Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRhoda Bailey Modified over 9 years ago
1
Schistosomiasis: A Common Diagnosis in Tanzania Anna Person, MD PGY-3
2
43 year old male presents to Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre in Moshi, Tanzania… One week of melena Progressive abdominal distension One day of hemetemesis No hx of fever, cough, diarrhea Works as a farmer in the rice paddies No past medical history No medications
3
Exam BP 86/50, HR 121, Temp 36.5 C, RR 21 Thin male in mild distress HEENT- pale conjunctiva CV- regular rate and rhythm, no murmurs Pulm- clear to ascultation bilaterally Ab- distended, dullness to percussion, palpable, enlarged liver and spleen Ext- no edema
4
Studies Hb- 5, Hct- 15 Abdominal US- markedly enlarged spleen, somewhat enlarged liver, heterogenous in appearance Endoscopy (available at KCMC)- bleeding esophageal varices identified
5
Schistosomiasis Trematode infecting over 200 million worldwide 1 Transmitted through skin while wading in freshwater S. hematobium (Africa and Middle East) kidney and bladder S. mansoni (Africa, ME, Carribean, S. America), japonicum (Asia), mekongi (Asia) liver
6
Life Cycle of Schistosomes
7
Life Cycle Females produce eggs which release larvae into water Larvae seek out snails and become sporocyts and then cercarial larvae Cercarial larvae leave the snail and penetrate intact skin of humans
8
Transmission www.humanillnesses.com/.../Schistosomiasis.html
9
Transmission, cont. Once in humans they become schistosomulae These migrate into the arterial circulation Then they reach the liver and mature into adults (within 4 weeks) Worms can live up to 30 years 2
10
Acute Schistosomiasis (Katayama fever) Usually occurs 14-84 days from initial contact Fever, headache, myalgias, bloody diarrhea, abdominal pain, hives Respiratory symptoms can occur in up to 70% of those infected with S. mansoni 3 A clinical diagnosis antibody titers can take 3 months to be positive 5
11
Acute schistosomiasis: case report 4 16 patients between ’94-’95 All had been in sub-Saharan Africa Dominant symptoms were fever, lethargy Symptoms began on average 36 days after exposure 14/16 had eosinophilia, 12/16 had negative stool microscopy All were treated with praziquantel, 8 required further courses of tx
12
Chronic Schistosomiasis Long-term sequelae caused by granuloma formation (immune response to antigens from schistosome) 6 Small subset with high burden of organisms (S. mansoni and S. japonicum) develop periportal fibrosis causes portal hypertension, esophageal varices, etc
13
Chronic Schistosomiasis, cont. S. hematobium infections hematuria, fibrosis of bladder and ureters, effects on kidneys (protenuria) Causes many types of bladder cancer 75% are squamous, 20% are transitional cell, 5% are adenocarcinoma, more common in men than women 7
14
Genitourinary Schistosomiasis: a study at KCMC Retrospective analysis of pathologic specimens from 1999-2005 at KCMC in Moshi, Tanzania 8 Schistosomiasis diagnosed histo- pathologically in 423 specimens 125 of these specimens were found in female genitourinary tract (cervix in 71 cases)
15
Burden of genitourinary schistosomiasis Main symptoms reported were bleeding (48%), ulcer (17%), tumor (20%), lower abdominal pain (11%), and infertility (7%). Authors conclude that genitourinary schisto is underrecognized cause of disease burden in women in Moshi, Tanzania
16
Diagnosis Sometimes a clinical diagnosis if other tests not available Peripheral eosinophilia can be suggestive Microscopic examination of feces and urine for eggs sensitivity unknown Serologic tests for antischistosomal antibodies, ELISA tests reported to be >90% sensitive and >95% specific PCR not widespread
17
Treatment Praziquantel. 20mg/kg po bid for 1 day (two total doses) for S. hematobium, intercalatum, and mansoni 20mg/kg po tid for 1 day (three total doses) for S. japonicum and S. mekongi 9 Steroids often used w/ praziquantel in acute schisto
18
Reducing Morbidity Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger annual mass- treatments of schoolchildren w/ praziquantel. In Burkina Faso, prevalence went from 90% to <5% after one year. 10 WHO has adopted a Resolution 54.19, which aims to treat 75% of all school-age children at risk for morbidity due to schistosomiasis by 2010 11.
19
References 1,3 Ross, A et al: Current Concepts: Schistosomiasis. N Engl J Med 346:1212, 2002 2 Arnon, R. Life span of parasite in schistosomiasis patients. Isr J Med Sci 1990; 26:404. 4,5 Doherty, JF et al. Lesson of the Week: Katayama fever: an acute manifestation of schistosomiasis. BMJ 1996;313(7064):1071. 6 Boros DL, et al. Delayed hypersensitivity-type granuloma formation and dermal reaction induced and elicited by a soluble factor isolated from Schistosoma mansoni eggs. J Exp Med 1970;132:488-507. 7 Ghoneim MA, Radical cystectomy for carcinoma of the bladder: critical evaluation of the results in 1,026 cases. J Urol. 1997 Aug;158(2):393-9. 8 Swai, B et al. Female genital schistosomiasis as an evidence of a neglected cause for reproductive ill-health: a retrospective histopathological study from Tanzania. BMC Infectious Disease 2006, 6:134. 9 Gilbert et al. The Sanford Guide to Antimicrobial Therapy: 36 th Edition, 2006. 10 Garba, A et al. Implementation of national schistosomiasis control programmes in West Africa. Trends in Parasitology. 2006 July; Volume 22, Issue 7, 322-326. 11 http://www.who.int/wer. Weekly Epidemiological Record, No.16; 2006, 81, 145-164. http://www.who.int/wer
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.