A Dog-Associated Primary Pneumonic Plague in Qinghai Province, China

Hu Wang(Qinghai Institute for Endemic Diease Prevention and Control), Yujun Cui(Institute of Microbiology), Zuyun Wang(Qinghai Institute for Endemic Diease Prevention and Control), Xiaoyi Wang(Institute of Microbiology), Zhaobiao Guo(Institute of Microbiology), Yanfeng Yan(Institute of Microbiology), Chao Li(Qinghai Institute for Endemic Diease Prevention and Control), Baizhong Cui(Qinghai Institute for Endemic Diease Prevention and Control), Xiao Xiao(Institute of Microbiology), Yonghai Yang(Qinghai Institute for Endemic Diease Prevention and Control), Zhizhen Qi(Qinghai Institute for Endemic Diease Prevention and Control), Guojun Wang(Qinghai Institute for Endemic Diease Prevention and Control), Baiqing Wei(Qinghai Institute for Endemic Diease Prevention and Control), YU Shou-hong(Qinghai Institute for Endemic Diease Prevention and Control), Duolong He(Qinghai Institute for Endemic Diease Prevention and Control), Hongjian Chen(Qinghai Institute for Endemic Diease Prevention and Control), Gang Chen(Hainan Center for Disease Control & Prevention), Yajun Song(Institute of Microbiology), Ruifu Yang(Institute of Microbiology)
Clinical Infectious Diseases
December 18, 2010
Cited by 102Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Primary pneumonic plague (PPP) caused by Yersinia pestis is the most threatening clinical form of plague. An outbreak was reported in July 2009 in Qinghai Province, China. METHODS: This outbreak was investigated by clinical, epidemiological, bacteriological, and immunological methods. Multilocus variable number tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) was used to track the source of the outbreak. RESULTS: The index case, a patient with PPP, contaminated 11 close contacts. All the 12 cases, including the index patient, experienced sudden onset of fever, headache, and productive coughing with bloody sputum. Three of them died. Nevertheless, another 61 direct and 256 indirect contacts were not infected during the 2-week quarantine. Antibodies to F1 antigen were detected in 9 survival cases, with a 4-fold increase in titers in serum samples collected at different periods. Seven strains of Y. pestis were isolated from dogs and patients. Field investigation and MLVA of the isolated strains revealed that this outbreak was started by a deceased dog. CONCLUSION: Dogs are believed to be an indicator animal for plague surveillance, but their association with PPP is rare. Our results provide evidence for this possibility, which suggests the public health significance of dogs as a source of plague.


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