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  2. Tularaemia

Tularaemia

  • Tularemia

Nature

Tularaemia is an acute, moderately severe, infectious disease of animals and, secondarily, of man. Man becomes infected by handling wild rodents, especially wild rabbits and hares, that are infected with the disease or that have died of it. Infection may also occur through contact with water, straw, or food products contaminated by such animals, as well as by tick or insect bites; by eating contaminated, under-cooked meat; by inhaling contaminated dust or aerosols; or by drinking contaminated water. The symptoms are fever, severe headache, insomnia, night sweats, and swelling and tenderness of the lymph nodes.

Background

The disease is named after Tulare County, California, USA, where it was first isolated, in 1911, by G McCoy and C Chapin, in infected ground squirrels.

Incidence

Tularaemia has been reported on all continents except Australia, but does not occur to the same degree in all areas. It is more prominent in the Holarctic animal region: Russia, Japan and the United States. The two main regions in which numerous infections of man have occurred are the USA (except Hawaii) and the southern USSR.

Broader

Epidemics
Excellent

Narrower

Rabbit fever
Yet to rate
Deerfly fever
Yet to rate

Aggravates

Pneumonia
Presentable

Aggravated by

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #3: Good Health and Well-being

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(E) Emanations of other problems
Subject
Content quality
Presentable
 Presentable
Language
English
Last update
Oct 4, 2020