4.7 Article

Non-fractional and fractional mathematical analysis and simulations for Q fever

Journal

CHAOS SOLITONS & FRACTALS
Volume 156, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chaos.2022.111821

Keywords

Q fever; Caputo derivative; Caputo-Fabrizio derivative; Atangana-Baleanu derivative

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The purpose of this study is to analyze the transmission dynamics of Q fever in livestock and ticks and to propose management practices to minimize the spread of the disease. The study develops a mathematical model to represent the spread of the disease and investigates various factors such as environmental transmission, shedding rate, and bacterial decay rate. The study also considers the memory aspect of ticks on their host by introducing fractional differential operators. The findings highlight the importance of environmental transmission and shed light on the susceptibilities and infections associated with different fractional operators.
The purpose of analysing the transmission dynamism of Q fever (Coxiellosis) in livestock and incorpo-rating ticks is to outline some management practices to minimise the spread of the disease in livestock. Ticks pass coxiellosis from an infected to a susceptible animal through a bite. The faecal matter can also contain coxiellosis, thus contaminating the environment and spreading the disease. First, a nonlinear integer order mathematical model is developed to represent the spread of this infectious disease in live -stock. The proposed integer model investigates the positivity and boundedness, disease equilibria, basic reproduction number, bifurcation, and sensitivity analysis. Through mathematical analysis and numerical simulations, it shows that if the environmental transmission and the effective shedding rate of coxiella burnetii into the environment by both asymptomatic and symptomatic livestock are zero, then the usual threshold hold and it produces forward bifurcation. It is noticed that an increase in the recruitment rate of ticks produces backward bifurcation. And also, it is seen that an increase in the natural decay rate of the bacterial in the environment reduces the backward bifurcation point. Furthermore, to take care of the memory aspect of ticks on their host, we modified the initially proposed integer order model by introducing Caputo, Caputo-Fabrizio, Atangana-Baleanu fractional differential operators. The existence and uniqueness of these three newly developed fractional-order differential models are shown using the Banach fixed point theorem. Numerical trajectories are obtained for each of the fractional-order math-ematical models. The trajectory of some fractional orders converges to the same endemic equilibrium point as the integer order. Finally, it is seen that the Atangana-Baleanu fractional differential operator captures more susceptibilities and fewer infections than the other operators.(c) 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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