The Presentation explains basic models of disease causation, to understand the etiology or causes of disease & altered production and helps to understand the applicability of causal criteria applied to epidemiological studies.
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Concepts of disease causation
1. Triad , Wheel, Web
and Pie concepts of
disease causation
By
Dr. Bhoj R Singh
Principal Scientist & Head Division of Epidemiology,
ICAR-Indian Veterinary Research Institute, Izatnagar-
243122, Bareilly, UP, India.
Email: brs1762@gmail.com
2. Objectives
īŽ To explain basic models of disease
causation.
īŽ To understand the etiology or causes of
disease & altered production.
īŽ To understand the applicability of causal
criteria as applied to epidemiological
studies
3. A cause?
īŽ Websterâs dictionary defines a cause as
âsomething which has an effectâ.
īŽ In epidemiology a cause can be considered
to be something that alters the frequency of
disease, health & production status or
associated factors in a population.
4. CONCEPT OF DISEASE
īŽ A condition of the body or some part
or organ of the body in which its
functions are deranged.
īŽ It is a mal-adjustment of an
organism to the environment.
īŽ It is deviation from normal function &
purpose.
5. 5
īŽ In epidemiology, there are several models of disease
causation that help understand disease process.
īŽ The most widely applied models are:
ī¨ The epidemiological triad (triangle),
ī¨ the wheel, and
ī¨ the web. And
ī¨ The sufficient cause and component causes models
(Rothmanâs component causes model)
General Models of Causation
6. The epidemiologic triad Model
īŽ The epidemiologic triangle or triad is the traditional
model of infectious disease causation.
īŽ It has three components: an external agent, a
susceptible host, and environmental factors that
interrelate in a variety of complex ways to produce
disease & alter production & utility in animals.
7. 7
The Epidemiological Triad
HOST
AGENT ENVIRONMENT
Genetic make up (breed,
strain, variety.
Nutritional status
Immunological status etc.
Virulence
Pathovar
Biovar
ID50,LD50
Climate
Radiations
Rainfall
Winds
8. Agent factors
âĸInfectious agents: agent might be microorganismâvirus,
bacterium, parasite, prions, other microbes and others
(poisonous creatures). Generally, these agents must be present
for disease to occur as essential causal factor.
âĸNutritive: Excesses or deficiencies (Cholesterol, vitamins,
proteins)
âĸChemical agents: (carbon monoxide, drugs, medications)
âĸPhysical agents (Ionizing radiation,âĻ
8
9. More about agent factors
Living organisms:
Adaptability
Host range
Virulence
Pathogenicity
Dose: ID50, LD50
etc.
Chemical agents (Toxins and pollutants)
Toxicity dose,
Pnetrability,
Stability
Half-life etc.
Physical agents (Radiations, sound, winds, floods, draughts, soil etc)
Compositions
Magnitude,
Exposure time
10. Host factors
âĸHost factors are intrinsic factors that influence an individualâs
exposure, susceptibility, or response to a causative agent.
âĸHost factors that affect a individual's risk of exposure to an
agent:
âĸAge, race, sex, breed, strain, purpose of domestication, feed
and feeding habits, breeding practices sociological status, etc..
âĸHost factors which affect susceptibility & response to an agent:
âĸGenetic composition, nutritional and immunologic status,
anatomic structure, presence of other disease or medications,
purpose & use of domestication, method of rearing & husbandry
practices and psychological makeup.10
11. Environmental factors
Environmental factors are extrinsic factors which affect the agent
as well as the host and the opportunity for exposure.
Environmental factors include:
ī¨ Physical factors such as geology, climate,..
ī¨ Biologic factors such as insects that transmit an agent; and
ī¨ Socioeconomic factors such as crowding, sanitation, and the
availability of health services.
11
12. Web of Causation
īŽ Web of Causation is devised to address chronic
disease â can also be applied to communicable
disease) due to multi-factorial/ multi-etiologic nature
of causation in many diseases
īŽ There is no single cause / multi-factorial causes
īŽ Causes of disease are interacting in various pathways
īŽ Illustrates the interconnectedness of possible causes
īŽ Here the disease is usually well-defined from a clinical point
of view (e.g. lung cancer, Mastitis) but the etiologic
perspective is more complex.
14. 14
The Wheel of Disease Causation
īŽ Mausner & Kramer,1985
īŽ The Wheel of Causation de-emphasizes the
agent as the sole cause of disease,
īŽ It emphasizes the interplay of physical, biological
and social (production) environments. It also
brings genetics into the mix.
īŽ A disease model which discriminates between
'necessary' and 'sufficient' factors.
15. 15
Necessary and sufficient causes
īŽ A necessary cause is a causal factor whose presence is
required for the occurrence of the effect. If disease does
not develop without the factor being present, then we term
the causative factor ânecessaryâ.
īŽ Sufficient cause is a âminimum set of conditions, factors or
events needed to produce a given outcome.
īŽ The factors or conditions that form a sufficient cause are
called component causes.
16. 16
Example
īŽ The tubercle bacillus is required to cause
tuberculosis but, alone, does not always
cause it.
īŽ Thus tubercle bacillus is a necessary,
not a sufficient cause.
īŽ This true for most the infectious causes.
17. 17
īŽ Rothman's model has emphasised that the causes of disease
comprise a collection of factors.
īŽ These factors represent pieces of a pie, the whole pie
(combinations of factors) is the sufficient cause for a
disease. May be several pies for a disease or syndrome.
īŽ It shows that a disease may have more that one sufficient
cause, with each sufficient cause being composed of several
factors.
Rothmanâs Component Causes and
Causal Pies Model
18. 18
īŽ The factors represented by the pieces of the pie in this model
are called component causes.
īŽ Each single component cause is rarely a sufficient cause by
itself, but may be necessary for causation of the disease.
īŽ Control of the disease could be achieved by removing one of
the components in each "pie" and if there were a factor
common to all "piesâ (necessary cause) the disease would be
eliminated by removing that alone.
Rothmanâs
Component Causes and Causal Pies
19. 19
Causal Complement
(Causal Pie)
īŽ Causal complement âĄ
the set of factors that
completes a sufficient
causal mechanism
īŽ Example: Typhoid
ī¨Necessary agent
Salmonella enterica ser
Typhi
ī¨Causal complement
âSusceptibilityâ
20. Causal pies representing all sufficient causes of a
particular disease
20 A given disease can have multiple sufficient mechanisms
Necessary
cause =
found in all
cases (B)
Contributing
cause =
needed in
some cases
(A, C, D, E,
F) but not in
all cases.
Sufficient
cause = the
set of
necessary &
contributing
causes that
make disease
inevitable in
an individual
21. Applications
īŽ Epidemiologic Triad (devised to enhance
search for understanding communicable
disease). Model works with both infectious or
non-infectious diseases.
īŽ Web of Causation (devised to address chronic
disease â can also be applied to communicable
disease)
22. Applications
īŽ The purpose of studying cause and effect
in epidemiology is to generate knowledge
to prevent and control disease.
īŽ Distinguishing natural from other causes of
death & loss or reduced production/ utility.
īŽ Establishing modes of transmission &
spread.
23. Quiz
1. Define the cause and disease.
2. Name the different models to explain the
causation of disease.
3. Give Trriad factors of HS and FMD.
4. Define sufficient and necessary & component
causes.
5. Differentiate between Mausner & Kramerâs Wheel
and Rothmanâs causal Pie Model.
6. Construct Pies for Mastitis & Infertility in cows.
7. Construct web model for repeat breeding in
buffaloes.