Anthrax information for general practitioners - Queensland Health
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Topic: Anthrax information for general practitioners

Description

Anthrax is caused by a spore forming bacterium, Bacillus anthracis. It is primarily a disease of grazing herbivores such as sheep and cattle, which are infected through ingestion of soil contaminated by anthrax spores. The spores then germinate to produce the vegetative forms, which multiply eventually killing the host. Bacilli are shed in massive numbers as the animal dies; they sporulate rapidly on exposure to air. Anthrax spores are profoundly resistant to desiccation, heat, irradiation etc and can remain dormant in some types of soil for decades.

View diagram showing the cycle of infection in anthrax

Human anthrax

Man is an incidental host, usually acquiring anthrax from contact with infected animals or animal products. There are three forms of human anthrax:

Cutaneous anthrax:

Gastrointestinal anthrax:

Inhalation anthrax:

Management of possible exposures to anthrax spores

Following a report of a suspicious package or a possible exposure to anthrax spores (eg. from a letter containing a powder):

where the incident is assessed as being possibly high risk:

Please inform the police on 000 immediately of any patient who presents after an alleged exposure to a suspect letter or package. Please do NOT commence ciprofloxacin without prior discussion with the public health unit.

Help and Assistance

For further information please contact the nearest public health unit.

Other Resources

Biosecurity Queensland website

Related Content

Queensland Health fact sheet on anthrax

Footnotes



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