Your Puppy Can Make You Very Sick, CDC says

THURSDAY, Sept. 20, 2018 (HealthDay News) — Puppies can be cute and cuddly, but they also carry germs that might make you very sick, a new government report warns.

An outbreak of antibiotic-resistant Campylobacter infections in 2017 and 2018 that sickened 118 people in 18 states was traced to pet store puppies, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“This is most likely the tip of the iceberg,” said researcher Dr. Mark Laughlin, a CDC veterinarian science officer.

Among those sickened by the bacteria, 26 were hospitalized. Of those who became ill, 29 were pet store employees. It’s likely that many others got sick, but not sick enough to go to the doctor, or doctors didn’t report cases, Laughlin added.


Campylobacter is not a rare bacteria. In fact, according to the CDC, it causes 1.3 million diarrheal illnesses in the United States each year.

“People most often get Campylobacter after they consume undercooked chicken,” Laughlin said. They can also get it from contaminated water and raw milk.

But it’s rare that an outbreak of Campylobacter occurs, “and it’s rare that it’s associated with contact with pets,” Laughlin said.

This outbreak was also unique because the bacteria was resistant to the antibiotics usually used to treat it, he explained.

According to Dr. Marc Siegel, a professor of medicine at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City, most people who are sickened with Campylobacter aren’t treated with antibiotics.

The reason antibiotics aren’t usually used is because they kill the bacteria but release the toxins the bacteria carries, and it’s the toxins that cause most of the symptoms, Siegel said.

Usually, people get better without treatment, he noted. “One of the most common symptoms is bloody diarrhea,” Siegel said. Other symptoms include headache, muscle ache and fever. The illness usually lasts about a week and then goes away.


Campylobacter is usually spread from feces, he said. It’s common among chickens because of the way they’re raised — all crammed together.

It’s possible that the same thing happens among puppies from puppy mills and pet stores, where the animals are in close contact with each other, Siegel suggested.

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