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Diarrheal Diseases

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Title: Diarrheal Diseases


1
Diarrheal Diseases
2
Leading Causes of Childhood Deaths
Source WHO estimates of the causes of death in
children, 2000-03 Bryce, Lancet, 26 March 2005
3
Major Causes of Death in emergencies for lt5 Years
Sudan Wad Kowli Camp February, 1985
Somalia Gedo Region 7 Camps, January, 1980
Measles ARI Malaria Diarrhea Other
Source Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Famine-Affected, Refugee, and
Displaced Populations Recommendations for Public
Health Issues. MMWR, 199241(No. RR-13)8.
4
Objectives
  • The organisms
  • Clinical features
  • Diagnosis
  • Treatment
  • Epidemiology
  • Preparedness

5
Diarrheal Diseases
  • Viruses
  • Rotavirus
  • Norovirus
  • Bacteria
  • E. coli
  • Shigella
  • Salmonella
  • Campylobacter
  • Yersinia
  • Cholera
  • Parasites
  • Giardia
  • Cryptosporidia
  • Entamoeba histiolytica



Common Causes of epidemic diarrhea
6
  • Shigella - Microbiology
  • Aerobic, non-motile, Gram negative bacilli
  • Four subgroups (many serotypes)
  • Shigella dysenteriae (group A)
  • Shigella flexneri (group B)
  • Shigella boydi (group C)
  • Shigella sonnei (group D)
  • Only reservoir people (and other primates)
  • Shigella Dysenteriae serotype 1 greatest concern

7
Shigella dysenteriae type 1(Shiga bacillus)
  • Most virulent of four serogroups of Shigella
  • Cause of epidemic dysentery
  • Bloody diarrhea
  • Abdominal cramps
  • Fever
  • Rectal pain

8
Shigella dysenteriae type 1
  • Infectious dose low (10-100 organisms)
  • Disease more severe in elderly, infants,
    malnourished
  • Complications
  • Hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS)
  • Seizures
  • Sepsis
  • Death rates 1-10

9
Shigella dysenteriae type 1
  • Diagnosis
  • Blood is observed in a fresh stool specimen
  • Stool culture
  • Organisms die quickly
  • Transport in special culture media
  • Transport cold
  • Reference laboratories
  • Resistance testing

10
Treatment in resource poor settings
  • Zinc
  • Rehydration
  • Antimicrobial Agents
  • Fluoroquinolones limited evidence for short
    course (1-2 doses) in children and adults
  • If susceptible naladixic acid, chloramphenicol,
    tetracycline
  • Less available and more expensive
    pivamdinocillin, ceftriaxone, azithromycin

11
Shigella dysenteriae type 1
  • Treatment
  • Mainstay of therapy is antimicrobials
  • Monitoring for antimicrobial resistance crucial
  • Resistant to a wide variety of antimicrobials in
    many parts of the world
  • Resistance to antimicrobials acquired rapidly
  • WHO now recommends ciprofloxacin as first-line
    empiric therapy

12
Shigella dysenteriae type 1
  • During epidemics gt33 of population can be
    infected
  • Conditions that facilitate epidemics
  • Poor sanitation
  • Substandard hygiene
  • Inadequate water supplies
  • Epidemics often occur during hot, humid, rainy
    seasons

13
Shigella dysenteriae type 1Transmission
  • Thought to be
  • Person-to-person
  • Contaminated food
  • Water
  • Contact with objects contaminated with the
    organism (fomites)
  • Sharing latrines

14
Prevention of Shigella dysenteriae infections
  • Handwashing with soap
  • Breast-feeding
  • Food safety
  • Safe water
  • Clean water supply
  • Home storage and treatment
  • No vaccines available!

15
Three Simple Rules for the Prevention of Dysentery
  • Cook your food
  • Boil your water
  • Wash your hands
  • (Make sure your neighbors wash their hands)

16
Preparation for Shigella dysenteriae type 1
Epidemics
  • Surveillance and reporting
  • Laboratory
  • Treatment policy
  • Emergency stocks of essential supplies
  • Training in case management
  • Community education about importance of
    antimicrobials in diarrhea

17
Surveillance and Reporting
  • Case definition
  • Diarrhea with visible blood
  • Laboratory confirmation of first cases!
  • Maintain case records
  • Allows accurate reporting and assists with
    maintenance of adequate supplies
  • Surveillance for antimicrobial resistance!
  • Must continue to collect stools

18
When Should an Outbreak of Dysentery Be Suspected?
  • Sudden increase in daily or weekly numbers of
    patients with bloody diarrhea
  • Increase in proportion of all cases that are
    bloody
  • Increase in deaths from bloody diarrhea

19
Questions about dysentery?
20
Vibrio cholerae
21
Vibrio Cholerae
22
Vibrio cholerae O1
  • Salt resistant
  • Heat and acid sensitive
  • El Tor biotype
  • Asymptomatic infections common
  • 75 asymptomatic
  • 18 mild diarrhea
  • 1-5 severe-cholera gravis
  • Fast growing in food
  • Lengthy survival in environment

23
Vibrio cholerae O1
  • Infectious dose 106 108
  • Varies with vehicle of transmission
  • Gastric acidity
  • Incubation period
  • 1-3 days (½-5 days)

24
Transmission-worldwide
  • Contaminated water
  • Contaminated food
  • Raw or undercooked seafood
  • Rice, cereals, gruels left at ambient temperature
  • Person to person transmission not common
  • Fecal-oral transmission is possible

25
Cholera in the world, 1960-2005
Source WHO Weekly Epi Record
26
Cholera CFR, 1960-2005
Source WHO Weekly Epi Record
27
Presentation- Rice water diarrhea
28
Presentation- Dehydration
  • Hypotension
  • Rapid thready pulse
  • Loss of skin turgor
  • Sunken eyes
  • Thirst
  • Altered mental status but arousable
  • Anuria
  • Renal failure

29
Cholera Gravis
  • Severe diarrhea
  • Vomiting
  • Muscle cramps (leg cramps)
  • Dehydration
  • Electrolyte imbalance
  • Death

30
Cholera Gravis
  • Loss of 1 liter of fluid/hour
  • gt10 of body weight
  • Hypotension in 1 hour (usually 4-12 hours)
  • Death in 2 hours (usually gt18 hours)

31
Diagnosis
  • Suspicion increased
  • Adults with dehydrating diarrhea
  • Deaths from dehydration
  • Recent travel to affected area
  • Recent consumption of high-risk foods
  • Undercooked seafood i.e. crabs, etc.
  • Lab confirmation of initial isolates!

32
Diagnosis
  • Stool culture Toxigenic Vibrio cholerae O1
  • Use Cary Blair Transport media if available
  • Viable for many days at room temperature
  • Use TCBS media for culture
  • Use V. cholerae serogroup O1 antisera
  • Confirm presence of cholera toxin
  • Cholera Rapid Test Dipsticks

33
Role of Laboratory
  • Confirmation of initial isolates in new areas
  • Monitor antibiotic susceptibility
  • Confirm when outbreak is over

34
Treatment
  • Treat all cases / suspect cases promptly
  • Assess degree of dehydration
  • Determine if rehydration should be oral or IV
  • Dont wait for laboratory confirmation to treat
  • Death rates from severe cholera can be decreased
    from 50 to lt1

35
Effect of tetracycline treatment on duration of
diarrhea
36
Recommended Antibiotics for Cholera
37
Preparedness and control
  • Cholera control committees
  • Ensure access to treatment facilities
  • Ensure adequate treatment supplies
  • Surveillance
  • Water and sanitation
  • Epidemiologic investigation
  • Public health education

38
Surveillance
  • Case definition
  • Example acute (watery) diarrhea in a person gt5
    years old
  • Laboratory confirmation of initial cases
  • Simple and sustainable
  • Dissemination of data
  • Environmental testing

39
When to investigate
  • Increase in total cases of diarrhea
  • Increase in cases of diarrhea in adults
  • Deaths caused by dehydration
  • Laboratory confirmation of cholera

40
Epidemiologic investigation
  • Ensure adequate treatment and surveillance
  • Investigate modes of transmission
  • Case-control studies
  • Household surveys
  • Environmental testing
  • Investigate unusually high case-fatality rates
  • Control measures based on investigations

41
Preparedness
  • Every health facility should have capacity for
    oral or IV rehydration
  • Train community health workers
  • identify patients
  • provide ORS for mild-moderate cases
  • redirect those with cholera gravis to health
    centers
  • Goal- 90 of health care workers trained
  • When and how to set up Cholera Treatment Centers

42
Cholera Treatment Centers
  • ORT Corners- need to be well identified
  • Cholera Treatment Centers
  • Should be ready before outbreak
  • Supplies-
  • 50 L water/ patient
  • Buckets, cholera cots, disinfectants, rubber
    gloves, clothing/bedding

43
Cholera Treatment Centers
  • Cholera Treatment Centers
  • Organization- 4 areas
  • Selection and observation
  • Hospitalization
  • Convalescent room for ORS
  • Neutral area (kitchen, materials)
  • Disinfection area
  • Safe disposal of excreta

44
(No Transcript)
45
Diarrheal Kits
  • Full treatment (4 modules)
  • 100 cases of severe cholera
  • Antibiotics for 65 adults and 60 children
  • 400 mild or moderate cases in ORT
  • 100 adults and 100 children with shigella
  • Can purchase modules separately
  • Total kit cost 5000 US

46
Water
  • Disinfection
  • Central chlorination
  • Home chlorination (storage containers)
  • Boiling water
  • Narrow necked water containers
  • Eliminate sewage cross connections
  • Ensure adequate quantities
  • Chlorine deactivated in metal need to use
    plastic buckets

47
Control measures
  • Quarantine?
  • No
  • Mass chemoprophylaxis?
  • No
  • Antibiotic treatment of family contacts?
  • Maybe
  • Vaccine?
  • Maybe?

48
Cholera Vaccines
  • 2 oral vaccines currently exist
  • Limited protection after 1 year, based on age
  • Available only for those gt2 years of age
  • Require multiple doses, 150ml of water
  • Cold chain
  • 7.00 per immunized person in Darfur
  • 18.00 per immunized person in Aceh

49
Cholera Case Study
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