Lymphatic Filariasis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

Lymphatic Filariasis

Description:

Lymphatic Filariasis Dan Imler Morning Report EPIDEMIOLOGY W. bancrofti occurs in the following regions: sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:763
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: journalfl
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Lymphatic Filariasis


1
Lymphatic Filariasis
  • Dan Imler
  • Morning Report

2
EPIDEMIOLOGY
  • W. bancrofti occurs in the following regions
    sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, the Indian
    subcontinent, many of the Pacific islands, and
    focal areas in Latin America.
  • B. malayi occurs mainly in China, India,
    Malaysia, the Philippines, Indonesia, and various
    Pacific islands.
  • B. timori is limited to the Timor Island of
    Indonesia.
  • Within endemic regions, the infection has a focal
    distribution that coincides with areas conducive
    to breeding sites for the mosquito vector.

3
(No Transcript)
4
EPIDEMIOLOGY
  • It is estimated that more than 120 million people
    worldwide are infected with one of these three
    microfilariae.
  • More than 90 percent of these infections are due
    to W. bancrofti, and the remainder are mostly due
    to B. malayi.
  • Estimates suggest that more than 40 million
    infected individuals are seriously incapacitated
    and disfigured by the disease.
  • A study from India, which accounts for 40 percent
    of the global prevalence of infection, estimated
    that a minimum of 842 million is lost each year
    there, secondary to treatment costs and working
    days lost from filariasis.

5
  • 85 of Haitis population lives in areas at risk
    of LF transmission.
  • According to a 2001 antigen survey, 117 of 133
    communes are endemic for LF.
  • In 2002, an estimated 2,130,000 people (30 of
    the total population) were thought to be
    infected.
  • The parasite responsible for LF in Haiti is
    Wuchereria bancrofti spread mainly by Culex
    mosquitoes. 

6
EPIDEMIOLOGY
  • Adult worms are gradually acquired over years,
    slowly accumulating and producing microfilariae
    in infected individuals.
  • Thus, the prevalence of microfilaremia in endemic
    communities increases with age.
  • After the third or fourth decade of life, most
    people have been exposed and the proportion of
    infected individuals remains relatively constant.

7
EPIDEMIOLOGY
  • New sensitive diagnostic tests reveal that
    lymphatic filariasis is first acquired in
    childhood, often with as many as one-third of
    children asymptomatically infected before age
    five
  • The risk of infection in childhood may be related
    to the maternal immune response during pregnancy.
    In one study of mother-newborn pairs, there was a
    13-fold increased risk of developing childhood
    Wuchereria infection, compared to uninfected
    controls, if the mother had active infection and
    there were absent filarial-specific T cell
    responses in cord blood at birth.
  • However, the risk of childhood filariasis was
    only five-fold higher if there was evidence of
    T-cell specific immunity in cord blood
    lymphocytes.

8
EPIDEMIOLOGY
  • As with most helminth infections, the adult
    parasite does not replicate within the human
    host. Thus, the adult worm burden (as opposed to
    the microfilarial burden) cannot increase once an
    individual is no longer exposed to infective
    larvae, such as after leaving an endemic region.
  • Since the mosquito vectors are not efficient
    transmitters of filariasis, a relatively
    prolonged stay in an endemic area is usually
    required for the acquisition of infection.

9
EPIDEMIOLOGY
  • Unlike most other mosquito-borne infections,
    several different mosquito species, including
    Anopheles, Culex, Aedes, and Mansonia species can
    serve as vectors for transmitting filariasis.
  • The geographic distribution of these mosquitoes
    varies, and both urban and rural transmission of
    disease occurs.
  • In many tropical and subtropical areas, the
    prevalence of infection is increasing due to
    progressive urbanization and increased breeding
    sites for the mosquito vectors.

10
LIFE CYCLE
  • W. bancrofti, B. malayi, and B. timori are all
    acquired via the bite of mosquitoes.
  • When mosquitoes bite humans, they deposit
    third-stage infective larvae into the skin.
  • These larvae travel through the dermis and enter
    local lymphatic vessels. Over a period of
    approximately nine months, these larvae undergo a
    series of molts and develop into mature adult
    worms, which range from 20 to 100 mm in length.
  • These adults reside in the lymphatics, generally
    several centimeters from lymph nodes. They
    survive for approximately five years
    (occasionally up to 12 to 15 years), during which
    time male and females worms mate and produce
    microfilariae.
  • Female parasites can release more than 10,000
    microfilariae per day into the bloodstream. These
    microfilariae are also known as embryonic or
    first-stage larvae, and measure approximately 200
    to 300 µm by 10 µm.

11
LIFE CYCLE
  • Mosquitoes, which bite infected individuals, can
    take up these circulating microfilariae. Within
    the mosquito, these embryonic larvae develop into
    second then third stage larvae over a period of
    10 to 14 days. The mosquito is then ready to bite
    and infect a new human host, thereby completing
    the life cycle.
  • The interval between acquisition of infective
    larvae from a mosquito bite and detection of
    microfilariae in the blood is known as the
    prepatent period. This interval is usually
    approximately 12 months in duration.

12
(No Transcript)
13
CLINICAL FEATURES
  • Most people infected with Brugian or Bancroftian
    filariasis in endemic areas are asymptomatic,
    since the development of symptoms relates to the
    cumulative acquisition of increasing numbers of
    worms.
  • Estimates suggest that at most one-third of
    infected individuals have clinical
    manifestations.
  • In endemic communities, clinical symptoms are not
    usually evident until adolescence or adulthood.
    The clinical course of lymphatic filariasis
    includes three distinct phases asymptomatic
    microfilaremia, acute episodes of
    adenolymphangitis (ADL), and chronic disease
    (irreversible lymphedema), which is often
    superimposed upon repeated episodes of ADL.

14
Acute adenolymphangitis
  • Acute adenolymphangitis (ADL) characteristically
    presents with the sudden onset of fever and
    painful lymphadenopathy.
  • Often there is retrograde lymphangitis, meaning
    that the inflammation spreads distally away from
    the lymph node group, which distinguishes it from
    the pattern typically associated with
    streptococcal lymphangitis.
  • ADL is thought to occur because of
    immune-mediated responses to dying adult worms.
    It can manifest in a variety of locations, but
    the inguinal nodes and lower limbs are commonly
    involved.
  • The inflammation tends to resolve spontaneously
    after four to seven days, but recurrences are
    frequent.
  • Recurrences are typically seen one to four times
    per year, but the number of attacks increases
    with increasing severity of lymphedema.
  • In addition, secondary bacterial infections can
    occur related to the breakdown of skin barriers
    in edematous or elephantatic skin or overlying
    intensely inflamed lymph nodes.

15
Worms within Lymph Vessel
16
Filarial fever
  • Another clinical syndrome is known as filarial
    fever. This is characterized by acute,
    self-limiting episodes of fever, often in the
    absence of any obvious lymphangitis or
    lymphadenopathy.
  • Because of the lack of associated features, this
    syndrome is frequently confused with other causes
    of fever in the tropics, such as malaria.

17
Tropical pulmonary eosinophilia
  • Tropical pulmonary eosinophilia is characterized
    by nocturnal wheezing.
  • It is caused by an immune hyperresponsiveness to
    microfilariae trapped in the lungs and is
    typically seen in young males.

18
Chronic Lymphedema
  • Lymphedema, or swelling of a limb related to
    chronic inflammation of the lymphatic vessels, is
    a common late sequela of filarial infection.
  • When the lymph vessels in the inguinal region are
    involved, swelling of the lower limb(s) ensues.
  • When axillary lymph nodes are involved, swelling
    of the upper limb(s) results.
  • Involvement of the breast can also occur in
    women.
  • Pitting edema is present early, but with more
    chronic inflammation, brawny edema and hardening
    of the tissues develops, eventually resulting in
    hyperpigmentation and hyperkeratosis.
  • When lymphedema is severe, it is often referred
    to as elephantiasis.

19
Chronic Lymphedema
  • The World Health Organization (WHO) has developed
    a system to grade the severity of lymphedema.
  • Grade I Pitting edema that is reversible by
    elevating the leg
  • Grade II Nonpitting edema that does not reverse
    with elevation of the extremity
  • Grade III Severe swelling with sclerosis and
    skin changes

20
Chronic Lymphedema
  • Chronic lymphatic disease can also involve the
    genitalia, resulting in the development of
    unilateral or bilateral hydroceles.
  • Hydroceles can be larger than 30 cm in diameter
    but are usually painless unless complicated by
    bacterial infection.
  • Localization of adult worms in the lymphatics of
    the spermatic cord can also lead to palpable
    thickening of the cord.
  • Lymphatic filariasis of the ovary and mesosalpinx
    has also been reported.

21
DIAGNOSIS
  • Nonspecific test abnormalities Eosinophilia up
    to 3000/microL
  • Blood examination for detection of microfilariae
    should be performed in all individuals in whom
    the diagnosis of filariasis is suspected.
    Bancroftian and Brugian filariasis tend to show
    nocturnal periodicity. Blood should be drawn
    between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. because the greatest
    number of microfilariae can be found in blood
    during this peak biting time of the mosquito
    vectors. The pattern of periodicity can be
    reversed by changing the patient's sleep-wake
    cycle.
  • Antibody tests  Serologic tests for filarial
    antibodies which detect elevated levels of IgG
    and IgE are available
  • Antigen tests  Different methods for detection
    of antigen in the blood have been attempted using
    various monoclonal antibodies.

22
(No Transcript)
23
TREATMENT
  • Diethylcarbamazine  DEC is not distributed for
    use in the United States but can be obtained from
    the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    (CDC) under an Investigational New Drug (IND)
    protocol
  • Ivermectin  Studies have established that
    ivermectin given as a single dose in Bancroftian
    filariasis reduces microfilaremia by
    approximately 90 percent even one year after
    treatment
  • Albendazole  has also been used in filarial
    infections. Prolonged courses of high dose
    albendazole have a significant macrofilaricidal
    effect and result in a gradual decrease in
    microfilarial levels.
  • Doxycycline  Initial studies suggested that
    coxycycline, which has good activity against
    Wolbachia, leads to sterility of adult worms

24
Workers in Port-au-Prince clean sea salt before
spraying it with a deworming drug and bagging it.
The treated salt is then sold at a loss to
Haitians.
Mass drug administration  This approach reduces
both the transmission of infection and disease
morbidity. The hypothesis is that once
populations have been treated long enough, levels
of microfilaremia will remain below that required
to sustain transmission. This period has been
estimated to be four to six years, corresponding
to the usual reproductive lifespan of the adult
parasite. Ideally, programs should focus on
treating both adults and children.
25
  • Uptodate.com
  • Diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of
    lymphatic filariasis
  • Epidemiology, pathogenesis, and clinical
    features of lymphatic filariasis
  • NYtimes.com
  • Beyond Swollen Limbs, a Disease's Hidden Agony
  • http//www.nytimes.com/2006/04/09/world/americas/
    09lymph.html
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com