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By LAURAN NEERGAARD : AP Medical Writer
Jun 9, 2003 : 8:36 pm ET
WASHINGTON -- The monkeypox outbreak
illustrates a growing problem: Exotic animals give exotic diseases
to people who get too close, a trend that some medical specialists
call a serious public health threat.
Such diseases can become a threat not just to
the people who buy and sell exotic pets, but to the general public
if they spread to native animals and become established in the
United States. Federal health officials are working frantically to
ensure doesn't happen with monkeypox.
"This is a harbinger of things to come,"
warns Michael Osterholm of the University of Minnesota, who advises
the government on infectious disease -- and has long warned that
there's too little oversight of the health threats of imported
animals.
"There are some of us who feel like lone
voices in the night" in calling for better scrutiny, adds Peter
Jahrling, a scientist at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute.
"Perhaps incidents like this might bring some much-needed
re-examinations."
Monkeypox, a relative of smallpox usually
found in tropical African forests, apparently jumped from an
imported Gambian giant rat into prairie dogs when both species were
being housed together by an exotic pet distributor in Illinois.
Health officials are investigating nearly
three dozen possible cases of monkeypox in people who bought or
cared for the prairie dogs, in Wisconsin, Indiana and Illinois. The
outbreak marks the first time monkeypox has been detected in the
Western hemisphere.
Nor is it the only threat, say critics who
fear a growing trend.
SARS, the respiratory epidemic, is thought to
have come from civet cats bred as an exotic meat in Chinese markets
where bats, snakes, badgers and other animals live in side-by-side
cages until they become someone's dinner.
Japan recently banned the importation of
prairie dogs because they can carry plague. The rodents had been
wildly popular as pets in that country.
Just last summer, a group of prairie dogs
caught in South Dakota was discovered to have tularemia, a dangerous
infection, typically spread by the bites of infected ticks,
deerflies and such or through ingesting contaminated material. The
disease was detected only after the animals were shipped to 10 other
states and five other countries. While the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention never recorded any human illnesses, it
advised adults who handled the ill rodents to take precautionary
antibiotics.
Then there's salmonella, which iguanas and
other reptiles, as well as birds, routinely shed in their feces. The
CDC counts a stunning 90,000 people a year believed to have caught
salmonella from some form of contact with a reptile, either touching
it or touching a surface where the reptile had tracked the bacteria.
A common scenario, Osterholm says: Parents
wash the reptile cage in a bathtub or sink their child uses, and the
child gets sick. Salmonella can be life-threatening in children.
Worse is if a disease jumps from exotic pets
into native wildlife -- a threat whenever owners dump an animal that
gets too large or tiresome to care for.
CDC's Dr. Steve Ostroff made a plea Monday
for prairie-dog owners not to release their animals into the wild,
but to call a veterinarian or their state health department for
proper care information. Call ahead before taking a sick prairie dog
to a veterinary clinic to guard against possible exposure of other
animals to monkeypox, he said.
Already, a sick prairie dog has infected a
rabbit who lived in the same house; Jahrling worries that hamsters
and gerbils could be incubating monkeypox from pet-store
transmission; in Africa, squirrels carry the virus.
"Even if we do manage to bring the prairie
dog problem under control, ... it's very important that we keep our
guard up" by watching for monkeypox in other species, Ostroff said
Monday.
There are no good counts of how many exotic
animals are sold, but they're immensely popular, says Richard
Farinato, director of the Humane Society of America's captive
wildlife program. Some 800,000 iguanas alone are imported for the
pet trade.
There is little federal scrutiny of most
imported animals for potential human health risk, and rules on
owning and selling exotic animals vary by state and city.
"We have a policy that says don't buy these
kinds of animals as pets. This (monkeypox) is one example of why,"
Farinato says.
But even the critics aren't immune to the
lure of exotic pets. Osterholm several years ago let his teenage son
buy an African dwarf hedgehog, another pet fad -- on condition that
it be tested for disease. Osterholm's laboratory found the animal
harbored three strains of salmonella never before seen in Minnesota.
They kept the hedgehog, but "extreme hand
washing took place," Osterholm recalls. "It wasn't that fun."
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EDITOR'S NOTE -- Lauran Neergaard covers
health and medical issues for The Associated Press in Washington.
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