Title: Parasitic Infections: Clinical Manifestations, Diagnosis and Treatment
1Parasitic InfectionsClinical Manifestations,
Diagnosis and Treatment
- Lennox K. Archibald, MD, PhD, FRCP, DTMH
- Hospital Epidemiologist
- University of Florida
2The Reality
- 1.3 billion persons infected with Ascaris (1 4
persons on earth) - 300 million with schistosomiasis
- 100 million new malaria cases/yr
- At UCLA, 38 of pediatric and dental clinic
children harbored intestinal parasites
3Case1
- 42-yr-old previously healthy, UF professor
- 6-week history of intermittent diarrhea, flatus
and abdominal cramps - Diarrhea x8/day pale no blood or mucus
- No tenesmus
- Illness began slowly during camping trip to
Colorado with loose stools - Spontaneously remission for 5-6 days at a time,
then recur
4Case 1
- His 8-yr-old son had had a mild course of watery
diarrheaascribed to viral gastroenteritis by
general practitioner - Stool smearno pus cells
- However, wet preps showed
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7Diagnosis?
8Giardiasis (G. lamblia)
- Should be suspected in prolonged diarrhea
- Contaminated water often implicatedoutbreaks
- Campers who fail to sterilize mountain stream
water - Person-person in day care centers
- MSM
- Symptoms usually resolve spontaneously in 4-6
weeks
9Giardiasis Tests of choice
- Examination of concentrated stools for cysts (90
yield after 3 samples) - Usually no PMNs
- Stool ELISA, IF Antigen (up to 98
sensitive/90-100 specific) - Consider aspiration of duodenal
contents--trophozoites - Treatment Metronidazole for 5-7 days
10Case 2
- 40 y/o male vicar returned from 2 years of
missionary work in South Africa - Excellent health throughout stay there
- 3 months after returning to U.S.
- Suddenly ill with abdominal distension
- Fever
- Periumbilical pain
- Vomiting
- Blood-tinged diarrheal stools
- Denied arthritis /known exposure to parasites
- Family history of inflammatory bowel disease
11Case 2
- Physical examination
- Acutely ill
- Distended abdomen
- No hepatomegaly or splenomegaly
- Decreased bowel sounds
- Stool exam
- Gross blood present
- No pus cells
- Negative for OP, one negative CS
12Sigmoidoscopy revealed
- Multiple punctate bleeding sites at 7 to 15 cm
with normal appearing mucosa between sites - This mucosa easily denuded when pressure applied
to it, leaving large areas of bleeding submucosa
13Case 2
- Diagnosed with ulcerative colitis
- Started on corticosteroids
- Temperature rose to 40C
- Abdomen distension increased and worsening of
symptoms - Emergency laparotomy for toxic megacolon
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16Diagnosis?
17Entamoeba histolytica
- One of 7 amoebae commonly found in humans
- Only one that causes significant disease
- Causes intestinal (diarrhea and dysentery) and
extraintestinal (liver primarily) disease - In US
- Institutionalized patients
- MSM
- Tourists returning from developing countries
- Patients with depressed cell mediated immunity
18Trophozoites with ingested RBC
19Trophozoites in colon tissue (H E stain)
20Cyst (wet mount)
21Amoebiasis Clinical Manifestations
- Symptoms depend on degree of bowel invasion
- Superficial watery diarrhea and nonspecific GI
complaints - Invasive gradual onset (1-3 weeks) of abdominal
pain, bloody diarrhea, tenesmus - Fever is seen in minority of patients
22Amoebiasis Clinical Manifestations
- Can be mistaken for ulcerative colitis
- Steroids can dramatically worsen and precipitate
toxic megacolon - Amebic liver abscesses
- RUQ pain, pain referred to right shoulder
- High fever
- Hepatomegaly (50)
-
23Amoebic abscessremember
- Can occur in lung, brain, spleen
24Amoebic Abscess
- Liquefaction of liver cells
- Do not contain pus
- Anchovy paste sauce
- Culture of contents usually sterile
- Liver affected
- 53-right lobe
- 8-left lobe
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27Remember
- That stool is merely a convenient vehicle passing
by - Amoebae live the bowel wall
- Direct observation preferable to mere examination
of stool - Trophozoites best seen in direct scrapings of
ulcers
28Amoebiasis Treatment
- Most respond to metronidazole
- Open surgical drainage should be avoided, if at
all possible
29Case 3
- Previously healthy 3-year-old girl
- Attends day-care center
- 7 day history of watery diarrhea
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Abdominal cramps
- Low-grade fever
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31Case 4
- 34 year-old AIDS patient
- Debilitating, cholera-like diarrhea
- Severe abdominal cramps
- Malaise
- Low-grade fever
- Weight loss
- Anorexia
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33Diagnosis?Case 3 4
34Three cysts stained pale red are seen in the
center with this acid fast stain
35Modified acid-fast stain of stool showing red
oocysts of Cryptosporidium parvum against the
blue background of coliforms and debris
36Cryptosporidium parvum
- Causes secretory diarrhea 10 liter/day
- Significant cause of death in HIV/AIDS
- Animal reservoirs
- Incubation period 5-10 days
37Cryptosporidium parvum
- Infants young children in day-care
- Unfiltered or untreated drinking water
- Farming practices lambing, calving, and
muck-spreading - Sexual practices oral contact with stool of an
infected individual - Nosocomial setting with other infected patients
or health-care employees - Veterinarians contact with farm animals
- Travelers to areas with untreated water
- Living in densely populated urban areas
- Owners of infected household pets (rare)
38Diagnosis and Treatment
- Best diagnosed by stool exam
- No known effective treatment
- Nitazoxamide shortens duration of diarrhea
39Case 5
- Mr. Mrs. R. were sailing with their 3 children
in Jamaica - Living primarily on the boat with several day
trips to a small coastal island - On island, ate several types of tropical fruit
- Both became suddenly ill with fevers, chills,
muscle aches, and loss of appetite. - Sought treatment locally, and were diagnosed with
hepatitis, likely due to ingestion of toxic fruit
40Case 5
- Two days later, Mr. R. became jaundiced and
passed dark urine - He progressively worsened, became comatose and
died - In the meantime, Mrs. R. was transferred to SUF
for liver transplant
41Case 5
- None of the children were sick despite having
eaten the same fruits and other foods. - The family had taken chloroquine prophylaxis
against malaria, but the parents stopped the
medicine 2 weeks prior to becoming ill because of
side effects.
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44Falciparum vs. Vivax
- Location Falciparum confined to tropics and
subtropics vivax more temperate - Falciparum infects RBC of any age others like
reticulocytes - Falciparum-infected RBCs stick to vascular
endothelium causing capillary blockage
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47Malaria Genetic susceptibility
- Two genetic traits associated with decreased
susceptibility to malaria - Absence of Duffy blood group antigen blocks
invasion of Plasmodium vivax - Significant number of Africans
- Persons with sickle cell hemoglobin are resistant
to P. falciparum - Sickle cell disease and trait
48Malaria Clinical manifestations
- Non-specific, flu-like illness
- Incubation
- P. falciparum 9-40 days
- Non-P. falciparum may be prolonged
- P. vivax 6-12 months
- P. malariae and ovale years
- Fever is the hallmark of malaria
- Classically, 2-3 day intervals in P. vivax and
malariae - More irregular pattern in P. falciparum
- Fever occurs after the lysis of RBCs and release
of merozoites
49Malaria Clinical manifestations
- Febrile paroxysms have 3 classic stages
- Cold stage
- Pt feels cold and has shaking chills
- 15-60 mins. prior to fever
- Hot stage
- 39-41C
- Lassitude, loss of appetite, bone and joint aches
- Tachycardia, hypotension, cough, HA, back pain,
N/V, diarrhea, abdo pain, altered consciousness - Sweating stage
- Marked diaphoresis followed by resolution of
fever, profound fatigue, and sleepiness - 2-6 hours after onset of hot stage
50Malaria Clinical manifestations
- Other symptoms depend on malaria strain
- P. vivax, ovale and malariae few other sxs
- P. falciparum
- Dependent upon host immune status
- No prior immunity/splenectomy ? high levels of
parasitemia ? profound hemolysis - Vascular obstruction and hypoxia
- Kidneys renal failure
- Brain (CNS) ? hypoxia, coma, seizures
- Lungs pulmonary edema
- Jaundice hemoglobinuria (blackwater fever)
51Malaria Clinical manifestations
- Always suspect malaria in travelers from
developing countries who present with - Influenza-like illness
- Jaundice
- Confusion or obtundation
52Diagnosis
- Giemsa-stained blood smear
- Thick and thin smears
- P. falciparum
- Best just after fever peak
- Others
- Smears can be performed at any time
- Examine blood on 3-4 successive days
53Differences in strains
- P. falciparum
- No dormant phase in liver
- Multiple signet ring trophs per cell
- High percentage (gt5) parasitized RBCs considered
severe
54Differences in strains
- P. vivax and ovale
- Dormant liver phase
- Single signet ring trophs per cell
- Schuffners dots in cytoplasm
- Low percent (lt 5) of parasitized RBCs
55Differences in strains
- P. malariae
- No dormant stage
- Single signet ring trophs per cell
- Very low parasitemia
56Treatment
- P. falciparum malaria can be fatal if not
promptly diagnosed and treated - Non- P. falciparum malaria rarely requires
hospitalization - Widespread drug resistance dictates regimen
(www.cdc.gov/travel CDC malaria hot line
770-488-7788).
57TreatmentUncomplicated malaria
- P. vivax, ovale, malariae, chloroquine-susceptible
falciparum - Chloroquine
- Primaquine for dormant liver forms
- Chloroquine-resistant falciparum
- Quinine plus doxycycline
- Mefloquine
- Atovaquone plus proguanil (AP)
- Artemisins (common in SE Asia due to multi-drug
resistance)
58TreatmentSevere malaria
- Drug options
- Quinidine gluconateonly approved parenteral
agent in US - Artemisin
59Prevention
- Mefloquine
- Doxycycline
- Nets
- 30-35 DEET
- Permethrin spray for clothing and nets
60And dont forget baggage malaria!
61Case 5
- Mrs. R. was treated with IV quinidine and
improved rapidly. - In retrospect, Mr. R. had died from untreated
blackwater fever - Few parasites in peripheral blood
- Acute renal failure
62Case 6
- A 24-year-old white male army officer
- Referred to the VA ID clinic with a 3-month
history of a lesion on his right leg, developing
approximately 2 weeks after returning from Iraq - Recent travel history 1 month in Kuwait and 2
months traveling between Kuwait and Iraq - Recalled being bitten numerous times by small
flying insects and other nasty bugs
63Case 6
- Physical examination essentially normal except
for - Non-tender (20 15 mm) scaly erythematous plaque
with a moist central erosion of the left
popliteal area. - There was no lymphadenopathy and no mucosal
lesions were noted
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65Diagnosis?
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67An intact macrophage practically filled with
amastigotes (arrows),
68Leishmaniasis
- Tropical areas where phlebotomine sandfly is
common South America, India, Bangladesh, Middle
East, East Africa - Sandfly introduces flagellated promastigote into
human ? ingested by macrophages ? develops into
nonflagellated amastigote
69Leishmaniasis
- Cutaneous
- Most common among farmers, settlers, troops and
tourists in Mid East (L. major and tropica),
Central and South America (L. mexicana,
braziliensis, amazonensis, and panamensis) - L. mexicana reported in Texas
- Visceral (kala azar)
- Anemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia,
hypergammaglobulinemia common
70Leishmaniasis Diagnosis
- Biopsy and Giemsa stain with amastigotes
- Species most prevalent in different places
- L. donovani India
- L. infantum Mid East
- L. chagasi Latin America
- L. amazonensis -- Brazil
71Visceral Leishmaniasis
- Dissemination of amastigotes throughout the
reticulendothelial system of the body - Spleen
- Bone marrow
- Lymph nodes
- Opportunistic infection in AIDS patients
- Ineffective humeral response
72Hepatosplenomegaly
73Splenic aspirate
- Most satisfactory method
- Spleen must be at least 3cm below LCM
- Aspirate stained with Giemsa
74Leishmaniasis treatment
- Only drug approved in US is Amphotericin B
- Treatment of cutaneous disease depends on
anatomic location - Many spontaneously heal and do not require
treatment
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76Remember..
- The factors determining the form of
leishmaniasis - Leishmanial species
- Geographic location
- Immune response of the host
77Case 7
- 38-year-old businessman
- Previously fit
- 2-week history of fever since returning from
Brazil business trip - Flu-like symptoms and myalgia
- Had consumed steak tartare in Brazil
- Results all unremarkable---normal WBC and ESR
negative smears CXR and urine OK - Continued to have fever, tachycardia and myalgia
78Case 8
- A 29-yr-old man with AIDS (CD4 count59) presents
with a 2 week history of headache, fevers and new
onset seizures - He had not been taking any antiretroviral
medications
79Cases 7 8
- What parasite could
- cause this picture?
80AIDS Patient
81AIDS Patient
82Toxoplasma gondii cyst in brain tissue with H E
stain (100x)
83For the businessman
- Toxoplasma serology was positive at a very high
titer - Responded to treatment with sulphonamide
pyrimethamine - No relapse
84Transmission
- Eating oocysts excreted by cats harboring sexual
stages of parasite - Outbreaks traced to inadequately cooked meat of
herbivores (raw beef) - Mutton
85Toxoplasma gondii
- Worldwide distribution
- Human infection
- Ingestion of cysts in undercooked meat of
herbivores - Water/food contaminated with oocysts
- Congenitally
- Infected organs, blood (less common)
- Prevalence of latent infection in US about 10
France about 75 - Generally higher in less-developed world
- 50 in AIDS patients up to 90 of AIDS patients
in developing world
86Toxoplasma gondii Immunocompetent hosts
- Latent infection (persistence of cysts) is
generally asymptomatic - Cervical lymphadenopathy (10-20)
- Mono-like presentation (lt1 of all mono-like
illnesses) - Chorioretinitis
- Very rare myocarditis, myositis
87Toxoplasma gondii Immunocompromised hosts
- Often life-threatening
- Almost always reactivation of latent infection
- AIDS
- Encephalitis most common manifestation
- Usually subacute onset/focal (if CD4lt 200)
- Mental status changes, seizures, weakness,
cranial nerve abnormalities, cerebellar signs, - Can present as acute hemiparesis/language deficit
- Usually multiple ring-enhancing lesions on CT/MRI
- Pneumonitis
- Chorioretinitis
88Toxoplasma gondii Clinical manifestations
- Immunocompromised hosts
- Non-AIDS (transplants, hematologic malignancies)
- CNS 75
- Myocardial 40
- Pulmonary 25
89Toxoplasma gondii Clinical manifestations
- Congenital
- Acute infection asymptomatic in mother
- Clinical manifestations range no sequelae to
sequelae that develop at various times after
birth - Chorioretinitis
- Strabismus
- Blindness
- Epilepsy, mental retardation, pneumonitis,
microcephaly, hydrocephalus, spontaneous
abortion, stillbirth
90Toxoplasma gondii diagnosis
- Clinical suspicion crucial
- Serology is primary method of diagnosis
- IgM, IgG
- Histopathology
- Tachyzoites in tissue sections or body fluid
(difficult to stain) - Multiple cysts near necrotic, inflammatory
lesions
91Toxoplasma gondii Treatment
- Immunocompetent adults are usually not treated
unless visceral disease is overt or symptoms are
severe and persistent - Immunodeficient patients
- Latent disease not treated
- Active disease pyrimethamine sulfadiazone
folinic acid
92Toxoplasma gondii Treatment
- Congenital
- Treatment of acute infected pregnant women
decreases but does not eliminate transmission - Spiramycin
- If fetal infection is documented, treat with
pyrimethamine sulfadiazone folinic acid - Postnatal treatment pyrimethamine sulfadiazone
folinic acid
93Case 22
- 25-year-old Caucasian woman presented with 1-week
history of fever, chills, sweating, myalgias,
fatigue - No travel abroad
- Had gone cranberry picking in Massachusetts
approx 3 weeks earlier - PE anemic, hepatosplenomegaly
- Blood workup hemolytic anemia, reduced
platelets
94Thick smear
95Thin smear
Maltese cross
96Diagnosis??
97Babesiosis
- Babesiosis caused by hemoprotozoan parasites of
the genus Babesia - gt100 species reported
- Few actually cause human infection
98Babesiosis
- Babesia microti
- Life cycle involves two hosts
- Deer tick, Ixodes dammini, (definitive host)
introduces sporozoites into white-footed mouse - Once ingested by an appropriate tick gametes
unite and undergo a sporogonic cycle resulting in
sporozoites - Humans enter cycle when bitten by infected ticks
99Babesiosis
- Deer are the hosts upon which the adult ticks
feed and are indirectly part of the Babesia cycle
as they influence the tick population
100Babesiosis
- Clindamycin plus quinine
- Atovaquone plus azithromycin
- Exchange transfusion in severely ill patients
with high parasitemia - Approved by FDA
101Case 9
- 6-year-old son of seasonal farm worker
- Presents with cough and fever, wheeze
- CXR reveals a lobar pneumonia
- Admitted for initial therapy
- After 2 days of antibiotics, with good
defervescence, a worm is found in his bed - Stool exam reveals
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103Diagnosis?
104Ascaris lumbricoides
- In GI tract, few symptoms in light infections
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Obstruction of small bowel or common bile duct.
- Pulmonary symptoms due to migration
- Alveoli (verminous pneumonia)cough, fever
wheeze, dyspnea, X-ray changes, eosinophilia
105Effects of Adult Ascaris Worms
- Depends on worm load
- Effects
- Mechanical obstruction, volvulus,
intussusception, appendicitis, obstructive
jaundice, liver abscesses, pancreatitis, asphyxia - Toxic and Metabolic
- Malnutrition (complex)
106Ascaris lumbricoidesDiagnosis
- Characteristic eggs on direct smear examination
- If treating mixed infections, treat Ascaris first
- Mebendazole
- Pyrantel
- Control
- Periodic mass treatment of children, health
education, environmental sanitation
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108Case 10
- 11-year-old female
- Doing poorly in school
- Not sleeping well
- Anorectic
- Complains of itching in rectal region throughout
the day - A Scotch-tape test reveals
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112Diagnosis?
113Enterobius (Pinworm)
- 18 million infections in U.S.
- Incidence higher in whites
- Preschool and elementary school most often
- Mostly asymptomatic
- Nocturnal anal pruritis cardinal feature due to
migration and eggs - May have insomnia, possible emotional symptoms
- DS-eggs or adults on perineum scotch tape
- Mebendazole 100 mg. Repeat in 2 weeks. Pyrantel
pamoate 11 mg/kg repeat 2 weeks
114Case 11
- 69-year-old male was admitted to VA Hospital
- Far East Prisoner of War (FEPOW)
- COPD--steroids for 3 years
- 2-month history of nausea, vomiting and anorexia
- 25 pounds weight loss
115On the day of admission
- Fever, confusion, and not able to get out of
bed---transported to the hospital - Initial blood work
- Elevated WBC
- Raised eosinophil count 4 times normal
- Underwent UGI endoscopy
- Duodenal biopsy obtained
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117Diagnosis
118Strongyloides Crucial Aspects of Life Cycle
- Infection acquired through penetration of intact
skin - Infection may persist for many years via
autoinfection - In immunocompromised patients, there is risk of
dissemination or hyperinfection - Hyperinfection syndrome
119Disseminated Strongyloidiasis
- High mortality?75
- Penetration of gut wall by infective larvae
- Gut organisms carried on the surface of larvae
results in polymicrobial sepsis, meningitis - Larvae disseminate into all parts of body CNS,
lungs, bladder, peritoneum
120SummaryClinical Findings
- Defective cell-meditated immunity steroids,
burns, lymphomas, AIDS (?) - Gl symptoms in about two-thirds
- Abdominal pain
- Bloating
- Diarrhea
- Constipation
- Wheezing, SOB, hemoptysis
121SummaryClinical Findings
- Skin rash or pruritis in one-third
- Larva currens (racing larva)
- Intensely pruritic
- Linear or serpiginous urticaria with flare that
moves 5-15 cm/hr - Usually buttocks, groin, and trunk
- In dissemination, diffuse petechiae and purpura
122Summary-Clinical Findings
- Eosinophilia 60-95
- Less if on steroids
123Case 12
- 57 year old farmer from Dixie County
- Presents with profound SOB
- Physical examination anemic otherwise
unremarkable - Laboratory examination reveals a profound anemia
(hct 24) with aniso and poikilocytosis - Remainder of laboratory examination normal.
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125Diagnosis?
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127Hookworm
- Hookworm responsible for development of USPHS
- Caused by two different species (North American
and Old World) - Very similar to strongyloides in life cycle
- Attaches to duodenum, feeds on blood
- Elaborates anticoagulant, attaches and reattaches
many times - Loss of around 0.1 ml/d of blood per worm
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130Case 13
- 8-yr-old schoolgirl visiting the U.S. from
Malaysia - 1 week history of epigastric pain, flatulence,
anorexia, bloody diarrhea - No eosinophilia noted
- Clinical diagnosis of amoebic dysentery made
- However, microscopy of stool prep
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132Diagnosis?
133Trichuris trichiura (Whipworm)
- Common in Southeast U.S.
- Frequently coexists with ascaris
- Entirely intraluminal life cycleeggs are
ingested - Frequently asymptomatic
- Severe infections diarrhea, abdominal pain and
tenesmus - Rectal prolapse in children
- DS-eggs in stool
- Mebendazole 100 mg bid x 3 days
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137Case 14
- 18-year-old trailer park handyman seen in ER
- Worked under trailers wearing shorts and no shirt
- Developed intensely pruritic skin rash
- Unable to sleep
- WBC 18,000
- 65 eosinophils.
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139Case 15
- An 8 year old boy
- Presents with skin lesions and itching after
spending the summer at a beach condo in St.
Augustine with his family (mother, father,
younger sister, dog and cat). - Legs show several raised, reddened, serpiginous
lesions that are intensely pruritic.
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141Diagnosis ?
142Cutaneous Larva Migrans
- Caused by filariform larvae of dog or cat
hookworm (Ancylostoma braziliense or Ancylostoma
duodenale - Common in Southeast U.S.
- Red papule at entry with serpiginous tunnel
- Intense pruritis
- Self limiting condition
- Diagnosis clinical
- Topical or oral thiabendazole 25 mg/kg bid for
3-5 days - May use ethyl chloride topically
143Cutaneous larva migrans (creeping eruption)
- More common in children
- Larvae penetrate skin and cause tingling followed
by intense itching. - Eggs shed from dog and cat bowels develop into
infectious larvae outside the body in places
protected from desiccation and extremes of
temperature - Shady, sandy areas under houses, at beach, etc.
144Cutaneous larva migrans (creeping eruption)
- Usually not associated with systemic symptoms
145Cutaneous larva migrans (creeping eruption)
- Diagnosis and treatment
- Skin lesions are readily recognized
- Usually diagnosed clinically
- Generally do not require biopsy
- Reveal eosinophilia inflammatory infiltrate
- Migrating parasite is generally not seen
- Stool smear will reveal eggs
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148Visceral Larva Migrans
- Infection with dog or cat round worms
- Toxocara canis Toxocara catis
- Underdiagnosed based on seroprevalence surveys
- Heavy infections associated with fever, cough,
nausea, vomiting, hepatomegaly, and eosinophilia - Uncommon in adults
- Ocular type more common in adults
- Diagnosis-ELISA
- Thiabendazole 25 mg/kg bid X 5 days
149Case 17
- A 34 yr-old woman from Saudi Arabia
- Radiation and cyclophosphamide, adriamycin,
vincristine and prednisone for diffuse large B
cell lymphoma of the neck. - Mild eosinophilia (AEC500) at the time of
diagnosis - 4 months after initiation of chemo, c/o
intermittent diffuse abdominal pain, bloating,
constipation and occasional rectal bleeding. - Absolute eosinophil count 1000
150Case 17
- No evidence of lymphoma found on re-staging
- Completed chemo, was deemed to be in complete
remission, but had persistence of GI complaints. - Upper endoscopy was unrevealing.
- Colonoscopy and biopsy revealed granulomatous
inflammation, prominent eosinophilic infiltrate,
surrounding a collection of eggs.
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152Chronic intestinal schistosomiasis
153Case 17
- The patient was treated with praziquantel and did
not have relapse of symptoms at 2-year follow-up - AEC250
154Schistosomiasis Epidemiology and life cycle
- Cercariae in fresh water penetrate human skin.
- Cercariae mature to schistosomulae, which enter
the bloodstream, liver and lung. - Mature worms migrate to the venous system of the
small intestine (S. japonicum), large intestine
(S. mansoni) or bladder venous plexus (S.
haematobium).
155Schistosomiasis Epidemiology and life cycle
- Worms release eggs for many years into stool or
urine, resulting in fresh water contamination. - Freshwater snails are infected by miracidia and
are necessary for the production of cercariae and
human infection. - S. mansoni
- South America, Caribbean, Africa, Mid East
- S. japonicum
- China and Philippines
- S. haematobium
- Africa, Mid East
156Schistosomiasis Clinical manifestations
- Three stages of disease, corresponding to life
cycle within human hosts - Swimmers itch
- Within 24 hours of cercariae penetration
- Serum sickness syndrome (Katayama fever)
- 4 to 8 weeks later when worms mature and release
eggs - Fever, headache, cough, chills, sweating,
lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly ? usually
resolves spontaneously - Elevated IgE and eosinophils
- Most common with S. japonicum
157Chronic Schistosomiasis
- Granulomatous reaction to egg deposition in
intestine, liver, bladder, lungs - S. mansoni, japonicum
- Chronic diarrhea, abdominal pain, blood loss,
portal hypertension, hepatosplenomegaly,
pulmonary hypertension - Eosinophilia is common
- Liver function tests are usually normal
- S. Haematobium
- Hematuria, bladder obstruction, hydronephrosis,
recurrent UTIs, bladder cancer
158Schistosomiasis Diagnosis and Treatment
- Detection of characteristic eggs in stool, urine
or tissue biopsy is diagnostic - Urine is best between 12N and 2Pm, passed through
10 µm filter to concentrate eggs - Antibody tests are available, but limited by
sensitivity, specificity - Praziquantel is the drug of choice
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160S. haematobium Urine
S. japonicum
S. mansoni Stool
161Case 18
- 15-yr-old girl
- Fever, rash, swelling around the eye and hands,
severe headaches - Fatigue, aching muscles and joints
- Swollen lymph nodes on the back of neck
- Weight loss
- Progressive confusion, personality changes
- Sleeping for long periods of the day
- Insomnia
- Had been on a safari with parents to West Africa
- Dusky red lesion developed within 1 week
- Vaguely remembered being bitten by a fly
162Diagnosis?
163Investigations
- Blood films
- Lumbar puncture
164Blood smear
165African trypanosomiasis
- Trypanosoma brucei gambiense
166Tsetse fly
167Treatment
168Case 19
- 6-yr-old boy recently arrived from Brazil
- Swelling around the eye
- Conjunctivitis
- Fever
- Enlarged lymph nodes
- Hepatosplenomegaly
- Had stayed in a hoteladobe style with thatched
roof
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170Diagnosis?
171Blood smear
172Reduviid bug(assassin bug)
173Chagas disease Clinical manifestations
- Local edema is followed by fever, malaise,
anorexia - More rarely myocarditis, encephalitis
- Years later chronic Chagas Disease (10-30)
- Heart primary target
- Cardiomyopathy associated with CHF, emboli,
arrythmias - GI tract mega-esophagus, megacolon
174Chagas disease Diagnosis and treatment
- Acute disease is diagnosed by seeing
trypomastigotes on peripheral blood smear - Chronic disease is diagnosed by ELISA detecting
IgG antibody to T. cruzi - Treatment slows the progression of heart disease
175Chagas Disease
- Public health implications in the US
- Chronic
- Cardiomyopathy
- Megaesophagus
- Megacolon
- Blood transfusion
- Transplant
- Solid organ
- Musculoskeletal allograft tissue
176Case 20
- 20-yr-old male
- Abdominal pain and nausea for several months
- More common in the morning
- Relieved by eating small amounts of food
- Some diarrhea and irritability
- Weight loss
- Pruritus ani
- Passage of white bits
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178Diagnosis?
179Taenia saginata
- Ingestion of raw or poorly cooked beef
- Cows infected via the ingestion of human waste
containing the eggs of the parasite - Cows contain viable cysticercus larvae in the
muscle - Humans act as the host only to the adult
tapeworms - Up to 25 meters in the lumen of intestine
- Found all over the world, including the U.S.
180 Beef Tapeworm
181Treatment
- Praziquantel
- Albendazole
- Niclosamide
182Tapeworms (Cestodes)
- Adult worms inhabit GI tract of definitive
vertebrate host - Larvae inhabit tissues of intermediate host
- Humans
- Definitive for T. saginata
- Intermediate for Echinococcus granulosus
(hydatid) - Both definitive and intermediate for T. solium
- Adult worms shed egg-containing segments in stool
ingested by intermediate host larval
form in tissues
183Case 21
- A 33 year-old Indian man was admitted with a
grand mal seizure - 2 yrs PTA, he had vertigo and CT revealed an
enhancing calcified lesion in left
temporal-parietal region - FHx Brother had grand mal seizure several years
earlier - Throughout his life, he has eaten a diet heavy in
pork
184Case 21
- Difficulty speaking and loss of consciousness
while on the phone - Co-workers noticed generalized tonic-clonic
seizures lasting 10 minutes. - CT revealed new localized edema around the
previously identified lesion and a second
contiguous ring enhancing lesion. - He received phenytoin (Dilantin, an antiseizure
med) and 5 days of corticosteroids.
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186Case 21
- ELISA titer was positive for antibodies against
Taenia solium. - The neurosurgeons tell you that resection is
impossible because of the extent and location of
the lesion
187Cystercercosis
- Human infected with the larval stage of Taenia
solium - Humans can serve as definitive or intermediate
host - Eggs are ingested, or possibly get to stomach by
reverse peristalsis - Probably much more common than is reported, since
most infections are asymptomatic
188Cystercercosis
- Symptoms depend on location of cysts, but
frequently include motor spasms, seizures,
confusion, irritability, and personality change - In the eye, often subretinal or in vitreous.
Movement may be seen by the patient. Pain,
amaurosis, and loss of vision may occur.
189Cysticercosis
- Clinical manifestations
- Adult worms rarely cause sxs
- Larvae penetrate intestine, enter blood, and
eventually encyst in the brain. - Cerebral ventircles ? hydrocephalus
- Spinal cord ? compression, paraplegia
- Subarachnoid space ? chronic meningitis
- Cerebral cortex ? seizures
- Cysts may remain asymptomatic for years, and
become clinically apparent when larvae die - Larvae may encyst in other organs, but are rarely
symptomatic
190Cysticercosis
- Diagnosis
- CT and MRI preferred studies
- Discrete cysts that may enhance
- Usually multiple lesions
- Single lesions especially common in cases from
India - Older lesions may calcify
- CSF
- Lymphs or eos, low glucose, elevated protein
- Serology
- Especially in cases with multiple cysts
191Cysticercosis
- Treatment
- Complex and controversial
- Praziquantel and albendazole may kill cysts, but
death of larvae can increase inflammation, edema
and exacerbate sxs - When possible, surgical resection of symptomatic
cyst is preferred - Corticosteroids vs. edema and inflammation
antiseizure meds
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194Case 21
- He was not treated with praziquantel or
albendazole - He continued to receive dilantin for seizures and
was treated with corticosteroids for edema
195Classification of Parasitic Diseases
- Protozoa amoeba flagellates ciliates
- Metazoa (two phyla)
- Helminths (worms)
- Nematodes
- Intestinal
- Extra-intestinal
- Flatworms (platyhelminths)
- Cestodes (tapeworms)
- Trematodes (flukes)
- Arthopods (ectoparasites) scabies, lice, fly
larvae
196General rules of treatment
- Protozoa require species-specific treatment
- Metozoa species-specific
197General rules of treatment of metazoa
198This is just the beginning of a great adventure
in infectious diseases
- Sine qua non
- history and physical examination
199Thank you
- Lennox K. Archibald, MD, PhD, FRCP
- lka1_at_ufl.edu