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Dozens Contract Illness From Small Pets

Sara'spets

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Apr 26, 2005
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Dozens Contract Illness From Small Pets

By MARILYNN MARCHIONE
AP Medical Writer

Furry "pocket pets" like hamsters, mice and rats have sickened up to 30 people in at least 10 states with dangerous multidrug-resistant bacteria, health officials are warning.

It is the first known outbreak of salmonella illness tied to such pets and reveals a previously unknown public health risk, officials said in a report released Thursday.

Many of the victims were children; six were hospitalized for vomiting, fever and severe diarrhea. Some passed the illness to others. The germ they had was resistant to five drugs spanning several classes of antibiotics.

"This is likely an underrepresentation of how large the problem is," because others who were sick may not have gone to doctors and not all labs do the kind of tests that would detect this germ, said Dr. Chris Braden, an epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Salmonella infections are common from reptiles, especially small turtles called red-eared sliders that are banned but have made an illegal comeback in several states in recent years. The 2003 monkeypox outbreak that originated in imported African rats and spread to U.S. prairie dogs showed the risks of owning exotic pets.

But cuddly little pocket pets like hamsters were not thought to pose much of a problem.

Gerbils, guinea pigs, ferrets and rabbits could also carry the germ, the CDC said.

"This outbreak highlights the fact that there is no perfectly safe pet. Parents and children should wash their hands thoroughly after contact with any pet" - even the family dog, said Dr. Stephen J. Swanson, a CDC epidemiologist working in the Minnesota Department of Health.

CDC started investigating last summer after Minnesota officials found the unusual infection in a 5-year-old boy sickened after playing with and kissing a pet mouse that had severe diarrhea and later died.

Tests showed that both had a drug-resistant strain of salmonella, a relative of the germ that causes typhoid fever. The same strain was found in a 4-year-old boy hospitalized in South Carolina and in his pet hamster, which also died.

Officials then checked PulseNet, a national germ reporting database designed to detect unusual trends, and found 28 other cases from December 2003 to October 2004.

Of the 22 people they have been able to interview, 13 had contact with rodents bought from pet stores and two caught salmonella from others who were ill. Seven had no known contact with rodents; investigations are continuing on the rest.

Cases have been confirmed in Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Georgia, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey and North Carolina.

Diarrhea is common in rodents, and many animal dealers routinely use antibiotics to prevent this. Such use may have spurred this multidrug-resistant strain to emerge, health officials speculate.

But not all of the animals in this outbreak were sick, so people should not think healthy ones don't carry the bacteria, Swanson said.

"We only looked for this particular strain. There may be other salmonellas that may be linked to pocket pets," Braden added.

Dr. Robert Tauxe, chief of foodborne illness at CDC, said detecting an outbreak like this would not have been possible before PulseNet, a system he helped start in 1996. It was expanded nationwide in 2001.

"With great luck, a case of illness in Minnesota might have been linked to one hamster and that would have been the end of it," Tauxe said. "We would never have been able to identify it as a nationwide problem."

In light of the outbreak, CDC recommends:

-People should wash hands well after handling rodents, their cases or bedding.

-Doctors should consider pets as a source of drug-resistant salmonella in patients with severe diarrhea.

-Veterinarians should do the same when treating rodents, and should test for it if clusters of such animals offered for sale are sick.

-Pet shops and dealers should sanitize transport containers and cages between uses.

-Owners should not kiss their pets or hold them close to their mouths; pets should be kept away from kitchens and food.
 
Sara'spets said:
-Owners should not kiss their pets or hold them close to their mouths;

Ha! Right!
 
I would like to know who in their right mind would play with a sick animal - let alone kiss it.

I think this is terrible and if it catches on so many furry critters are going to end up in rescues, shelters and God knows where else.

What also annoys me is they have classified Guinea pigs as a rodent and yet I have to wonder if any of the illnesses have come from them. From the sounds of the animals I think they must have had wet tail, which I don't think I have ever heard of Guinea pigs getting it. Please correct me if I am wrong.

I am just very upset about this news article.
 
Acctually, yes, guinea pigs ARE rodents. It is a common misconception.
 
Sara'spets said:
I would like to know who in their right mind would play with a sick animal - let alone kiss it.

I think this is terrible and if it catches on so many furry critters are going to end up in rescues, shelters and God knows where else.

What also annoys me is they have classified Guinea pigs as a rodent and yet I have to wonder if any of the illnesses have come from them. From the sounds of the animals I think they must have had wet tail, which I don't think I have ever heard of Guinea pigs getting it. Please correct me if I am wrong.

I am just very upset about this news article.

I read that article earlier. Many people dont realize their pet is sick especially children and many do kiss their pets around the mouth area. I have kissed my piggy on the head and now I wont. It's just a warning to be more careful.
No different than cooking your meat thoroughly, washing your cutting board and utensils. As far as I am concerned this is nothing to get excited about.
 
Sounds like these are pet store animals. All the more reason to adopt from a rescue or shelter.
 
I agree. It is nice to know about this type of stuff though, just to be aware of it all.
 
Unfortunately if this type of "panic-causing" subject gets on the evening news we will see a HUGE increase in GPs being abandoned, surrendered, euthanised and set free.

People often overreact to news like this. It's much like with the SARs scare. People were terrified yet the Flu is the deadliest disease known to man. The flu has killed more people then SARs, Bubonic Plague, AIDS and any other disease known to man...including "Guinea Pig disease".
 
I will still kiss my pigs.
 
voodoojoint said:
Unfortunately if this type of "panic-causing" subject gets on the evening news we will see a HUGE increase in GPs being abandoned, surrendered, euthanised and set free.

People often overreact to news like this. It's much like with the SARs scare. People were terrified yet the Flu is the deadliest disease known to man. The flu has killed more people then SARs, Bubonic Plague, AIDS and any other disease known to man...including "Guinea Pig disease".

That's the point I was trying to make, but no one seemed to get it. I am very concerned about all the furry critters mentioned in the article. The rescue I am involved with are also concerned. They can't afford to lose foster homes or have tons of pigs being turned in. Also, adoption can go way down if people are afraid of getting sick. I live in NJ and we cannot buy turtles because of same thing that happened many years ago.

What really surprises me is you can also contract salmonella from Iguanas, yet I've never seen a big deal made over that.
 
Same here Licia!
 
Sara'spets said:
What also annoys me is they have classified Guinea pigs as a rodent and yet I have to wonder if any of the illnesses have come from them. From the sounds of the animals I think they must have had wet tail, which I don't think I have ever heard of Guinea pigs getting it. Please correct me if I am wrong.

Guinea Pigs do not get wet-tail.
 
What is wet tail?
 
Disease common in hamsters.
 
slap_maxwell said:
Acctually, yes, guinea pigs ARE rodents. It is a common misconception.

Actually, they aren't rodents and scientists are trying hard to get them classified differently. They are nothing like a rodent at all.
 
I think people have a much greater chance of contracting salmonella from the food they eat, rather than the pets that they have. 90% of chicken in the US are infected with salmonella, and many of these strains have become resistant not only to multiple antibiotics, but also to temperature extremes.

You have to wonder how these "pocket" pets are contracting salmonella themselves ... could it be that their owners are giving them food cut on the same cutting board as their uncooked chicken? Or are uneducated people trying to feed their "pocket pets" meat/chicken? Or perhaps the breeders/pet stores that sell these pets leave them in dirty cages with deceased animals, encouraging cannibalism?

I really don't think the problem lies in the "pocket pets" themselves, but rather with the people that breed them, sell them, and care for them.
 
Hmmm...they don't mention anything about pets that try to kiss you. I take it that's not allowed either. Phoebe will be crushed.
 
You can catch lots of things from lots of sources. I live in Toronto. I'm still alive after SARS (and mad cow, and the black out. We had a really bad year that year.)

It's possible that you could catch something from kissing your spouse as well. Would you stop kissing them? Things like Mono can lie dormant in thier system just waiting for you to catch it.

I will never stop kissing my animals. I also wouldn't have the time to wash my hands every time I picked up an animal. To me it would make more sense to wash my hands before I eat or handle food. Children are another story though as they will put thier hands in their mouths, but should small children be regularly handling guinea pigs anyway?
 
Nothing was even said about a sick guinea pig, They are making an assumption that guinea pigs can cause the same thing. I am sure hamsters and mice carry illnesses that guinea pigs don't have and the other way around.

What I don't understand is what was a 5 year old was doing carry a sick pet mouse around or the 4 year old with his sick hamster. I was never allowed at that age to play with my pet without parental supervision - I had a rabbit. That's what happens all the time - irresponsible people causing problems for everyone. Let's blame the animal instead of the parent who didn't monitor their child and pet close enough. Because of the lack of caution from a handful of people a lot of innocent animals may suffer from this whole situation.
 
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