- Home
- Collections
- Zoonotic diseases
Zoonotic diseases
The risk of contact with zoonotic diseases is ever present for veterinary professionals, as well as for owners of pets in their care. For World Zoonoses Day, which commemorates Louis Pasteur's ground-breaking achievements, we have created a new collection of articles, podcasts and reference guides to address the responsibilities and considerations necessary to protect those in close proximity to companion animals.
Collection Contents
14 results
-
-
Imported diseases: brucellosis
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2023Authors: Hannah Walker and Paula BoydenBrucella: epidemiology and zoonotic concerns
- Observe basic biology of brucella canis
- Interpret screening test results and explain their significance
- Recognise the challenges of evaluating predictive value of tests and public health risk
Brucella : classical presentations and sensible diagnostics
- Recognise clinical signs of Brucella
- ACV
- Explore prognostic factors related to Brucella infection
-
-
-
Imported diseases: leishmaniasis
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2023Authors: Paula Boyden and Hannah WalkerClassical presentations of Leishmania
- Recognise clinical signs of Leishmania
- List key risk factors for Leishmania
- Explore prognostic factors related to Leishmania infection
Diagnostic options and therapeutic challenges for Leishmania
- List diagnostic tests available for screening for Leishmania
- Recognise chronic nature and their are different stages of Leishmania infection
- Explore the nature of leishmania treatment (when to start, duration, availability)
-
-
-
How to...
Screen a dog with travel history Authors: Josh Kennils and Emi BarkerWith the incidence of travelled dogs continuing to increase, Josh Kennils and Emi Barker, from Langford Vets, Bristol, offer guidance on which diseases to test for and how best to test for them.
-
-
-
A practical guide to zoonotic diseases: what do I need to tell clients?
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2020Author Jane E. Sykes
-
-
-
Tick-borne diseases: which ones do I actually need to know about?
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2020Author Laura Macfarlane
-
-
-
IDEXX topic of the month: Canine brucellosis: what you need to know
BSAVA Webinar LibraryAuthor Yvonne McGrottyCanine brucellosis is an infectious and zoonotic disease caused by a bacterium called Brucella canis which is highly contagious between dogs. This disease is uncommonly encountered in the UK and is a reportable disease. Due to the increase in numbers of dogs being imported into the UK from Eastern Europe, where the infection is endemic, the risk of this disease in the UK is increasing, and the first reported case of dog to human transmission has now been reported. Brucellosis in dogs can cause reproductive signs including abortion and infertility, but many animals may be asymptomatic. The greatest risk of exposure is contact with aborted tissue or reproductive fluids. This short webinar discusses the clinical presentation, available diagnostic tests and treatment options for this emerging infectious disease. This webinar is provided by BSAVA Education Partner IDEXX. A collection of IDEXX ‘topic of the month’ webinars is available here.
-
-
-
Dirofilaria immitis
BSAVA Scientific Information DocumentsAuthor BSAVA Scientific CommitteeAlthough Dirofilaria immitis (commonly known as heartworm) is not endemic in the UK, the number of infections diagnosed in dogs in the UK is increasing, with most cases found in dogs that have travelled to or been imported from regions where the disease is endemic. Currently, average temperature conditions necessary for transmission of dirofilariasis are rarely met in the UK. However, with increasing temperatures and the rise in imported dogs, there’s potentially an increasing risk of D. immitis becoming endemic in the UK. This document provides key information on the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of heartworm.
Click here to download a PDF of the Infographic summary of the Dirofilaria immitis (heartworm) Scientific Information Document.
First published February 2024.
-
-
-
Lyme disease
BSAVA Scientific Information DocumentsAuthor BSAVA Scientific CommitteeLyme disease is a chronic, multi-systemic, inflammatory disorder of humans and animals associated with infection by the tick-borne spirochaete, Borrelia burgdorferi. There are a number of subspecies of B. burgdorferi, each adapted to a different type of wildlife. The principal vector in the UK is the tick Ixodes ricinus and animals become infected following a bite from an infected nymph or adult. Tick-borne disease poses an ongoing and growing risk to dogs and their owners in the UK. Last reviewed 2016. The information in this SID is still valid as far as BSAVA Scientific Committee is aware but is not under active review at this time. The Committee will review this content if any new information comes to light.
-
-
-
-
-
What you can catch at work: an update on zoonotic diseases (I)
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2015Author Michael Lappin
-
-
-
What you can catch at work: an update on zoonotic diseases (II)
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2015Author Michael Lappin
-
-
-
MRSA: a zoonotic infection
Introduction to the new Authors: Hilary Jackson and Rosanna MarsellaA case history that illustrates how the manual can help with challenging recurrent skin diseases.
-
-
-
Problematic parasite to pet and owner
The campaign to stop the fox tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis from reaching the UK. Author John BonnerEchinococcus multilocularis is probably the most dangerous of all helminth diseases in humans but it is little known. John Bonner reports on the campaign to keep it out of Britain.
-
-
-
Ferrets: systemic viral diseases
BSAVA Manual of Rodents and FerretsAuthor Anna MeredithFerrets are subject to a number of important viral diseases. This chapter deals with the three important systemic viral diseases of ferrets; distemper, parvovirus (Aleutian disease) and rabies. Canine distemper virus (CDV) is an RNA virus of the genus Morbillivirus (family Paramyxoviridae), closely related to human measles virus. Aleutian disease virus (ADV) is a parvovirus that affects both mink and ferrets. It is so called because when discovered in the 1940s in the USA it affected the Aleutian genotype most severely. Rabies is an acute fatal encephalomyelitis caused by viruses of the genus Lyssavirus (family Rhabdoviridae). Ferrets are susceptible to rabies but in the USA fewer than 30 cases have been reported since 1958. The chapter details transmission, pathogenesis, clinical signs, treatment and prevention and control for Distemper, Aleutian disease and Rabies.
-