People can contract skin lesions from goats and sheep
infected with the Orf virus through household meat preparation or when
slaughtering the animals, a federal agency said on Thursday in a report
aimed at doctors in ethnically diverse communities.
The Orf virus - sometimes misdiagnosed as a more serious disease such as
anthrax - is most commonly transmitted to humans on farms. It has also
been reported in children who visited petting zoos and livestock fairs,
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.
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But the CDC said people could also contract Orf by preparing infected
sheep or goat meat for household use or when slaughtering the animals,
and detailed four such cases in the report.
"In ethnically diverse communities, health-care providers might be
unaware of patients having this type of animal contact and of the
seasonal increases in contact associated with religious events," the
report said.
"The popularity of hobby farming and home butchering also increases
opportunities for household Orf exposures."
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The report said that in 2010, a 42-year old man in Massachusetts
assisted in a lamb sacrifice for the Muslim feast holiday Eid al-Adha,
holding the animal's head with his left hand. Five days later, a small
lesion appeared on one of the fingers of his left hand.
In another case, a 35-year-old man of Ethiopian descent cut his left
thumb with a knife while slaughtering a lamb as part of Easter
festivities and later suffered a thumb lesion.
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Orf lesions often heal within a few weeks, CDC veterinarian Danielle
Tack told Reuters. Doctors, particularly in urban areas, can sometimes
misdiagnose Orf, she said. |