1. Academic Validation
  2. Lobomycosis: risk of zoonotic transmission from dolphins to humans

Lobomycosis: risk of zoonotic transmission from dolphins to humans

  • Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis. 2013 Oct;13(10):689-93. doi: 10.1089/vbz.2012.1280.
John S Reif 1 Adam M Schaefer Gregory D Bossart
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 1 College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University , Fort Collins, Colorado.
Abstract

Lobomycosis, a Fungal disease of the skin and subcutaneous tissues caused by Lacazia loboi, is sometimes referred to as a zoonotic disease because it affects only specific delphinidae and humans; however, the evidence that it can be transferred directly to humans from dolphins is weak. Dolphins have also been postulated to be responsible for an apparent geographic expansion of the disease in humans. Morphological and molecular differences between the human and dolphin organisms, differences in geographic distribution of the diseases between dolphins and humans, the existence of only a single documented case of presumed zoonotic transmission, and anecdotal evidence of lack of transmission to humans following accidental inoculation of tissue from infected dolphins do not support the hypothesis that dolphins infected with L. loboi represent a zoonotic hazard for humans. In addition, the lack of human cases in communities adjacent to coastal estuaries with a high prevalence of lobomycosis in dolphins, such as the Indian River Lagoon in Florida (IRL), suggests that direct or indirect transmission of L. loboi from dolphins to humans occurs rarely, if at all. Nonetheless, attention to personal hygiene and general principals of Infection control are always appropriate when handling tissues from an animal with a presumptive diagnosis of a mycotic or Fungal disease.

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