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Parasitic Infections: Clinical Manifestations, Diagnosis and Treatment

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Stool exam. Gross blood present. No pus cells. Negative for O&P, one negative C&S ... Few parasites in peripheral blood. Acute renal failure. Case 6 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Parasitic Infections: Clinical Manifestations, Diagnosis and Treatment


1
Parasitic InfectionsClinical Manifestations,
Diagnosis and Treatment
  • Lennox K. Archibald, MD, PhD, FRCP, DTMH
  • Hospital Epidemiologist
  • University of Florida

2
The 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

3
Case1
  • 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

4
Case 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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Diagnosis?
8
Giardiasis (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

9
Giardiasis 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

10
Case 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

11
Case 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

12
Sigmoidoscopy 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

13
Case 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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Diagnosis?
17
Entamoeba 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

18
Trophozoites with ingested RBC
19
Trophozoites in colon tissue (H E stain)
20
Cyst (wet mount)
21
Amoebiasis 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

22
Amoebiasis 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)

23
Amoebic abscessremember
  • Can occur in lung, brain, spleen

24
Amoebic 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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Remember
  • 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

28
Amoebiasis Treatment
  • Most respond to metronidazole
  • Open surgical drainage should be avoided, if at
    all possible

29
Case 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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Case 4
  • 34 year-old AIDS patient
  • Debilitating, cholera-like diarrhea
  • Severe abdominal cramps
  • Malaise
  • Low-grade fever
  • Weight loss
  • Anorexia

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Diagnosis?Case 3 4
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Three cysts stained pale red are seen in the
center with this acid fast stain
35
Modified acid-fast stain of stool showing red
oocysts of Cryptosporidium parvum against the
blue background of coliforms and debris
36
Cryptosporidium parvum
  • Causes secretory diarrhea 10 liter/day
  • Significant cause of death in HIV/AIDS
  • Animal reservoirs
  • Incubation period 5-10 days

37
Cryptosporidium 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)

38
Diagnosis and Treatment
  • Best diagnosed by stool exam
  • No known effective treatment
  • Nitazoxamide shortens duration of diarrhea

39
Case 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

40
Case 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

41
Case 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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Falciparum 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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Malaria 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

48
Malaria 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

49
Malaria 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

50
Malaria 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)

51
Malaria Clinical manifestations
  • Always suspect malaria in travelers from
    developing countries who present with
  • Influenza-like illness
  • Jaundice
  • Confusion or obtundation

52
Diagnosis
  • 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

53
Differences in strains
  • P. falciparum
  • No dormant phase in liver
  • Multiple signet ring trophs per cell
  • High percentage (gt5) parasitized RBCs considered
    severe

54
Differences 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

55
Differences in strains
  • P. malariae
  • No dormant stage
  • Single signet ring trophs per cell
  • Very low parasitemia

56
Treatment
  • 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).

57
TreatmentUncomplicated 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)

58
TreatmentSevere malaria
  • Drug options
  • Quinidine gluconateonly approved parenteral
    agent in US
  • Artemisin

59
Prevention
  • Mefloquine
  • Doxycycline
  • Nets
  • 30-35 DEET
  • Permethrin spray for clothing and nets

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And dont forget baggage malaria!
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Case 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

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Case 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

63
Case 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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Diagnosis?
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An intact macrophage practically filled with
amastigotes (arrows),
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Leishmaniasis
  • 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

69
Leishmaniasis
  • 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

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Leishmaniasis 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

71
Visceral Leishmaniasis
  • Dissemination of amastigotes throughout the
    reticulendothelial system of the body
  • Spleen
  • Bone marrow
  • Lymph nodes
  • Opportunistic infection in AIDS patients
  • Ineffective humeral response

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Hepatosplenomegaly
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Splenic aspirate
  • Most satisfactory method
  • Spleen must be at least 3cm below LCM
  • Aspirate stained with Giemsa

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Leishmaniasis 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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Remember..
  • The factors determining the form of
    leishmaniasis
  • Leishmanial species
  • Geographic location
  • Immune response of the host

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Case 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

78
Case 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

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Cases 7 8
  • What parasite could
  • cause this picture?

80
AIDS Patient
81
AIDS Patient
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Toxoplasma gondii cyst in brain tissue with H E
stain (100x)
83
For the businessman
  • Toxoplasma serology was positive at a very high
    titer
  • Responded to treatment with sulphonamide
    pyrimethamine
  • No relapse

84
Transmission
  • Eating oocysts excreted by cats harboring sexual
    stages of parasite
  • Outbreaks traced to inadequately cooked meat of
    herbivores (raw beef)
  • Mutton

85
Toxoplasma 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

86
Toxoplasma 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

87
Toxoplasma 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

88
Toxoplasma gondii Clinical manifestations
  • Immunocompromised hosts
  • Non-AIDS (transplants, hematologic malignancies)
  • CNS 75
  • Myocardial 40
  • Pulmonary 25

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Toxoplasma 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

90
Toxoplasma 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

91
Toxoplasma 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

92
Toxoplasma 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

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Case 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 

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Thick smear
95
Thin smear
Maltese cross
96
Diagnosis??
97
Babesiosis
  • Babesiosis caused by hemoprotozoan parasites of
    the genus Babesia
  • gt100 species reported
  • Few actually cause human infection

98
Babesiosis
  • 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

99
Babesiosis
  • Deer are the hosts upon which the adult ticks
    feed and are indirectly part of the Babesia cycle
    as they influence the tick population

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Babesiosis
  • Clindamycin plus quinine
  • Atovaquone plus azithromycin
  • Exchange transfusion in severely ill patients
    with high parasitemia
  • Approved by FDA

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Case 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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Diagnosis?
104
Ascaris 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

105
Effects 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)

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Ascaris 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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Case 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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Diagnosis?
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Enterobius (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

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Case 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

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On 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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Diagnosis
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Strongyloides 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

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Disseminated 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

120
SummaryClinical Findings
  • Defective cell-meditated immunity steroids,
    burns, lymphomas, AIDS (?)
  • Gl symptoms in about two-thirds
  • Abdominal pain
  • Bloating
  • Diarrhea
  • Constipation
  • Wheezing, SOB, hemoptysis

121
SummaryClinical 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

122
Summary-Clinical Findings
  • Eosinophilia 60-95
  • Less if on steroids

123
Case 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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Diagnosis?
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Hookworm
  • 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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Case 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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Diagnosis?
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Trichuris 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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Case 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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Case 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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Diagnosis ?
142
Cutaneous 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

143
Cutaneous 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.

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Cutaneous larva migrans (creeping eruption)
  • Usually not associated with systemic symptoms

145
Cutaneous 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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Visceral 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

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Case 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

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Case 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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Chronic intestinal schistosomiasis
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Case 17
  • The patient was treated with praziquantel and did
    not have relapse of symptoms at 2-year follow-up
  • AEC250

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Schistosomiasis 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).

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Schistosomiasis 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

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Schistosomiasis 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

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Chronic 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

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Schistosomiasis 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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S. haematobium Urine
S. japonicum
S. mansoni Stool
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Case 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

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Diagnosis?
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Investigations
  • Blood films
  • Lumbar puncture

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Blood smear
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African trypanosomiasis
  • Trypanosoma brucei gambiense

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Tsetse fly
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Treatment
  • Suramin
  • Melasoprol

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Case 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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Diagnosis?
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Blood smear
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Reduviid bug(assassin bug)
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Chagas 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

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Chagas 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

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Chagas Disease
  • Public health implications in the US
  • Chronic
  • Cardiomyopathy
  • Megaesophagus
  • Megacolon
  • Blood transfusion
  • Transplant
  • Solid organ
  • Musculoskeletal allograft tissue

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Case 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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Diagnosis?
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Taenia 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.

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Beef Tapeworm
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Treatment
  • Praziquantel
  • Albendazole
  • Niclosamide

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Tapeworms (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

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Case 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

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Case 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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Case 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

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Cystercercosis
  • 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

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Cystercercosis
  • 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.

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Cysticercosis
  • 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

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Cysticercosis
  • 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

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Cysticercosis
  • 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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Case 21
  • He was not treated with praziquantel or
    albendazole
  • He continued to receive dilantin for seizures and
    was treated with corticosteroids for edema

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Classification 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

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General rules of treatment
  • Protozoa require species-specific treatment
  • Metozoa species-specific

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General rules of treatment of metazoa
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This is just the beginning of a great adventure
in infectious diseases
  • Sine qua non
  • history and physical examination

199
Thank you
  • Lennox K. Archibald, MD, PhD, FRCP
  • lka1_at_ufl.edu
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