Emerging Infectious Diseases. 10(3):483-6, 2004 Mar.
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First reported prairie dog-to-human tularemia transmission, Texas, 2002.[see comment].
Avashia SB, Petersen JM, Lindley CM, Schriefer ME, Gage KL, Cetron M, DeMarcus TA, Kim DK, Buck J, Montenieri JA, Lowell JL, Antolin MF, Kosoy MY, Carter LG, Chu MC, Hendricks KA, Dennis DT, Kool JL
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA. swati.avashia@tdh.state.tx.us
Article type: Curated - Canary ID: 2102
| Cause and Effect Analysis |
Interspecies susceptibility data |
Shared exposures with humans |
Shared outcomes with humans |
Gene sequence data |
| Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
| Study type |
N |
Routes |
Sampling |
Controls |
Timing |
| descriptive |
163 |
ingestion |
- |
- |
concurrent |
| cross sectional |
131 |
ingestion, inhalation, mucocutaneous |
exposure |
yes |
concurrent |
| cross sectional |
22 |
mucocutaneous, inhalation, vector, ingestion |
exposure |
yes |
repeated |
| Exposures |
Francisella tularensis
|
| Outcomes |
Tularemia
|
| Species |
Chinchilla Hares Hedgehogs Human Microtus pennsylvanicus Onychomys Peromyscus Peromyscus Sciuridae Tamias striatus Tamiasciurus
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| Locations |
| United States |
South Dakota |
Mellette County (populated place) |
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Texas |
Texas, State of (populated place) |
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