLIAMS, A. PRYSOR
EDWARDS-JONES, G.
SALMON, R. L.
RIGBY, D.
CHALMERS, R. M.
THOMAS, D. Rh
JONES, D. L.
description Asymptomatic carriage of gastrointestinal zoonoses is more common in people whose profession involves them working directly with domesticated animals. Subclinical infections (defined as an infection in which symptoms are either asymptomatic or sufficiently mild to escape diagnosis) are important within a community as unknowing (asymptomatic) carriers of pathogens do not change their behaviour to prevent the spread of disease; therefore the public health significance of asymptomatic human excretion of zoonoses should not be underestimated. However, optimal strategies for managing diseases where asymptomatic carriage instigates further infection remain unresolved, and the impact on disease management is unclear. In this review we consider the environmental pathways associated with prolonged antigenic exposure and critically assess the significance of asymptomatic carriage in disease outbreaks Although screening high-risk groups for occupationally acquired diseases would be logistically problematical, there may be an economic case for identifying and treating asymptomatic carriage if the costs of screening and treatment are less than the costs of identifying and treating those individuals infected by asymptomatic hosts.
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subjects Animals
Antibodies
Asymptomatic
Asymptomatic Infections - epidemiology
Biological and medical sciences
Campylobacter
Carrier State - epidemiology
Carrier State - transmission
Cattle
Dairy farms
Domestication
E coli
Environmental Medicine
Epidemics
Farmworkers
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Gastroenteritis/Food poisoning
Gastrointestinal Diseases - epidemiology
Guillain-Barre syndrome
Humans
Illnesses
Infections
Infectious diseases
Livestock
Microbiology
Occupational Exposure
Pathogens
Poultry
Public Health
Review
Rural areas
Sheep
Zoonoses
Zoonoses - epidemiology
Zoonoses - transmission
title Subclinical infection and asymptomatic carriage of gastrointestinal zoonoses: occupational exposure, environmental pathways, and the anonymous spread of disease
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