Abstract

BackgroundAround 67 million pets are owned by households in the United Kingdom, and an increasing number of these are exotic animals. Approximately a third of pets are purchased through retail outlets or direct from breeders. A wide range of infections can be associated with companion animals.ObjectivesThis study uses a systematic literature review to describe the transmission of zoonotic disease in humans associated with a pet shop or other location selling pets (incidents of rabies tracebacks and zoonoses from pet food were excluded).Data sourcesPubMed and EMBASE.ResultsFifty seven separate case reports or incidents were described in the 82 papers that were identified by the systematic review. Summary information on each incident is included in this manuscript. The infections include bacterial, viral and fungal diseases and range in severity from mild to life threatening. Infections associated with birds and rodents were the most commonly reported. Over half of the reports describe incidents in the Americas, and three of these were outbreaks involving more than 50 cases. Many of the incidents identified relate to infections in pet shop employees.LimitationsThis review may have been subject to publication bias, where unusual and unexpected zoonotic infections may be over-represented in peer-reviewed publications. It was also restricted to English-language articles so that pathogens that are more common in non-Western countries, or in more exotic animals not common in Europe and the Americas, may have been under-represented.Conclusions/implicationsA wide spectrum of zoonotic infections are acquired from pet shops. Salmonellosis and psittacosis were the most commonly documented diseases, however more unusual infections such as tularemia also appeared in the review. Given their potential to spread zoonotic infection, it is important that pet shops act to minimise the risk as far as possible.

Highlights

  • Rising numbers of household pets, in particular exotic species, means that an increasing number of people are exposed to the risk of acquiring zoonotic disease from companion animals

  • Two articles describing infection with rat bite fever (Streptobacillus moniliformis or Spirillum minus) were identified by the review [16,17], one of which occurred in a pet shop employee and resulted in his death

  • All of the psittacosis infections were associated with birds, and no other avian infection was recorded in the review

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Summary

Introduction

Rising numbers of household pets, in particular exotic species, means that an increasing number of people are exposed to the risk of acquiring zoonotic disease from companion animals. Traditional pets such as dogs and cats remain the most popular (23% of UK households own a dog and 19% of UK households own a cat) [1], there has been an increased ownership of exotic pets in recent years, though accurate figures are difficult to obtain This increase is due in part to the 2007 modification to The Dangerous Wild Animals Act 1976 [2]. A wide range of infections can be associated with companion animals, including parasitic, bacterial, fungal and viral diseases [3,4,5].

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