http://www.hopkins-biodefense.org/pages/agents/agenttularemia.html
Tularemia
Francisella tularensis, the organism that causes tularemia, is one of
the most infectious pathogenic bacteria known, requiring inoculation or
inhalation of as few as 10 organisms to cause disease. It is considered to be a
dangerous potential biological weapon because of its extreme infectivity, ease
of dissemination, and substantial capacity to cause illness and death.
During World War II, the potential of F. tularensis as a biological
weapon, was studied by the Japanese as well as by the US and its allies.
Tularemia was one of several biological weapons that were stockpiled by the
US military in the late 1960's, all of which were destroyed by 1973. The Soviet
Union continued weapons production of antibiotic and vaccine resistant strains
into the early 1990s.
Francisella tularensis is a hardy non-spore forming organism that is
capable of surviving for weeks at low temperatures in water, moist soil, hay,
straw or decaying animal carcasses.
F. tularensis has been divided into two subspecies: F. tularensis
biovar tularensis (type A), which is the most common biovar isolated in North
America and may be highly virulent in humans and animals; F. tularensis
biovar palaearctica (type B) which is relatively avirulent and thought to the
cause of all human tularemia in Europe and Asia.
Tularemia is a zoonosis. Natural reservoirs include small mammals such as
voles, mice, water rats, squirrels, rabbits and hares. Naturally acquired human
infection occurs through a variety of mechanisms such as: bites of infected
arthropods; handling infectious animal tissues or fluids; direct contact or
ingestion of contaminated water, food, or soil; and inhalation of infective
aerosols. F. tularensis is so infective that examining an open culture
plate can cause infection.
Human to human transmission has not been documented.
In the natural setting, tularemia is noted to be a predominately rural
disease with clinical presentations including ulceroglandular, glandular,
oculoglandular, oropharyngeal, pneumonic, typhoidal and septic forms.
The Working Group on Civilian Biodefense believes that of the various
possible ways that F. tularensis could be used as a weapon, an aerosol
release would cause the greatest adverse medical and public health
consequences.
A World Health Organization (WHO) expert committee reported in 1970 that if
50 kg of virulent F. tularensis was dispersed as an aerosol over a
metropolitan area with a population of 5 million there would an estimated
250,000 incapacitating casualties, including 19,000 deaths.
Aerosol dissemination of F. tularensis in a populated area would be
expected to result in the abrupt onset of large numbers of cases of acute,
non-specific febrile illness beginning 3 to 5 days later (incubation range,
1-14 days), with pleuropneumonitis developing in a significant proportion of
cases over the ensuing days and weeks. Without antibiotic treatment, the
clinical course could progress to respiratory failure, shock and death.
The overall mortality rate for severe Type A strains has been 5-15%, but in
pulmonic or septicemic cases of
tularemia without antibiotics treatment the mortality rate has been as high as
30-60%. With treatment, the most recent mortality rates in the US have been 2%.
Aminoglycosides,
macrolides, chloramphenicol and fluoroquinolones have each been with used with
success in the treatment of tularemia.
In the United States, a live-attenuated vaccine derived from the avirulent
Live Vaccine Strain (LVS) has been used to protect laboratory personnel
routinely working with F. tularensis. Given the short incubation period
of tularemia and incomplete protection of current vaccines against inhalational
tularemia, vaccination is not recommended for post-exposure prophylaxis.
Given the lack of human-to-human transmission, isolation is not recommended
for tularemia patients.
The Working Group lacks information on survival of intentionally-dispersed
particles, but would expect a short half-life due to dessication, solar
radiation, oxidation and other environmental factors, and a very limited risk
from secondary dispersal.
Simple, rapid and reliable diagnostic tests that could be used to identify
persons infected with F. tularensis in the mass exposure setting need to
be developed. Research is also needed to develop accurate and reliable
proced-ures to rapidly detect F. tularensis in environmental samples.