Date: March 4, 2019
Source: Forschungsverbund Berlin
As cultural
successors, hedgehogs reside in close proximity to humans. Close contacts,
however, are not only beneficial but also bear risks for animals and humans.
Road traffic, lawn mowers and infectious agents threaten the prickly insect
eaters. Some infectious agents can be transmitted to humans. Considerate
treatment of wildlife and appropriate hygiene measures minimize the risk of
infection, though. A recent study, initiated by the National Consiliary
Laboratory for Diphtheria (CL-Diphtheria) in Germany and conducted in close
collaboration of five federal state laboratories and the Leibniz Institute for
Zoo and Wildlife Research (Leibniz-IZW), identified Corynebacterium ulcerans -- a close relative of the diphtheria
causing bacterium -- in hedgehogs. The study is published in Emerging
Microbes & Infections.
Diphtheria
is a bacterial disease of humans affecting the upper respiratory tract. The
etiologic agent Corynebacterium
diphtheria can harbor a specific diphtheria toxin gene. Diphtheria is very
rare in countries with high immunization coverage such as Germany, although C. diphtheria associated skin or wound
infections occur more frequently over the past years in long-distance
travelers. Germany has recognized an increase of infections with Corynebacterium ulcerans too, a close
relative to C. diphtheria that often
carries a diphtheria-like toxin gene and has now been found in hedgehogs. A
bulletin published from the National Consiliary Laboratory for Diphtheria
concluded that C. ulcerans occurs in a variety of animal species without or
with disease symptoms such as lymph node abscesses, wound or respiratory
infections. "There are clear transmission events from infected pets to the
owners of dogs and cats ," comment the initiators of the study Anja Berger
and Andreas Sing from CL-Diphtheria. Corresponding case numbers are low but the
risk of animal-to-human transmission should raise public health awareness
towards emerging C. ulcerans
infections. The bacterium has already been detected in different native
wildlife species such as red fox, wild boar and roe deer. This study provides
the first evidence of diseased hedgehogs infected by C. ulcerans.
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