Pet rats may harbour dangerous fever
Last Updated: Tuesday, June 1, 2010 | 6:16 PM ET
Australian Broadcasting Corporation
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Keeping rats as pets and handling them can be hazardous, a microbiologist says. (CBC)A disease associated with squalor could be on the increase in suburban homes because more people are keeping rodents as pets, warns an Australian microbiologist.
Known as rat bite fever, the disease can result after a bite, scratch or exposure to excreta or saliva from rodents such as rats, guinea pigs, and gerbils.
Dr. Shivanti Abeysuriya of PathWest Laboratory Medicine at the Queen Elizabeth II Medical Centre in Perth said rat bite fever is mostly associated with people living in poverty in rat-infested buildings.
"Now that rats are becoming popular pets and study animals, cases are increasingly seen in different groups of people such as pet owners, pet shop workers and laboratory technicians," she says.
"The message to the public is that keeping rats as pets and handling them can be hazardous to their health."
Abeysuriya and colleagues presented their findings at the recent Australasian Society of Infectious Diseases meeting in Darwin, Australia.
According to Abeysuriya, the risk of infection after a bite is about 10 per cent and if untreated, could result in death for one in 10 people. Complications include endocarditis (infection in the heart valves), meningitis, septic arthritis and abscesses of the brain or soft tissue.
Abeysuriya said people should be aware of the risk of infection and handle their rodent pets carefully.
"Scientists who handle rats know about the infection and take preventive measures such as wearing gloves," she says.
After a rodent bite, the wound should be thoroughly cleaned with soap and water and owners should report symptoms to their doctor immediately.
Abeysuriya says doctors should be aware that rat bite fever is an emerging disease.
"More people are keeping rodents as pets and should suspect this infection in patients with a suggestive clinical picture," she says.
Girl's infection
Abeysuriya outlines the case of a Western Australian girl who was diagnosed with the fever.
The girl, 13, arrived at hospital with a rash covering her body plus fever, headache, vomiting and suffered from joint pain for two days.
She denied she had been bitten or scratched by her pet rat, but said she played with it and cleaned its cage.
Tests detected a bacterial infection (Streptobacillus moniliformis ) in the girl's blood, a bacteria found in rats' upper respiratory tracts.
"Most rats are asymptomatically colonized [they show no signs of illness] with this bacteria in their mouth and upper respiratory tract," says Abeysuriya.
"Not all rats would have this infection and only a percentage would be colonized, but you don't know which rat is colonized and which is not."
Other pet sources
Abeysuriya warns that other domestic pets could be responsible for transmitting infection.
"Sometimes cats and dogs that feed on or attack rodents can get transiently colonized and there is a human case report of rat bite fever resulting from a bite from a greyhound which ate rodents," she says.
Abeysuriya says rat bite fever can be difficult to diagnose because signs and symptoms are non-specific, and may appear to be the result of other bacterial and viral infections.
The diagnosis can also take several days as the organism grows slowly in the laboratory.
Since first reported in the U.S. in 1839, there have been more than 200 cases of the rare zoonotic infection documented worldwide, mostly in North America, including two reported cases in Ontario early this decade.
Australia has recorded less than 10 cases since 1940, but Abeysuriya believes that figure could be higher as many may have gone unreported.
Corrections and Clarifications
- An earlier version of the story said ferrets were rodents. Ferrets are in what is commonly known as the weasel family. June 1, 2010 | 6:10 p.m. ET
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