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人与单峰骆驼的互动以及感染人畜共患中东呼吸综合征冠状病毒的风险。

Human-Dromedary Camel Interactions and the Risk of Acquiring Zoonotic Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Infection.

作者信息

Gossner C, Danielson N, Gervelmeyer A, Berthe F, Faye B, Kaasik Aaslav K, Adlhoch C, Zeller H, Penttinen P, Coulombier D

机构信息

European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), Stockholm, Sweden.

School of Public Health and Primary Care (CAPHRI), Maastricht University Medical Center (MUMC+), Maastricht, The Netherlands.

出版信息

Zoonoses Public Health. 2016 Feb;63(1):1-9. doi: 10.1111/zph.12171. Epub 2014 Dec 27.

Abstract

Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) cases without documented contact with another human MERS-CoV case make up 61% (517/853) of all reported cases. These primary cases are of particular interest for understanding the source(s) and route(s) of transmission and for designing long-term disease control measures. Dromedary camels are the only animal species for which there is convincing evidence that it is a host species for MERS-CoV and hence a potential source of human infections. However, only a small proportion of the primary cases have reported contact with camels. Other possible sources and vehicles of infection include food-borne transmission through consumption of unpasteurized camel milk and raw meat, medicinal use of camel urine and zoonotic transmission from other species. There are critical knowledge gaps around this new disease which can only be closed through traditional field epidemiological investigations and studies designed to test hypothesis regarding sources of infection and risk factors for disease. Since the 1960s, there has been a radical change in dromedary camel farming practices in the Arabian Peninsula with an intensification of the production and a concentration of the production around cities. It is possible that the recent intensification of camel herding in the Arabian Peninsula has increased the virus' reproductive number and attack rate in camel herds while the 'urbanization' of camel herding increased the frequency of zoonotic 'spillover' infections from camels to humans. It is reasonable to assume, although difficult to measure, that the sensitivity of public health surveillance to detect previously unknown diseases is lower in East Africa than in Saudi Arabia and that sporadic human cases may have gone undetected there.

摘要

中东呼吸综合征冠状病毒(MERS-CoV)病例中,无记录显示与其他人类MERS-CoV病例有接触的病例占所有报告病例的61%(517/853)。这些原发病例对于了解传播源和传播途径以及设计长期疾病控制措施尤为重要。单峰骆驼是唯一有确凿证据表明是MERS-CoV宿主物种并因此可能是人类感染源的动物物种。然而,只有一小部分原发病例报告与骆驼有接触。其他可能的感染源和传播媒介包括食用未经巴氏消毒的骆驼奶和生肉导致的食源性传播、骆驼尿液的药用以及来自其他物种的人畜共患病传播。围绕这种新疾病存在关键的知识空白,只有通过传统的现场流行病学调查以及旨在检验关于感染源和疾病风险因素假设的研究才能填补这些空白。自20世纪60年代以来,阿拉伯半岛的单峰骆驼养殖方式发生了根本性变化,生产集约化且生产集中在城市周边。有可能近期阿拉伯半岛骆驼养殖的集约化增加了病毒在骆驼群中的繁殖数和攻击率,而骆驼养殖的“城市化”增加了人畜共患病从骆驼向人类“溢出”感染的频率。虽然难以衡量,但有理由认为东非公共卫生监测发现此前未知疾病的敏感度低于沙特阿拉伯,并且那里可能有散发病例未被发现。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/2f57/7165574/694a9bd23dbf/ZPH-63-1-g001.jpg

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