Yersinia pestis

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    • Cause of bubonic plague in humans, transmitted via fleas from infected rats
    • Not a significant veterinary disease
    • Disease in rats and other rodents similar to the disease in humans
    • Bubonic form can lead to the pneumonic form, which is highly contagious and usually fatal
    • Humans and domestic and wild animals incidental hosts
    • Plague has rarely been reported in dogs, cats, camels, elephants, deer
    • Cats can acquire the disease from ingesting dead rodents, and show lymphadenopathy and abscesses
    • Fever, lethargy, swelling and abscessation of lymph nodes particularly in head and neck region
    • 50% mortality if not treated
    • Possesses 3 plasmids, 2 of which are unique to this species; these encode an endotoxin, and coagulase and fibrinolytic activity