* Major, Medical Corps, U.S. Army; Chief,
Dermatology Service, Irwin Army Community Hospital, Fort Riley, Kansas 66442 Colonel, Medical Corps, U.S. Army; Chief, Bacteriology
Division, U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infections Diseases, Fort
Detrick, Frederick, Maryland 21702-5011; and Clinical Associate Professor of
Medicine, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, 4301 Jones
Bridge Road, Bethesda, Maryland 20814-4799
Plague is a zoonotic infection caused by Yersinia pestis, a
Gram-negative bacillus, which has been the cause of three great pandemics of
human disease in the common era: in the 6th, 14th, and 20th centuries. The
naturally occurring disease in humans is transmitted from rodents and is
characterized by the abrupt onset of high fever, painful local
lymphadenopathy draining the exposure site (ie, a bubo, the
inflammatory swelling of one or more lymph nodes, usually in the groin; the
confluent mass of nodes, if untreated, may suppurate and drain pus), and
bacteremia. Septicemic plague can sometimes ensue from untreated bubonic
plague or, de novo, after a flea bite. Patients with the bubonic form of the
disease may develop secondary pneumonic plague (also called plague
pneumonia); this complication can lead to human-to-human spread by the
respiratory route and cause primary pneumonic plague, the most severe and
frequently fatal form of the disease.
During the last four millennia, plague has played a role in many
military campaigns. During the Vietnam War, plague was endemic among the
native population, but U.S. soldiers escaped relatively unaffected. This
excellent protection of troops was largely due to our understanding of the
rodent reservoirs and flea vectors of disease, the pathophysiology of the
various clinical forms of plague, the widespread use throughout the war of a
plague vaccine, and prompt treatment of plague victims with effective
antibiotics. Mortality from endemic plague continues at low rates throughout
the world despite the availability of effective antibiotics. People continue
to die of plague, not because the bacilli have become resistant but, most
often, because physicians do not include plague in their differential
Diagnosis (in the United States) or because treatment is absent or delayed
(in underdeveloped countries).
To be best prepared to treat soldiers who are plague victims of endemic
or biological agent attack by an enemy, military physicians must understand
the natural mechanisms by which plague spreads between species, the
pathophysiology of disease in fleas and humans, the minimal diagnostic
information necessary to begin treatment with effective antibiotics, and the
proper use and capabilities of the presently available plague vaccine.
The United States militarys concern with plague is both as an endemic
disease and as a biological warfare threat. A better understanding of the
preventive medicine aspects of the disease will aid in the prompt Diagnosis
and effective treatment necessary to survive an enemy attack of plague.
Key terms in this chapter include enzootic and epizootic.
These refer, respectively, to plague that is normally present in an animal
community at all times but that occurs in only a small number of animals and
in a mildly virulent form, and to widespread plague infections leading to
death within an animal community (ie, equivalent to an epidemic in a
human population). The death of a rodent pressures the living fleas to leave
that host and seek other mammals, including humans. Understanding these two
simple concepts will help us to understand how and when humans may be
attacked, both in endemic and biological warfare scenarios.
The biblical book of I Samuel records what may be the oldest reference
to bubonic plague. In approximately 1320 BC, the
Philistines stole the Ark of the Covenant from the Israelites and returned
home. Then, I Samuel continues,
[t]he Lords hand was heavy upon the people of Ashdod and its vicinity;
he brought devastation upon them and afflicted them with tumors. And rats
appeared in their land, and death and destruction were throughout the
city... [T]he Lords hand was against that city, throwing it into a great
panic. He afflicted the people of the city, both young and old, with an
outbreak of tumors in the groin.1
After this time, plague became established in the countries
bordering the eastern Mediterranean Sea.2 In 430
BC, Sparta won the Peloponnesian War partly because of the plague of
Athens.3 Some scholars believe that this was the bubonic plague,
but others suggest that it may have been due to other bacterial or viral
diseases.4
Procopius gave us the first identifiable description of epidemic plague
in his account of the plague of the Byzantine empire during the reign of
Justinian I (AD 541542),5 which we now consider to be the first
great pandemic of the common era. As many as 100 million Europeans,
including 40% of the population of Constantinople, died during this
epidemic.6,7 Repeated, smaller epidemics followed this plague.8
The second plague pandemic, known as the Black Death, thrust this dread
disease into the collective memory of western civilization.8
Plague bacilli in fleas on the fur of marmots (a rodent of the genus
Marmota) probably entered Europe via the trans-Asian silk road during
the early 14th century. When bales of these furs were opened in Astrakhan
and Saray, hungry fleas jumped from the fur seeking the first available
blood meal, often a human leg.810 In 1346, plague arrived in
Caffa (modern Feodosiya, Ukraine), on the Black Sea. The large rat
population there helped spread the disease as they stowed away on ships
bound for major European ports such as Pera, a suburb of Constantinople, and
Messina, in Sicily. By 1348, plague had already entered Britain at Weymouth.5
The Black Death took the lives of 24 million people between the years
1346 and 1352 and claimed perhaps another 20 million by the end of the 14th
century.6 However, the plague continued through 1720, with a
final foray into Marseilles. Thirty percent to 60% of the populations of
major cities such as Genoa, Milan, Padua, Lyons, and Venice succumbed during
the 15th to the 18th centuries.10
Physicians of the time offered no effective treatment because they did
not understand the epidemiology of plague. At the highly regarded University
of Paris, physicians theorized that a conjunction of the planets Saturn,
Mars, and Jupiter at 1:00 PM on March 20, 1345, caused a corruption of the
surrounding atmosphere that led to the plague.6 They recommended
a simple diet; avoidance of excessive sleep, exercise, and emotion; regular
enemas; and abstinence from sexual intercourse.11 While some
people killed cats and dogs, thinking them to be carriers of disease, no one
ever thought to kill the rats.6 Christians blamed the disease on
Muslims, Muslims on Christians, and both Christians and Muslims on Jews or
on witches.8
In 1666, a church rector in Eyam, Derbyshire, England, persuaded the
whole community to quarantine itself when plague erupted there. This was the
worst possible solution, since the people then stayed in close proximity to
the infected rats. The city experienced virtually a 100% attack rate with
72% mortality (the average mortality for the Black Death was consistently
70%80%).8,12
Accurate clinical descriptions of the Black Death were written by
contemporary observers such as Boccaccio, who wrote in his Decameron:
The symptoms were not the same as in the East, where a gush of blood
from the nose was a plain sign of inevitable death, but it began both in
men and women with certain swellings [buboes] in the groin or under the
armpit. They grew to the size of a small apple or an egg, more or less,
and were vulgarly called tumours. In a short space of time these tumours
spread from the two parts named all over the body. Soon after this, the
symptoms changed and black or purple spots appeared on the arms or thighs
or any other part of the body, sometimes a few large ones, sometimes many
little ones.13(p646)
Guy de Chauliac in Avignon added his own commentary, describing
pneumonic plague and the axillary and groin forms of bubonic plague:
Doctors dared not visit the sick for fear of infection; or, when they
did, they helped little and gained nothing.14(p646)
. . . .
The disease is three fold in its infection; that is to say, firstly,
men suffer in their lungs and breathing and whoever have these corrupted,
or even slightly attacked, cannot by any means escape nor live beyond two
days...and it is found that all those who have died thus suddenly have had
their lungs infected and have spat blood. There is another form of the
sickness, however, at present running its course concurrently with the
first; that is, certain aposthumes appear under both arms and by these
also people quickly die. A third form of the diseaselike the two former,
running its course at the same time with themis that from which people of
both sexes suffer from aposthumes in the groin. This is likewise quickly
fatal.15(p646)
Some writers described bizarre neurological disorders, which gave
rise to the term Dance of Death, followed by anxiety and terror,
resignation, blackening of the skin, and death. The sick gave off a terrible
stench: Their sweat, excrement, spittle, breath, [were] so foetid as to be
overpowering[; in addition, their urine was] turbid, thick, black, or
red.6(p70) The second great pandemic slowly died out in
Europe by 1720. Many reasons, including the following, have been suggested
to explain its decline:
The oriental rat flea, Xenopsylla cheopis, the main vector of
the plague bacillus, could no longer exist in the cool European climate.5
The black rat, Rattus rattus, was replaced by the brown rat,
Rattus norvegicus, which was less likely to live in close proximity to
man.5,8
A new and less virulent species of Y pestis, or a related
Yersinia species such as Y pseudotuberculosis, may have
developed, causing natural immunization of infected rats and humans.8
The European population was generally iron deficient, and iron is an
essential factor for the bacteriums virulence.12
Flea density on humans decreased as the use of soap became more
widespread.5
The third, or modern, plague pandemic arose in 1894 in China and spread
throughout the world via modern transportation.12,16 It was also
in 1894 that Alexandre J. E. Yersin discovered that Yersinia pestis
satisfied Kochs postulates for bubonic plague.17 The reservoir
of plague bacilli in the fleas of the Siberian marmot was likely responsible
for the Manchurian pneumonic plague epidemic of 19101911, which caused
50,000 deaths.2 The modern pandemic arrived in Bombay in 1898,
and during the next 50 years, more than 13 million Indians died of plague.2,18
The disease officially arrived in the United States in March 1900, when
the lifeless body of a Chinese laborer was discovered in a hotel basement in
San Francisco, California19; the disease appeared in New York
City and Washington state the same year.20 New Orleans,
Louisiana, was infected in 1924 and 1926.20 Rodents throughout
the western United States were probably infected from the San Francisco
focus, leading to more infected rodents in the western United States than
existed in Europe at the time of the Black Death.12 Therefore,
human plague was initially a result of urban rat epizootics until 1925.
After general rat control and hygiene measures were instituted in various
port cities, urban plague vanishedonly to spread into rural areas, where
virtually all cases in the United States have been acquired since 1925.21
It is an axiom of warfare that battle casualties are far fewer than
casualties caused by disease and nonbattle injuries.3Y pestis
can cause disease both through endemic exposure and as a biological warfare
agent. Medical officers need to be able to distinguish likely from unlikely
cases of endemic disease, and to keep the possible biological warfare threat
in mind.
Just as plague befell armies of antiquity, so the disease has also
afflicted armies in more recent times. Frederick the Greats troops were
devastated by plague in 1745, as were Catherine the Greats in 17691771
when they returned from the Balkans with plague. In 1798, French military
operations in Egypt were significantly impeded by plague, which even caused
them to abandon their attack on Alexandria. The modern pandemic began in
China, when Chinese troops were deployed in an epidemic plague area to
suppress a Muslim rebellion. Military traffic is responsible for the rapid
spread of disease to nearly every country in Asia.2
For the U.S. military since the mid 20th century, endemic plague has
not been a source of disease and nonbattle injuries. During World War II and
the Vietnam War, U.S. forces were almost entirely free of plague. However,
the disease remains on and near our military bases because local mammal
populations maintain reservoirs of infection.
World War II
Endemic plague has been established in Hawaii (on the islands of Hawaii
and Maui) since December 1899. No evidence of the disease, however, in
either rodents or humans, has been found on the islands of Oahu or Kauai
since the first decade of this century. A small outbreak22(p667)
occurred during World War II on the island of Hawaii (in 1943) but was
contained by means of very strenuous rat control measures [that] were
carried out in each of the endemic plague areas. [T]hese measures were of
sufficient thoroughness to prevent any spread of plague to military
personnel during the war in the Pacific.22(p667)
Official policy during World War II was to vaccinate U.S. troops with a
killed plague vaccine. No U.S. troops contracted plague, although they
served in known endemic areas.22,23
Vietnam War
Plague entered Vietnam in Nha Trang in 189816 and several
pneumonic epidemics have occurred since (in 1911, 1915, 1925, and 1941).2,24
Cases have been reported from Vietnam every year since 1898 except during
the Japanese occupation during World War II.2 When French forces
departed Vietnam after the Indochina War, public health conditions
deteriorated and plague flourished. The reported plague incidence increased
from 8 cases in 1961, to 110 cases in 1963, to an average of 4,500 cases
from 1965 through 1969.21,2528 The mortality in clinically
diagnosed cases was between 1% and 5%. In untreated individuals, it was much
higher (60%90%).2,26 Only 8 American troops were affected (1
case per 1 million man-years) during the Vietnam War.28 American
success was attributed to
the use of flea insecticide (Xenopsylla cheopis became
resistant to the insecticide dichloro-diphenyltrichloroethane [DDT] during
the war, but others were employed)26;
immunization of virtually all American troops with plague vaccine2;
and
a thorough understanding of the epidemiology of disease, which led to
the use of insect repellents, protective clothing, and rat-proofed
dwellings.2
It was during the 1960s that our knowledge of plague grew
dramatically. This is due in great part to the work of two officers of the
Medical Service Corps, U.S. Army, Lieutenant Colonel Dan C. Cavanaugh and
Lieutenant Colonel John D. Marshall. These scientists studied plague
ecology, related plague epidemics to weather as a function of flea
physiology (epidemics virtually disappeared when the temperature rose above
28°C),2 developed serologic tests for plague infection, and
developed the data to demonstrate the efficacy of the whole-cell killed
plague vaccine.29
Disease Threat on U.S. Military Installations
Human exposure to plague on military installations may occur when pets
bring home infected rodents, their fleas, or both; at recreation areas with
sick or dead rodents and their infected fleas; or at field training and
bivouac sites. The consequences of plague at a military installation include
human illness, death, or both; pet or other animal illness, death, or both;
lost use of training and bivouac sites; large expenditures of money,
manpower, and equipment to eliminate the plague risk; and the lost use of
recreation areas.21 Plague risk has been identified on and near
several U.S. military installations (Exhibit 23-1).
Exhibit 23-1
U.S. Military Installations with Identified Plague Risks*
Plague-infected animals on the
installation; human case reported on post:
Fort Hunter Liggett, California
United States Air Force Academy, Colorado
Human case reported in the same county:
Edwards Air Force Base, Colorado
F. E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyoming
Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico§
Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado
Plague-infected animals on the
installation:
Dugway Proving Ground, Utah
Fort Carson, Colorado
Fort Ord, California
Fort Wingate Army Depot Activity, New Mexico
Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center, Bridgeport,
California
Navajo Army Depot Activity, Arizona
Pueblo Army Depot Activity, Colorado
Rocky Mountain Arsenal, Colorado
Vandenberg Air Force Base, California
White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico
Plague-infected animals or fleas are not on
the installation but are in the same county:
Bridgeport Naval Facility, California
Camp Roberts, California
Dyess Air Force Base, Texas
Fort Bliss, Texas
Fort Lewis, Washington
Sierra Army Depot, California
Tooele Army Depot, Utah
Umatilla Army Depot Activity, Oregon
Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada
Plague-infected animals or fleas are not on
the installation or in the county, but susceptible animals are
present:
Fort Huachuca, Arizona
*Does not
include military installations near Los Angeles and San Francisco,
California, where urban plague cases and deaths were not uncommon in
the first quarter of the 20th century; no plague cases have occurred
in these urban areas since the mid-1920s.
Fatality: 18-mo-old child died of pneumonic plague; rock squirrels
and their fleas had taken up residence in the ducts of the on-base
house.
Two human cases in the same county in 1995; animal surveillance on
base began in 1996.
§ Plague-infected animals in the county in 1995; last human case in
the county in 1993; no animal surveillance on base since 1986.
Sources: (1) Harrison FJ. Prevention and Control of Plague.
Aurora, Colo: United States Army Center for Health Promotion and
Preventive Medicine, Fitzsimons Army Medical Center; September 1995:
38. Technical Guide 103. (2) Data collected from Preventive
Medicine Officers on 30 military bases in the United States, March
1996.
The first attempt at what we now call biological warfare is purported
to have occurred at the Crimean port city of Caffa on the Black Sea during
the years 13461347.2,6 During the conflict between Christian
Genoese sailors and Muslim Tatars, the Tatar army was struck with plague.
The Tatar leader catapulted corpses of Tatar plague victims at the Genoese
sailors. The Genoese became infected with plague and fled to Italy. However,
the disease was most likely spread by the local population of infected rats,
not by the corpses, since an infected flea leaves its host as soon as the
corpse cools.6
The 20th-century use of plague as a potential biological warfare weapon
is the immediate concern of this chapter. Medical officers need to keep this
use of plague in mind, particularly when the disease appears in an unlikely
setting.
World War II
During World War II, the Japanese army established a secret biological
warfare research unit (Unit 731) in Manchuria, where epidemics of pneumonic
plague had occurred in 19101911, 19201921, and 1927, and a cholera
epidemic had spread in 1919. General Shiro Ishii, the physician leader of
Unit 731, was fascinated by plague because it could create casualties out of
proportion to the number of bacteria disseminated, the most dangerous
strains could be used to make a very dangerous weapon, and its origins could
be concealed to appear as a natural occurrence. Early experiments, however,
demonstrated that dropping bacteria out of aerial bombs had little effect
because air pressure and high temperatures that were created by the
exploding bombs killed nearly 100% of the bacteria.30
One of Ishiis greatest achievements was his use of the human flea,
Pulex irritans, as a stratagem to simultaneously protect the bacteria
and target humans. This flea is resistant to air drag, naturally targets
humans, and could also infect a local rat population to prolong an epidemic.
Infected fleas may regurgitate up to 24,000 organisms in a single feeding.
Spraying fleas out of compressed-air containers was not successful since
aircraft had to fly too low for safety. High flying meant too much
dispersion. Clay bombs solved these problems and resulted in an 80% survival
rate of fleas.30
The Japanese apparently used plague as a biological warfare agent in
China several times during World War II. At 0500 hours on a November morning
in 1941, a lone Japanese plane made three low passes over the business
center of Changteh, a city in the Hunan province. Although no bombs were
dropped, a strange mixture of wheat and rice grains, pieces of paper, cotton
wadding, and other unidentified particles were. Within 2 weeks, individuals
in Changteh started dying of plague. This miniepidemic was thought to be of
human origin for the following reasons30:
Changteh and the whole surrounding area of China had never been
afflicted by plague.
Plague usually spreads with rice (because rats infest the grain) along
shipping routes, but the nearest epidemic center was 2,000 km away by land
or river. Changteh exported, not imported, rice. No individual who
contracted plague had recently traveled outside the city.
All reported instances of human plague occurred in the area of the
city where the strange particles were dropped.
No evidence of excessive rat mortality occurred until 2 months
after the people began dying.
The first six human cases occurred within 15 days of the aerial
incident.
Applying the concepts implicit in these five points will help medical
officers differentiate endemic plague from plague used as a biological
warfare agent. In fact, these concepts are important in making a Diagnosis
of most forms of biological warfare.
In another incident, on October 4, 1940, a Japanese plane dropped rice
and wheat grains mixed with fleas over the city of Chuhsien, in Chekiang
province. A month later, bubonic plague appeared for the first time there,
in the area where the particles had been dropped. There were 21 plague
deaths in 24 days. Again, on October 27, 1940, a Japanese plane was seen
releasing similar particles over the city of Ningpo, in Chekiang province.
Two days later, bubonic plague occurred for the first time in that city,
producing 99 deaths in 34 days. No epizootic or excessive mortality was
found in the rat population.30
Since World War II
An article31 published in the popular press in 1993 stated
that in the 1970s and 1980s the Soviet Union created lethal diseases that
defied cures. This included a genetically engineered, dry,
antibiotic-resistant form of plague. In this article, a defecting Soviet
microbiologist was quoted as saying that producing this form of plague had
been a top priority of the Soviets in the 5-year plan that started in 1984.
During the Korean War, allied forces were accused of dropping on North
Korea insects that were capable of spreading plague, typhus, malaria,
Japanese B encephalitis, and other diseases. No evidence exists to support
such claims.32
Y pestis is a Gram-negative, nonacid-fast, nonmotile,
nonsporulating, nonlactose-fermenting, bipolar coccobacillus measuring
0.50.8 × 1.52.0 µm. The Yersinieae comprise Genus XI of the family
Enterobacteriaceae, which includes the related enteropathogenic bacteria
Y enterocolitica and Y pseudotuberculosis. Its bipolar appearance
is best appreciated when Wright-Giemsa, Waysons, and Grams stains are used
(Figure 23-1). Y pestis grows optimally at 28°C, producing tiny, 1-
to 3-mm beaten-copper colonies after 48 hours on blood or MacConkeys
agar. After 24 hours growth in standard peptone broth, moderate growth with
little or no turbidity is observed. Biochemically, the plague bacillus
produces no hemolysins; is positive for catalase; and is negative for
hydrogen sulfide, oxidase, urease, and fermentation of lactose, sucrose,
rhamnose, and melibiose.2
Fig. 23-1. This Wright-Giemsa stain of a
peripheral blood smear from a patient with septicemic plague
demonstrates the bipolar, safety-pin staining of Yersinia pestis. Grams
and Waysons stains can also demonstrate this pattern. Photomicrograph:
Courtesy of Ken Gage, Ph.D., Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
Fort Collins, Colo.
The known virulence factors of Y pestis are encoded on the
chromosome and its three plasmids. A chromosomal locus responsible for
pigmentation phenotype, iron-inducible proteins, and iron uptake is
necessary for virulence from a peripheral route of inoculation.33
The pH 6 antigen (also encoded on the chromosome), a protein located on the
surface of the bacterium, is necessary for complete virulence.34
It is induced in vitro at low pH, perhaps in vivo at sites of inflammation
and cellular necrosis, and within phagocytic cells.
The low calcium response (Lcr) plasmid of approximately 75 kilobase
(kb), which is homologous in Y pestis and the other two Yersinia
pathogens, Y pseudotuberculosis and Y enterocolitica, encodes
for several secreted proteins, including Yersinia outer-membrane
proteins (Yops), necessary for virulence.35 These proteins are
produced in vitro in a low-calcium environment and, in some instances, by
attachment to eucaryotic cells.36 They include
the V antigen, which is involved in regulation of growth and other
plasmid-encoded secreted virulence proteins,37 and which may
also have a more direct role in virulence33;
Yop M, which binds thrombin, inhibits platelet aggregation, and may
prevent an effective inflammatory response38;
Yops K and L, of unknown function39; and
several proteins that interfere with phagocytic cell function,
including Yop H, a tyrosine phosphatase,40 and Yop E.41
Although additional virulence factors encoded on the Lcr plasmid have
been described35 for the other Yersinia species,
confirmation of their importance in plague is not yet established. Y pestis also possesses two additional plasmids not present in
the other Yersinia species. First, a 9.5-kb plasmid encodes for a
plasminogen activator protease, which is most active at temperatures higher
than 30°C.33 This proteolytic enzyme is necessary for systemic
spread of infection from a peripheral subcutaneous site, perhaps by causing
degradation of fibrin and extracellular matrix proteins, and by impairing
the inflammatory response.42 This same protease has predominantly
coagulase activity at temperatures lower than 30°C.33
The second unique plasmid, of approximately 100 kb, codes for the
protein capsule (fraction 1 antigen) of Y pestis. The capsule is
antiphagocytic and necessary for full virulence in some animal species.43
The 100-kb plasmid also encodes for an exotoxin that is active in the mouse
and rat but not in primates.33
During the modern pandemic, W. G. Liston, a member of the Indian Plague
Commission (18981914), made the association of plague with rats and
incriminated the rat flea as a vector.2 Subsequently, more than
200 species of animals and 80 species of fleas have been implicated in
maintaining Y pestis endemic foci throughout the world.21
Throughout history, the oriental rat flea (Xenopsylla cheopis)
has been largely responsible for spreading bubonic plague.5 After
the flea ingests a blood meal on a bacteremic animal, bacilli can multiply
and eventually block the fleas foregut, or proventriculus, with a fibrinoid
mass of bacteria (Figure 23-2).2 When an infected flea with a
blocked foregut attempts to feed again, it regurgitates clotted blood and
bacteria into the victims blood-stream, and so passes the infection on to
the next mammalwhether rat or human. As many as 24,000 organisms may be
inoculated into the mammalian host.2 This flea desiccates rapidly
in very hot and dry weather when away from its hosts, but flourishes at
humidity just above 65% and temperatures between 20°C and 26°C,2
and can survive 6 months without a feeding.21
Fig. 23-2. The oriental rat flea (Xenopsylla
cheopis) has historically been most responsible for the spread of
plague to humans. This flea has a blocked proventriculus, equivalent to
a humans gastroesophageal region. In nature, this flea would develop a
ravenous hunger because of its inability to digest the fibrinoid mass of
blood and bacteria. The ensuing biting of the nearest mammal will clear
the proventriculus through regurgitation of thousands of bacteria into
the bite wound, thereby inoculating the mammal with the plague bacillus.
Photomicrograph: Courtesy of Ken Gage, Ph.D., Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colo.
Although the largest outbreaks of plague have been associated with
X cheopis, all fleas should be considered dangerous in plague endemic
areas.2 During the Black Death, the human flea, Pulex irritans,
may have aided in human-to-human spread of plague; and during other
epidemics, bedbugs (Cimex lectularius), lice, and flies have been
found to contain Y pestis.5 The presence of plague bacilli
in these latter insects is associated with ingestion of contaminated blood
from plague victims, however, and plays little or no role as a vector for
the disease. The most important vector of human plague in the United States
is Diamanus montanus, the most common flea on rock squirrels and
California ground squirrels.21
Throughout history, the black rat, Rattus rattus, has been most
responsible worldwide for the persistence and spread of plague in urban
epidemics. R rattus is a nocturnal, climbing animal that does not
burrow. Instead, it nests overhead and lives in close proximity to humans.5
In the United Kingdom and much of Europe, the brown rat, R norvegicus,
has replaced R rattus as the dominant city rat.44 Unlike
R rattus, R norvegicus is essentially a burrowing animal that
lives under farm buildings and in ditches. However, R norvegicus may
be involved in both rural and urban outbreaks of plague.5
Most carnivores, except cats, are resistant to plague infection, but
animals such as domestic dogs, all rodents, and even burrowing owls may
mechanically transmit fleas. Mammals that are partially resistant to plague
infection serve as continuous reservoirs of plague. In the United States,
deer mice (Peromyscus species) and ground squirrels (Spermophilus
species) are thought to serve as the main reservoirs. Some susceptible
mammals are only occasionally infected: chipmunks, tree squirrels,
cottontail rabbits, and domestic cats (Figure 23-3).
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
Fig. 23-3. Known mammalian reservoirs of plague
in the United States (noninclusive). The common North American marmot
(a) and the brown rat (Rattus norvegicus) ( b), which has
largely replaced the black rat, are considered to be reservoirs of plague
(ie, hosts to infected fleas). Other reservoirs of plague during enzootics
are thought to include the deer mouse (c), the California ground
squirrel (d), and the 13-lined ground squirrel (e). Other
infective mammals that can spread plague to humans include the chipmunk
(f), prairie dogs (g), and the coyote (h). Domestic and
nondomestic cats are also reservoirs of plague. This cat (i), which
died of pneumonic plague, demonstrates a necrotic head. Photographs a, h:
Courtesy of Denver Zoological Society, Denver, Colo. Photographs bg, i:
Courtesy of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Fort Collins,
Colo.
Highly susceptible animals amplify both fleas and bacilli. Such
epizootics occur in chipmunks, ground squirrels, and wood rats, but
especially in prairie dogs, rock squirrels (Spermophilus variegatus),
and California ground squirrels (Spermophilus beechyi). Although
prairie dog fleas rarely bite humans, the infectious rodents can transmit
plague to humans via direct contact (eg, handling a live or dead animal;
stumbling into a nest while walking; or dissecting specimens [primarily
laboratory personnel]). Rock squirrels and California ground squirrels both
infect humans via direct contact and fleas.5,21,45,46
Many mammals in the United States harbor plague (Exhibit 23-2).
Knowledge of this wide-spread harborage is important, because certain
mammalflea complexes found in the United States are dangerous: they contain
both a susceptible mammal and a flea known to bite humans. These pairings
include the following21:
the rock squirrel (S variegatus) or California ground squirrel
(S beechyi) and the fleas Diamanus montanus or
Hoplopsyllus anomalus;
the prairie dog (Cynomys species) and the flea Opisochrostis
hirsutus; and
Richardsons ground squirrel (Spermophilus richardsoni) or the
golden-mantled ground squirrel (S lateralis) and the fleas
Oropsylla labis, O idahoensis, or Thrassus bacchi.
Exhibit 23-2
Mammals Known to Harbor Plague in the United States
Carnivores
Black bears, cats (including bobcats and mountain lions), coyotes,
dogs, foxes, martens, raccoons, skunks, weasels, wolverines, wolves
Adapted from Harrison FJ. Prevention and Control of Plague.
Aurora, Colo: US Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive
Medicine, Fitzsimons Army Medical Center; September 1995:
2528.Technical Guide 103.
Plague exists in one of two states in nature, enzootic or epizootic. An
enzootic is the state of a stable rodentflea infection cycle in a
relatively resistant host population, without excessive rodent mortality.
Importantly for humans, when the disease is in an enzootic state, the fleas
have no need to seek less desirable hostssuch as ourselves. During an
epizootic, on the other hand, plague bacilli have been introduced into
moderately or highly susceptible mammals. High mortality occurs, most
conspicuously in larger colonial rodents such as prairie dogs.47
Man is an accidental host in the plague cycle (Figure 23-4) and is not
necessary for the persistence of the organism in nature. Humans usually
acquire plague from
fleas whose usual host is another mammal (eg, from flea bites, flea
feces inoculated into skin with bites, and by directly biting the fleas
[during the grooming behavior practiced in some cultures]);
fleas whose usual host is a human;
infected animals (eg, from aerosols, draining abscesses, eating
infected tissue, and handling infected pelts); and
other humans, via aerosol or direct contact with infected body
substances.
Fig. 23-4. Plague cycles in the United
States. This drawing shows the usual, occasional, and rare routes by
which plague is known to have spread between various mammals and humans.
Reprinted with permission from Poland JD. Plague. In: Hoeprich PD,
Jordan MC, eds. Infectious Diseases: A Modern Treatise of Infectious
Processes. Philadelphia, Pa: Lippincott; 1989: 1297.
The greatest risk to humans occurs when large concentrations of people
live under unsanitary conditions in close proximity to large commensal or
wild rodent populations that are infested with fleas that bite both humans
and rodents.2
Human-to-human transmission of plague can occur from patients with
pulmonary infection. However, understanding of the epidemiology of pneumonic
plague is incomplete. Most epidemics have occurred in cool climates with
moderate humidity and close contact between susceptible individuals.
Outbreaks of pneumonic plague have been rare in tropical climates even
during epidemics of bubonic disease. Respiratory transmission may occur more
efficiently via larger droplets or fomites rather than via small-particle
aerosols.48
Worldwide cases of plague and mortalities are shown in Figure 23-5, and
the known foci of plague in Figure 23-6. In 1992, most of the reported 1,582
cases occurred in Myanmar and Vietnam in Asia, and Zaire and Madagascar in
Africa. Worldwide mortality was 8.7%. The outbreaks in 1994 of pneumonic and
bubonic plague in India, and bubonic plague in Tanzania and Peru, highlight
the potential for epidemics to arise from these foci.49
Fig. 23-5. Absolute numbers of annual
worldwide plague cases, 19761994. Fatalities (a subset of the total
cases) are shown in red, total cases in green. Data are as of 7 February
1996; reports for 1995 were not complete at that time. Note that the
mortality rate continues between 5% and 12% despite the availability of
effective antibiotics. Data sources: (1) Human plague in 1990. WHO
Weekly Epidemiological Record. 1 Nov 1991;44:321324. (2) Human
plague in 1993. WHO Weekly Epidemiological Record. 17 Feb
1995;7:4548. (3) Barkway J. World Health Organization, Geneva,
Switzerland. Personal communication, 7 February 1996.
Fig. 23-6. Known worldwide foci of human
plague infection. Data sources: (1) Human plague in 1990. WHO Weekly
Epidemiological Record. 1 Nov 1991;44:321324. (2) Human plague in
1993. WHO Weekly Epidemiological Record. 17 Feb 1995;7:4548. (3)
Barkway J. World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland. Personal
communication, February 1996. (4) Ken Gage, Ph.D., Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colorado. Personal communication,
March 1996.
Plague has been endemic in the continental United States since at
least 190020 and now is permanently established from the eastern
slope of the Rocky Mountains westwardespecially in pine-oak or piñonjuniper
woodland habitats at altitudes of 5,000 to 9,000 ft, or on lower, dry
grassland or desert scrub areas.21 Between 1970 and 1990, 56% of
all cases occurred in New Mexico, 14% in Arizona, and 10% in Colorado.45
In the first quarter of this century, virtually all 432 cases and 284
deaths (65.7% mortality) in the United States occurred in urban port cities.
Epidemics occurred in San Francisco, California, during the years 19001904
(118 deaths) and 19071908 (78 deaths). The last time plague was transmitted
between humans in the United States was during the 19241925 pneumonic
plague epidemic in Los Angeles, California. Eighty percent of cases since
1925 have been sylvatic, involving contact with wild-rodent habitats.20
Most cases (58%) are in men and occur within a 1-mile radius of home,21
and half the victims in the United States have been younger than 20 years
old.20
Between 1926 and 1960, the United States averaged only 1 case of plague
per year. This number steadily rose to 3 per year during the 1960s, 11
during the 1970s, 18 during the 1980s, and then decreased to 9 per year
since 1990.45 The number of states reporting human plague cases
has steadily increased over the last 5 decades, most likely because
increasing encroachment of humans on previously wild areas brings people
closer to infected animals and their fleas.21
In the United States, 93% of cases have occurred between April and
November, peaking in July. During the last 25 years, pneumonic plague
accounted for 11% of cases, and bubonic or septicemic plague, or both, for
89%. One case of meningitic plague also occurred.45
Epizootic cycles occur approximately every 5 years. The last large
epizootic with a large die-off of rodents (19821984) was accompanied by the
highest number of humans infected with plague since the urban epidemics of
the first quarter of the century. The numbers of rodents slowly recovered to
their characteristic levels by 1991, and the stage is now set for another
epizootic, with the potential for increased human plague infections.45,46
As few as 1 to 10 Y pestis organisms are sufficient to infect
rodents and primates via the oral, intradermal, subcutaneous, and
intravenous routes.33 Estimates of infectivity by the respiratory
route for nonhuman primates vary from 100 to 20,000 organisms.50,51
After being introduced into the mammalian host by a flea, where it had
been at ambient temperature, the organism is thought to be initially
susceptible to phagocytosis and killing by neutrophils. However, some of the
bacteria may grow and proliferate within tissue macrophages.52
Within the human host, several new environmental signals (including elevated
temperature of 37°C, contact with eucaryotic cells, and perhaps the location
within cells or in necrotic foci at low pH) are thought to induce the
synthesis and activity of a multitude of factors contributing to virulence.
These include the antiphagocytic fraction 1 capsule, pH 6 antigen, the
antiphagocytic Yops H and E, V antigen, Yop M, and plasminogen activator.
The bacteria in this state are now resistant to phagocytosis and they
proliferate unimpeded extracellularly.
During the incubation phase, the bacilli most commonly spread to
regional lymph nodes, where suppurative lymphadenitis develops, producing
the characteristic bubo. Dissemination from the local site is thought to be
related to the action of both plasminogen activator and Yop M. Infection
will progress if untreated; septicemia will develop and the infection will
spread to other organs. The endotoxin of Y pestis probably
contributes to the development of septic shock, which is similar to the
shock state seen in other causes of Gram-negative sepsis. The endotoxin also
contributes to the resistance of the organism to the bactericidal activity
of serum.33 The acral cyanosis and necrosis seen in some cases of
septicemic plague may also be related to the coagulase activity of the
plasminogen activator, which occurs at temperatures lower than 37°C.2
Tissues most commonly infected include the spleen, liver, lungs, skin,
and mucous membranes. Late infection of the meninges also occurs, especially
if suboptimal antibiotic therapy has been given.
Primary pneumonic plague, the most severe form of disease, arises from
inhalation of an infectious aerosol. Primary pneumonic plague is more
rapidly fatal than secondary, because the inhaled droplets already contain
phagocytosis-resistant bacilli, which have arisen from their growth at 37°C
in the vertebrate host.47
Primary septicemic plague can occur from direct inoculation of bacilli
into the bloodstream, bypassing initial multiplication in the lymph nodes.
Asymptomatic pharyngeal carriage of plague has been reported to occur in
contacts of patients with either bubonic or pneumonic plague.53,54
In the United States, most patients (85%90%) with human plague present
clinically with the bubonic form, 10% to 15% with the primary septicemic
form, and 1% with the pneumonic form. Secondary septicemic plague occurs in
23% of patients who present with bubonic plague, and secondary pneumonic
plague occurs in 9%.46 If Y pestis were used as a
biological warfare agent, the clinical manifestations of plague would be
(a) epidemic pneumonia with blood-tinged sputum if aerosolized bacteria
were used or (b) bubonic or septicemic plague, or both, if fleas were
used as carriers.
Buboes manifest after a 1- to 8-day incubation period, with the regular
onset of symptoms of sudden fever, chills, and headache often followed
several hours later by nausea and vomiting. Presenting symptoms include
prostration or severe malaise (75%), headache (20%85%), vomiting (25%49%),
chills (40%), altered mentation (26%38%), cough (25%), abdominal pain
(18%), and chest pain (13%).2 Six to 8 hours after onset of
symptoms, buboes, heralded by severe pain, occur in the groin (90%, with
femoral more frequent than inguinal), axillary, or cervical lymph
nodesdepending on the site of bacterial inoculation (Figure 23-7). Buboes
become visible within 24 hours; they are so intensely painful that even
nearly comatose patients will attempt to shield them from trauma and will
abduct their extremities to decrease pressure. Other manifestations of
bubonic plague include bladder distention, apathy, confusion, fright,
anxiety, oliguria, and anuria. Tachycardia, hypotension, leukocytosis, and
fever are frequently encountered. Untreated, septicemia will develop in 2 to
6 days.55 Approximately 5% to 15% of bubonic plague patients will
develop secondary pneumonic plague and, as a result, the potential for
airborne transmission.56
ab
Fig. 23-7. A femoral bubo (a), the
most common site of an erythematous, tender, swollen, lymph node in
patients with plague. This painful lesion may be aspirated in a sterile
fashion to relieve pain and pressure; it should not be incised and
drained. The next most common lymph node regions involved are the
inguinal, axillary (b), and cervical areas. Bubo location is a
function of the region of the body in which an infected flea inoculates
the plague bacilli. Photographs: Courtesy of Ken Gage, Ph.D., Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colo.
Septicemic plague may occur primarily, or secondarily as a complication
of hematogenous dissemination of bubonic plague. Presenting signs and
symptoms of primary septicemic plague are essentially the same as those for
any Gram-negative septicemia: fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.
Later, purpura (Figure 23-8), disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC),
and acral cyanosis and necrosis (Figure 23-9) may be seen.
Fig. 23-8. Purpuric lesions can be seen on
the upper chest of this girl with plague. The bandage on her neck
indicates that a bubo has been aspirated. Photograph: Courtesy Ken Gage,
Ph.D., Centers of Disease Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colo.
ab
Fig. 23-9. This patient is recovering from
bubonic plague that disseminated to the blood (septicemic form) and the
lungs (pneumonic form). Note the dressing over the tracheostomy site. At
one point, the patients entire body was purpuric. Note the acral
necrosis of (a) the patients nose and fingers and (b) the
toes. Photographs: Courtesy Ken Gage, Ph.D., Centers of Disease Control
and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colo.
In New Mexico between 1980 and 1984, plague was suspected in 69% of
patients who had bubonic plague, but in only 17% of patients who had the
septicemic form. The mortality was 33.3% for septicemic plague versus 11.5%
for bubonic, thus highlighting the difficulty of diagnosing septicemic
plague. Diagnosis of septicemic plague took longer (5 vs 4 d) after onset,
although patients sought physicians earlier (1.7 vs 2.1 d) and were
hospitalized sooner (5.3 vs 6.0 d) than patients with bubonic plague. The
only symptom present significantly more frequently in septicemic than in
bubonic plague was abdominal pain (40% vs < 10%), probably due to
hepatosplenomegaly.57
The risk of developing septicemic plague is higher for
individuals older than 40 years of age, although the risk of dying
from septicemic plague is higher for those younger than 30 years. This
difference is most likely due to older undiagnosed patients being treated
empirically with antibiotics that kill Y pestis, and younger
undiagnosed patients being treated with antibiotics (such as penicillin)
that do not affect Y pestis. Earlier Diagnosis and appropriate
therapy, not newer antibiotics, will have the greatest effect on reducing
mortality from septicemic plague.57
Fig. 23-10. This chest roentgenogram shows
right middle-and lower-lobe involvement in a patient with pneumonic
plague. Photograph: Courtesy Ken Gage, Ph.D., Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colo.
Pneumonic plague may occur primarily, from inhalation of aerosols, or
secondarily, from hematogenous dissemination. Patients typically have a
productive cough with blood-tinged sputum within 24 hours after onset of
symptoms.2 The findings on chest roentgenography may be variable,
but bilateral alveolar infiltrates appear to be the most common finding in
pneumonic plague (Figure 23-10).58,59
Plague meningitis is seen in 6% to 7% of cases. The condition manifests
itself most often in children after 9 to 14 days of ineffective treatment.
Symptoms are similar to those of other forms of acute bacterial meningitis.60
Asymptomatic pharyngeal carriage has been reported to occur in contacts
of plague patients.53,54 Rarely, pharyngitisresembling
tonsillitis and associated with cervical lymphadenopathyhas been reported.17,55
A plague syndrome of cervical buboes, peritonsillar abscesses, and fulminant
pneumonia has also been reported to occur among Indians of Ecuador, who are
known to catch and kill fleas and lice with their teeth. It is thought,
although not proven, that endobronchial aspiration from peritonsillar
abscesses leads to fulminant pneumonia. A similar syndrome may have occurred
in Vietnam.55
Fig. 23-11. This child has left axillary
bubonic plague. The erythematous, eroded, crusting, necrotic ulcer on
the childs left upper quadrant is located at the presumed primary
inoculation site. Photograph: Courtesy of Ken Gage, Ph.D., Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colo.
Approximately 4% to 10% of plague patients are said to have an ulcer or
pustule at the inoculation site (Figure 23-11).59,61 The flea
typically bites the lower extremities; therefore, femoral and inguinal
buboes are the most common. Infection arising from the skinning of infected
animals typically produces axillary buboes. Buboes may point and drain
spontaneously or, rarely, they may require incision and drainage because of
pronounced necrosis.
Petechiae and ecchymoses may occur during hematogenous spread to such
an extent that the signs mimic severe meningococcemia, and the microscopic
lesions are almost indistinguishable. The pathogenesis of these lesions is
probably that of a generalized Shwartzman reaction (DIC secondary to the
Y pestis endotoxin). Purpura and acral gangrene may also be due to the
activities of the plasminogen activator/coagulase enzyme, and prognosis is
poor when these signs occur.2,62 Patients in the terminal stages
of pneumonic and septicemic plague often develop large ecchymoses on the
back. Lesions like these are likely to have given rise to the medieval
epithet the Black Death.
Ecthyma gangrenosum has been reported in several patients.53,62
The only case cultured grew Y pestis, which suggests that the skin
lesions were the result of septicemic seeding of the organism.62
A patient with a typical presentation of bubonic plague (eg, with a
painful bubo in the setting of fever, prostration, and possible exposure to
rodents or fleas in an endemic area) should readily suggest the Diagnosis of
plague. However, if the medical officer is not familiar with the disease or
if the patient presents in a nonendemic area or without a bubo, then the
Diagnosis can be most difficult. When a bubo is present, the differential
Diagnosis should include tularemia, cat scratch disease, lymphogranuloma
venereum, chancroid, tuberculosis, streptococcal adenitis, and scrub typhus
(Figure 23-12). In both tularemia and cat scratch disease, the inoculation
site will usually be more evident and the patient will usually not be
septic. In chancroid and scrofula, the patient has less local pain, the
course is more indolent, and there is no sepsis. Patients with chancroid and
lymphogranuloma venereum will have a recent history of sexual contact and
genital lesions. Those with the latter disease may be as sick as patients
with plague. Streptococcal adenitis may be difficult to distinguish
initially, but the patient is usually not septic, and the node is more
tender when plague is present.
ac
bd
Fig. 23-12.(a) Small femoral bubo and
presumed inoculation site (on the inferior thigh) in a patient with
tularemia. This Gram-negative bacterial infection (with Francisella
tularensis) may closely mimic bubonic plague and is successfully
treated with the same antibiotics. (b) Axillary bubo seen in
child with cat scratch disease. (c) Greenblatts sign of
ipsilateral femoral and inguinal buboes with intervening depression over
the inguinal ligament, seen in a patient with lymphogranuloma venereum
caused by Chlamydia trachomatis. (d) Large inguinal bubo
seen in a patient with chancroid caused by Haemophilus ducreyi.
Photographs: Courtesy of Dermatology Service, Fitzsimons Army Medical
Center, Aurora, Colo.
The implications of the absence of a bubo were clearly demonstrated
in a review of 27 cases of plague seen in New Mexico.59 There
were no deaths among 10 patients with typical bubonic plague. However, 3 of
5 patients died who presented with an upper respiratory infection syndrome
of fever, sore throat, and headache. Similarly, 3 of 5 patients died who
presented with fever, chills, and anorexia. The other 7 patients presented
with nonspecific gastrointestinal and urinary tract symptoms without a bubo.
Thus, other causes of lymphadenitis, upper respiratory tract infection,
gastrointestinal disease including appendicitis, and nonspecific febrile
illnesses, must all be considered.
The differential Diagnosis of septicemic plague also includes
meningococcemia, Gram-negative sepsis, and the rickettsioses. The patient
with pneumonic plague who presents with systemic toxicity, a productive
cough, and bloody sputum suggests a large differential Diagnosis. However,
demonstration of Gram-negative rods in the sputum should readily suggest the
correct Diagnosis, because Y pestis is perhaps the only Gram-negative
bacterium that can cause extensive, fulminant pneumonia with bloody sputum
in an otherwise healthy, immunocompetent host.
In patients with lymphadenopathy, a bubo aspirate should be obtained by
inserting a 20-gauge needle attached to a 10-mL syringe containing 1 mL of
sterile saline. Saline is injected and withdrawn several times until it is
tinged with blood. Repeated, sterile bubo aspiration may also be done to
decompress buboes and relieve pain. Drops of the aspirate should be
air-dried on a slide for one of the following stains: Grams, Wright-Giemsa,
or Waysons. If available, a direct fluorescent antibody (DFA) stain of bubo
aspirate for the presence of Y pestis capsular antigen should be
performed; a positive DFA result is more specific for Y pestis than
are the other listed stains (Figure 23-13).63,64
Fig. 23-13. These Yersinia pestis
fluorescent cells are from infected mouse spleen. Notice how the
outlines of the coccobacilli light up in this direct fluorescent
antibody (DFA) test. The DFA test is specific and therefore better than
the other stains discussed in this chapter (original magnification ×
1,000). Photograph: Courtesy of M. C. Chu, Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colo.
Both Wright-Giemsa stain and DFA stain for Y pestis should
also be performed on peripheral blood smears and sputum specimens, when
applicable. Although a bipolar, safety-pin staining morphology has been
reported to be specific for Y pestis, it is not. Other bacteria such
as Pasteurella species, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella
species, and diplococci (Streptococcus) may also exhibit this
morphology. None of the listed stains is better than any other for
demonstrating the bipolar, safety-pin morphology. In fact, even Y pestis
will sometimes not exhibit this morphology.64
Cultures of blood, bubo aspirate, sputum, and cerebrospinal fluid (if
indicated) should be performed. Tiny, 1- to 3-mm beaten-copper colonies
will appear on blood agar by 48 hours, but it is important to remember that
cultures may be negative at 24 hours. In a recent study, 24 (96%) of 25
blood cultures of patients with bubonic plague were positive on standard
supplemented peptone broth.59
Complete blood counts often reveal leukocytosis with a left shift.
Leukemoid reactions with up to 100,000 white blood cells per microliter may
be seen, especially in children. Platelet counts may be normal or low, and
partial thromboplastin times are often increased. When DIC is present,
fibrin degradation products will be elevated. Because of liver involvement,
alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, and bilirubin levels
are often increased.
Serologic assays measuring the immune response to plague infection are
mainly of value retrospectively, since patients present clinically before
they develop a significant antibody response. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assay (ELISA) tests and the older, less-sensitive passive hemagglutination
assay (PHA) both measure antibodies to the fraction 1 capsule. They are
available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Fort Collins,
Colorado, and the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious
Diseases, Fort Detrick, Frederick, Maryland. Rapid diagnostic tests are
available on an investigative basis.
An immunological assay to detect circulating fraction 1 antigen in the
serum of acutely infected patients can detect levels as low as 0.4 ng/mL
serum.65 During plague infection, fraction 1 antigenemia may
reach levels of 4 to 8 µg/mL serum. During a plague outbreak in Namibia, 38
cases of plague were confirmed: 50% by culture, 34% by antibody response,
and 16% by antigenemia.66 Because fraction 1 antigen and antibody
do not occur simultaneously in serum, and because neither may be present
early in infection, titers for both should be performed on several
sequential blood specimens.
A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test, using primers for the
plasminogen activator gene, can detect as few as 10 Y pestis
organisms, even in the presence of flea tissue. This test may be useful in
surveillance of rats and could be adapted to aid in the Diagnosis of human
infection.67
All patients with plague should be isolated for the first 48 hours
after the initiation of treatment. Special care must be taken in handling
blood and bubo discharge. If pneumonic plague is present, then strict,
rigidly enforced respiratory isolation procedures must be followed,
including the use of gowns, gloves, and eye protection. Patients with
pneumonia must be isolated until they have completed at least 4 days of
antibiotic therapy. If patients have no pneumonia or draining lesions at 48
hours, they may be taken out of strict isolation.
Since 1948, streptomycin has remained the treatment of choice for
bubonic, septicemic, and pneumonic plague. It should be given
intramuscularly in a dose of 30 mg/kg/d in two divided doses. In cases of
suspected meningitis or in patients who are hemodynamically unstable,
intravenous chloramphenicol (5075 mg/kg/d in four divided doses) should be
added. Gentamicin has had much less clinical usage but can be used as an
alternative to streptomycin or given together with chloramphenicol.
Treatment should be continued for a minimum of 10 days or 3 to 4 days after
clinical recovery. If clinically indicated, oral tetracycline can be used to
complete a 10-day course of treatment after at least 5 days of systemic
therapy. In patients with very mild bubonic plague who are not septic,
tetracycline can be used orally at a dose of 2 g/d in 4 divided doses for 10
days. Doxycycline should be an acceptable alternative, although there are no
published data on its efficacy in humans. Doxycycline, ofloxacin, and
ceftriaxone have all been shown to be effective in experimental animal
models of septicemic plague.68
In pregnant women, streptomycin or gentamicin should be used unless
chloramphenicol is specifically indicated. Streptomycin is also the
treatment of choice in newborns.
If treated with antibiotics, buboes typically recede in 10 to 14 days
and do not require drainage. Patients are unlikely to survive primary
pneumonic plague if antibiotic therapy is not initiated within 18 hours of
the onset of symptoms. Without treatment, mortality is 60% for bubonic
plague and 100% for the pneumonic and septicemic forms.53
All plague-control measures must include insecticide use, public health
education, and reduction of rodent populations with chemicals such as
cholecalciferol.2,25 Fleas must always be targeted before
rodents, because killing rodents may release massive amounts of infected
fleas.56 Use of insecticides in rodent areas is effective because
rodents pick up dust on their feet and carry it back to their nests, where
they distribute it over their bodies via constant preening.2
Plague must be reported to the World Health Organization as an
internationally quarantinable disease for which travelers may be detained up
to 6 days.
Not only contacts of patients with pneumonic plague but also
individuals who have been exposed to aerosols (eg, in a biological warfare
attack) should be treated with tetracycline 15 to 30 mg/kg/d (12 g/d)
administered in four divided doses for 7 days. Doxycycline 100 mg
administered twice daily is probably an effective alternative if
tetracycline is not available. Pregnant women and children under 8 years of
age should receive trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (40 mg sulfa/kg/d)
administered orally in two divided doses for 7 days.
Hospital personnel who are observing recommended isolation procedures
do not require prophylactic therapy, nor do contacts of patients with
bubonic plague. However, people who were in the same environment and who
were potentially exposed to the same source of infection as the contact case
should be given prophylactic antibiotics. In addition, previously vaccinated
individuals should receive prophylactic antibiotics if they have been
exposed to a plague aerosol.
The first plague vaccine, consisting of killed whole cells, was
developed by Russian physician Waldemar M. W. Haffkine, working in India in
1897. In 1942, Karl F. Meyer, D.V.M., began developing an immunogenic and
less-reactogenic vaccine for the U.S. Army from an agar-grown,
formalin-killed, suspension of virulent plague bacilli. With minor
modifications, this is the same procedure used to prepare the licensed
vaccine we have available today. Live-attenuated vaccines have been
unsuccessful, since they are much more reactogenic than the present killed
vaccine.23
Only individuals at high risk for plague should be immunizedsuch as
military troops and other field personnel working in plague endemic areas in
which exposure to rats and fleas cannot be controlled. Laboratory personnel
working with Y pestis, people who reside in enzootic or epidemic
plague areas, and those whose vocations bring them into regular contact with
wild animals, particularly rodents and rabbits, should also be vaccinated.69
The dose schedule for adults is 1.0 mL initially, with 0.2 mL at 1 to 3
months, followed by a third dose 5 to 6 months later. Booster doses of 0.2
mL are given every 6 months for 1.5 years, and then every 1 to 2 years
thereafter if risk for exposure continues. If an accelerated schedule is
essential, then 0.5 mL at 0, 7, and 14 days has been recommended, although
no supporting data exist.69
Approximately 92% to 93% of vaccinees will produce antibody titers
after the initial series of three injections.6971 Local side
effects include erythema, soreness, or swelling, in any combination, in 11%
of vaccinees and 6% of injections. Systemic side effects include headache,
malaise, and myalgias in 4% of vaccinees and 1% of injections. Rarely,
sterile abscesses, necrotic lesions, or anaphylaxis may occur.72
Data from animal and human investigations suggest that the killed
plague vaccine is effective for preventing or ameliorating bubonic but not
pneumonic plague.50,51,7375 A recombinant vaccine candidate that
protects laboratory animals from inhalational challenge is being studied.
Plague is a zoonotic infection caused by the Gram-negative bacillus
Yersinia pestis. Three great human pandemics have been responsible for
more deaths than any other infectious agent in history. Plague is maintained
in nature, predominantly in urban and sylvatic rodents, by a flea vector.
Humans are not necessary for persistence of the organism, and we acquire the
disease from animal fleas, contact with infected animals, or, rarely, from
other humans, via aerosol or direct contact with infected secretions.
To be able to differentiate endemic disease from plague used in
biological warfare, medical officers must understand the typical way in
which humans contract plague in nature. First, a die-off of animals in the
mammalian reservoir that harbors bacteria-infected fleas will occur. Second,
troops who have been in close proximity to such infected mammals will become
infected. By contrast, in the most likely biological warfare scenario,
plague would be spread via aerosol. A rapid, person-to-person spread of
fulminant pneumonia, characterized by blood-tinged sputum, would then ensue.
If, on the other hand, an enemy force were to release fleas infected with
Y pestis, then soldiers would present with classic bubonic plague before
a die-off in the local mammalian reservoir occurred.
The most common form of the disease is bubonic plague, characterized by
painful lymphadenopathy and severe constitutional symptoms of fever, chills,
and headache. Septicemic plague without localized lymphadenopathy occurs
less commonly and is difficult to diagnose. Secondary pneumonia may follow
either the bubonic or the septicemic form. Primary pneumonic plague is
spread by airborne transmission, when aerosols from an infected human or
animal are inhaled.
Diagnosis is established by isolating the organism from blood or other
tissues. Rapid Diagnosis may be made with fluorescent antibody stains of
sputum or tissue specimens. Patients should be isolated and treated with
aminoglycosides, preferably streptomycin, plus chloramphenicol when
meningitis is suspected or shock is present. A licensed, killed, whole-cell
vaccine is available to protect humans against bubonic, but not against
primary pneumonic, plague.
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-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
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