Title: Infectious Disease in Sports
1Infectious Disease in Sports
- Britt Marcussen, MD
- Department of Family Medicine
- University of Iowa
2UI Sports Medicine 6-0
3Seeking Sponsorship ?
4Influenza
- Definition Influenza or flu is an infection
caused by the influenza viruses. Influenza
spreads around the world in seasonal epidemics
that result in 250,000 to 500,000 deaths each
year (41,000 on average in the US). Occasional
pandemics occur when a particularly virulent and
contagious strain of flu have been know to cause
50 million deaths.
5Classification
- There are three viral types A/B/C
- A The most virulent and responsible for all
pandemics thus far. Mutates rapidly - B Not as virulent. Mutates slower. Humans
have some baseline immunity. - C Much less common and usually only produces
mild symptoms.
6Influenza Viral Structure
- Envelope Contains the glycoprotein's
Hemaggutinin (binding) and Neuraminidase
(release) and thus the H N classification. - Core contains the RNA that contains the genes
for protein coding - During viral replication because there are no RNA
proofreading enzymes errors in transcription
occur, thus altering the surface proteins. These
mutations are what is responsible for antigenic
drift.
7Signs and Symptoms
- The typical presentation is fairly rapid onset of
fever, chills and body aches. Other symptoms can
include HA, cough, nasal congestion and sore
throat. You can also get GI symptoms of nausea,
vomiting and diarrhea especially in children.
None of these clinical symptoms or signs are
particularly specific and are common to most of
the hundreds of known respiratory viruses
8Morbidity/Mortality
- Increased in the young (lt5), old (gt65) and those
with other co morbid conditions. - Death is usually the result of a secondary
infection, usually pneumonia. - During pandemics the excess mortality is in
younger patient population and is a result of the
cytokine storm induced by the virus which leads
to pulmonary edema and hemorrhage.
9Transmission
- Possible mechanism of spread
- Direct transmission from hard surfaces
- Direct transmission for large particle contact
(up to 1 meter away) - Inhalation of suspended particle (5micrometer)?.
- The virus can live on hard surfaces up three days
and in mucus for up to two weeks!
10Testing
- Rapid test for A/B are available and are
reasonably accurate (sensitivity 50-70 and
specificity of 90-95). - They are most accurate during the first 4-5 days.
- Test only when results will influence decision
making( i.e., hospitalized patients, considering
treatment of the individual or contacts/infection
control). During outbreaks in patient with
typical symptoms no testing is necessary.
11Treatment
- Must start within 48 hours!
- At best decreases the duration of illness by 1-2
days. - It is unclear whether treatment decreases the
severity of symptoms, complications or mortality.
12Treatment
- Agents Amantidine, rimantidine, oseltamivir
(Tamiflu), zanamivir (Relenza). - The adamantanes are not currently recommended due
to high resistance rates, but this may change! - Most healthy adults with no risk factors for
complications require no treatment.
13Treatment
- High risk groups
- Pregnancy up to two weeks postpartum
- The young and old (lt5 and gt65)
- Chronic medical conditions (CV/pulmonary disease,
renal/hepatic disease, diabetes,
immunosuppressed, 19 yos or younger on aspirin,
obesity/BMI over 30 - Severe disease/pronounce lower respiratory tact
symptoms. - Prophylaxis of close contacts is not generally
recommended, especially if 48 hours has passed
since the time of exposure.
14Prevention
- The infectious period starts 24 hour prior to the
onset of symptoms and at least for 24 hour after
fever abates. - Stay home until fever free for 24 hours. For
health care workers its or 7 days which ever is
longer! - Patients on antiviral are considered infectious
until they have completed at least 4 days of
therapy. - Surgical masks are recommended for health care
workers caring for suspected cases. - General Advise Wash your hands, dont pick your
nose, avoid sick people, eat well, sleep well and
avoid stress. - Medical offices Triage/vaccination of
staff/masking/designated waiting areas.
15Vaccination
- Advised for everyone over 6 months of age.
- This years vaccine will include H1N1, a seasonal
H3N2 and a B component. - There are two vaccines available an inactivated
injectable form and a live attenuated intranasal
form - Why everyone
- An estimated 85 of the population has and
indication for vaccination. - People under 50 do get ill and spread infection.
- We are now able to supply the vaccine.
16Vaccination
- Special populations and considerations
- One dose if 8 and older, 2 dose 4 weeks apart if
8 and under and did not receive at least one dose
of the 2009 H2N1 vaccine plus at least one dose
of seasonal flu vaccine previousely. - No nasal vaccine for those under 2 or over 50.
Pregnancy, age lt19 and on aspirin, lung disease,
diabetes, weakend immune system, kidney failure. - No vaccine at all if you have a severe egg
allergy, history of Gillain-Barre within 6 weeks
of previous vaccination. - Multidose vial contains Mercury.
- 6-35 months get ½ dose.
- Avoid Fluviron in those 8 and under due to fever
and febrile seizure risk. - If 65 and older consider high dose Fluzone (4x
the antigen). - Better immune response but ? better protection.
17Vaccination
- NNT in Health Adults (Cochrane review)
- Under ideal conditions (vaccine match) 33
- Under usual conditions 100
- One case of vaccine related Gillian
Barre/million vaccinated. - 15/36 studies were industry sponsored.
- Vaccine effectiveness under the age of two is not
yet established despite the guild lines. - may not need to change from year to year.
- New DNA vaccine to the inner less variable part
of the HA protein shows some promise and -The
are over 200 viruses that cause influenza like
illness which represent about 90 of the
circulating virus each year.
18Summary of Last Years Flu Season
- Overall vaccination coverage was 41, 27 for
H1N1. - H1N1 was very wide spread peaking in June/July
and again in October. - Deaths from April 09 to April 10 were
approximately 12,470. 9,570 were in the 18-64
year age group! In an average year up to 40,000
deaths will be attributed to flu. - Hospitalizations were approximately 274,000 with
160,000 from the 18-64 age group.
19Summary of Last Years Flu
- 2009 NEJM 3691935-1944
- Looked at 272 hospitalized patients
- 45 were lt18 50 were 18-65
- In a usual year 60 of the hospitalized
patients will be gt65. - New obesity link?
- 45 of hospitalized patients were obese
201918 Pandemic Prospective
- Mortality was 10-20 primarily young adults
(cytokine storm-massive hemorrhage) - WW1 troop movement and close quarters help
facilitate the spread - 3-6 of the global population died (50-100
million) - 500,000 to 700,000 died in the US (more than in
the war). - In Samoa 90 of the population died.
- The virus has been identified as an Avian H1N1
virus and sequenced from frozen remains in Alaska
and preserved soldiers. - Will modern medicine help when this type of stain
emerges again? Vaccination/antibiotics/better
equipped hospitals.
21Influenza and Sports
- Asian Youth Games 2009 (BJSM 2010 44528-532).
- 1210 athletes, 810 staff from 43 countries one
week after WHO declared H1N1 a pandemic. - All athletes had twice daily temp. recorded
- Any athlete with flu like symptoms was tested and
if positive placed on medication put in
isolation. Close contacts were placed on
medication and quarantined. - Masks and thermometers were provided to all
athletes and officials. - All confirmed cases of H1N1 were admitted to the
Hospital for isolation after special transport
was arranged. Close contacts were placed on
medication and isolated at government quarantine
facilities for 7 days. Close contact was defined
as 2m for more than one hour. - Temperature scanners were place at strategic
locations in the games village. - Medical care was made available 24/7 to all
participants family and staff. With hot zone and
cold zone triage. All medical staff in the hot
zone were required to wear gloves/gowns/N95
masks. Mobile high efficiency air filter systems
were installed in the hot zone. - 6 cases, 42 quarantined, no event outbreaks were
identified.
22- Case Football team arrives and passes through
thermal scans. After arrival 2 team members who
did not make the trip due to illness are found to
have H1N1. First match is the next day. What do
you do?
23- Emergency panel assembles and determines that all
are close contacts. - All 21 team/team personal are screened. 4 are
positive, the rest are quarantined.
24The Athlete and Influenza
- Athletes may be at higher risk during times of
high training load and stress. -
- Athletes may be at higher risk due to close
contact with other athletes during training and
competition. - Athletes may be at higher risk due to there
living/travel circumstances -
- Athletes may be at higher risk due to sharing of
water bottles towel and other personal items. - Good hygiene and infectious control measure
should be stressed.
25The Athlete and Influenza
- We should do are best to recognizes the typical
symptoms of flu in our athletes and staff (i.e.,
abrupt onset of f/c/HA/cough/ST/rhinnorhea) and
treat if appropriate and minimize exposing
others. PPV 79-88 - Not all need to be seen in the clinic as
uncomplicated cases resolve in 3-7 days. - Cough and malaise can last several weeks so
training loads may need adjusting. - We need to be aware of the incubation periods are
1-4 days. Viral shedding occurs for 24 hour
prior to symptoms and lasts 5-10 days.
26Return to Play
- Must be individualized based on
- Symptom severity
- Fever/myalgia/severe cough warrant activity
limitation (neck check) - Symptom duration/infectious period.
- Sport and current demand
- Must include monitoring for secondary
infection/pneumonia.
27Influenza Update
- Flu is sporadic in Iowa at the moment but
increasing. - Both influenza A and B have been identified.
- All strains so far (including H1N1) are covered
by the vaccine.
28Mononucleosis in Athletes
- Infectious Mononucleosis (IM) is a common medical
condition effecting thousands of young athletes
each year. - It an important clinical entity for the sports
medicine team for several reasons - It can have a profound and somewhat lasting
effect on athletic performance. - There are a number of potentially serious
complications including splenic rupture. - Therefore, there are often complex and difficult
decisions for the medical team regarding return
to play.
29Goals
- Describe the etiology and pathophysiology of IM.
- Describe the clinical presentation of IM.
- Provide guidelines for making the diagnosis of
IM. - Discuss the potential complications IM focusing
on splenic rupture. - Discuss treatment and RTP.
30Epidemiology
- IM is cause by Epstein Barr Virus (EBV) a herpes
virus. - The peak incidence of clinical IM is in
adolescents and young adults. - Between 30-70 of freshman remain vulnerable.
- The risk of developing IM is between 1-3 per
year. - In childhood it is often subclinical or difficult
to distinguish from other respiratory illness. - It is more likely to be symptomatic and severe
the older you are when you acquire the infection. - Eventually 90-95 of the adult population will
show serologic evidence of infection. - The incidence clinical infection in the US is 30
times higher in whites compared to blacks.
31Transmission and Pathogenesis
- EBV is transmitted primarily through saliva thus
its popular description as the kissing disease - Other possible modes of spread include sexual
contact, sneezing and the sharing cups and food. - Host cells include epithelial cells/monocytes/B
lymphocytes and T lymphocytes. - The incubation is as long as 30-50 days.
- The virus is shed for weeks to months.
- There is evidence of intermittent shedding in
oral secretions for decades. - Despite the bodies immune response to the virus
it enters a dormant phase.
32Clinical Features
- Sore throat (82), fever (76) and fatigue (76)
are the most common clinical symptoms - Clinical Findings/Signs
- Lymphadenopathy Posterior cervical
chaingtanterior. Auxiliary and inguinal nodes can
be involved. Node are often large and tender. - Pharyngitis Exudates are seen in 30-50 or more
and can be white to gray. Hypertrophy may be
impressive. Palatal petechiae can be present.
Group A Strep can be present in up to
30...colonization?
33Clinical Features
- Fatigue
- May be persistent and severe.
- May have a fair amount of daily variability
- Women seem to have more severe and more prolonged
fatigue. - Usually resolves in one month but may last up to
six. - Performance may lag for 3 months.
- A small subset of patients will have persistent
fatigue. The reasons for this are unclear.
34Clinical Features
- Skin
- a rash can be present and can be maculopapular to
urticarial to petechial. - Rash development after administration of
Amoxicillin (up to 95 of the time) is common but
can occur with other antibiotics (40-60 with
other beta lactams). - Petecial rash should alert you to check for
hematologic complications (aplastic anemia,
thrombocytopenia, hemolytic anemia, HUS, DIC) - Petechiae and any GI symptoms seems to predict a
longer and more severe course. - Periorbital edema
35Clinical Features
- Abdominal
- Splenomegaly
- Probably occurs in most cases but clinically
detectable in 15-65 as the sensitivity and
specificity of the clinical exam is 20-70 and
69-100 respectively. This may be even worse in
our athletes many of whom have well developed
musculature making it even more difficult to
detect. Be aware there are reported cases of
rupture from too vigorous an examination! More
to come. - Hepatomegaly
- Can occur but is much less common.
Transaminases can be elevated but are not
clinically important to follow. - Neurologic These are rare occurring in only 1-5
of cases - Guillain-Barre, Facial Nerve Palsy, encephalitis,
meningitis, transverse myelitis and other
neuritis.
36Differential Diagnosis
- HIV-rash, GI symptoms, cough, weight loss etc
- Group A Strep-Seasonal, no posterior chain nodes,
no splenomegaly, less tonsillar hypertrophy, less
fatigue more fever. - Cytomegalovirus-Usually minimal to no sore
throat, otherwise can look very similar. - Toxoplasma Gondii-small anterior tender
andenopathy. - Human Herpes Simplex 6/7
37Laboratory Testing
- The most common lab finding with IM is
lymphocytosis defined as gt4500/mcl or gt50.
Atypical Lymphocyte count of gt10 on a peripheral
smear. - The monospot test or the heterophile antibody
test is a group of IgM antibodies that cross
react with antigens found on sheep and horse
blood cells. - Sensitivity increase through the first few weeks
of illness with false negatives of 25 in the 1st
week falling to 5 by week 3. - Once present the test can stay positive for up to
1 year. - In the presents of typical symptoms the test has
a sensitivity of around 85 and a specificity of
approximately 94 - Patients with HIV type 1/cancer/lupis can
generate false positive results.
38Laboratory Continued
- Specific IgM and IgG to viral capsid antigens
(VCA) can be measure when the diagnosis is in
doubt. Sensitivity and specificity for IM is 97
and 94 respectively. - IgG takes weeks to appear and indicates in most
cases old infection. - IgM appears early in the disease usually
disappears by 3-6 months but can persist in up to
20. - IgG to the nuclear antigen (EBNA) can also be
measured. This can be detected starting around
6-12 weeks and indicates that the virus is
entering the latent phase. Therefore, it can be
used to help exclude an acute infection. - All of these tests are useful primarily in cases
when the diagnosis is in question or you suspect
a false negative monospot.
39Immune Response
40Laboratory
- Many patients with IM will have a mild hepatitis.
Liver Function tests can be mildly elevated. - There is no correlation of LFT elevation and
spleen size. - There is no evidence to support the use of
serially monitoring as a guild to clinical
improvement or return to play.
41Laboratory Summary
- Patients with a clinical picture consistent with
IM should have a CBC and a herterophile test - If the heterophile test is positive then no more
testing is needed. - If the heterophile test is negative and the
clinical suspicion is high then a repeat test can
be performed in a week. - If the clinical syndrome is prolonged or symptoms
are atypical then VCA IgM and IgG and EBNA IgG
can be measured.
42Complications
- Most patients who contract IM have an
uncomplicated and often subclinical course thus
require only supportive care. - Severe complications occur in less than 5 and
include - Airway obstruction
- Dehydration
- Splenic rupture
- Aplastic anemia/thrombocytopenia
- Neurologic-GB/Meningitis, encephalitis
- Myocarditis
- Lymphoma
- HUS
- DIC
- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome?
43Treatment
- Antiviral medication
- 5 randomized trials of acyclovir have show
decrease viral shedding during treatment only.
No significant effect on clinical symptoms or
duration of illness has been demonstrated - One small trial (20 patients) with valacyclovir
did show a reduction in the number and severity
of symptoms scores.
44Treatment
- Corticosteroids (Cochrane review 2010)
- 17 studies most with low patient numbers and
widely varying methodology. - Return to work/school-2 studies no change
- There may be an early effect of reduced severity
of ST at 12-24 hours, but this effect is lost 36
hours. - In one study using both steroid and acyclovir
showed diminished symptoms at 2 and 4 days.
Furthermore, the ST was gone at 7 days in the
treatment group and 9 days in the placebo group
but no statistic significance was reported.
45Treatment
- Fatigue-2 studies and no change with steroid use
was noted. - Steroid plus valacyclovir showed slight
improvement but the study was underpowered. - Fever
- Steroids in three trials found modest reduction
in the number of days of fever. - One trial of steroids and acyclovir showed no
difference.
46Treatment
- None of the studies systematically tracked
complications that may have resulted from
corticosteroid treatment - Corticosteroid use suppresses the hosts immune
response and predisposes to secondary infections. - In these studies there was one reported case of
acute diabetes, one peri-tonsillar cellulites and
one empyema. - It is unknown what effect using an
immunomodulator will have on the risk of EBV
associated malignancies.
47Treatment
- The conclusion is that there is not enough data
to recommend corticosteroids or antivirals for
the treatment of uncomplicated IM. - It is probably reasonable to use corticosteroids
in cases in which significant respiratory,
neurologic or hematologic complications arise.
48Treatment
- Vaccines
- Trails using vaccine developed against the
glycoprotein subunit of the virus did not appear
to protect against acquiring infection but were
less likely to have symptoms.
49EBV Autoimmune Disorders and Cancer
- Association of symptomatic EBV infections and
various autoimmune processes and cancers have
been identified including - Burkitts Lymphoma-virtually all African patients
with BL have high titers of EBV - Hodgkins Lymphoma-EBV nucleic acids in 20-40.
- Nasopharyngeal carcinoma
- Multiple Sclerosis
50Airway Obstruction/Complicated Cases
- This is a result of marked tonsillar enlargement,
autoimmune processes and lymphoid infiltration. - Can be treated with corticosteroids (i.e.,
prednisone at 40-80 mg/day) /- antivirals. - Clinical expert opinion still favors their use of
corticosteroids in cases of severe tonsillar
hypertrophy with upper airway obstruction and in
cases involving hemolytic anemia,
thrombocytopenia or myocarditis.
51Splenic Rupture
- Splenomegaly is nearly always present with IM,
but rupture is rare (0.1-0.2). - It tends to occur in the first three weeks of
illness and can be traumatic or spontaneous.
Cases of splenic rupture have been reported out
to 7 weeks. - Even in the case of rupture fatalities are rare.
52Splenic Rupture
- The nature of athletics puts this population at
particularly high risk for this complication. - Many have advocated that the spleen be normal
prior to return to contact sports. - The problem is that radiologic assessment of the
spleen is difficult due to individual variability
and lack of normative data for the athletic
population.
53Splenic Imaging
- The spleen can be imaged with CT or ultrasound.
CT offers superior detailed imaging but
significant radiation exposure therefore
ultrasound has become the image modality of
choice in determining spleen size. - In cases of suspected rupture CT would be the
image modality of choice.
54The Problem with Athletes
- Normative data for spleen size in adults shows
that the upper limits of normal are 12-14 cm in
length (linear length correlates highly with CT
volume). - Spleen size correlates with height and in tall
athletes. In one study of tall athletes 30 of
the men and 13 of the women were shown to have
lengths greater than 12. - There is a lot of variability in spleen size.
Hosey et al. showed spleen size correlated
reasonable well with body size. The average
spleen was 10.65 with a range of 5.59-17.06 cm.
Males and females differed significantly even
when height and weight were controlled for. - In a recent study done by Cockle et al. showed a
mean length of 12.19 in 66 tall athletes.
55What to do with the Spleen?
- The data suggest that due to the variable nature
of normal spleen size in the athlete population
using population based normative data to
determine spenomegaly is suspect at best. - Therefore, a single measurement of spleen size in
an athlete with IM is of limited utility.
56Return to Play
- The timing of RTP is complicated by the following
factors - The incubation period for IM is 4-7 weeks and the
symptom onset can be insidious thus making
pinpointing the onset of illness difficult and
calling into question the studies looking at the
timing of splenic rupture relative to symptom
onset. - Currently there is not a reliable means
determining if the spleen is back to its normal
size in the athletic population in particular.
57Return to Play
- Current best advice
- Prior to RTP all athletes should be afebrile,
well hydrated, asymptomatic (good energy level)
and have no palpable spleen. - A minimum of 3 weeks should have elapsed since
symptom onset prior to returning to any
non-contact activities. - The timing of return to strenuous activity and
contact is controversial. This would include
such activities as weight lifting/rowing or any
activity requiring valsalva. Returning athletes
to these activities should be handled more
conservatively. - The risk of transmission from athlete to athlete
is low except in close contact sports such as
wrestling and therefore is not an issue in RTP in
most situations. - Little is know regarding whether early return to
activity impacts the nature time course of the
illness. - Imaging of the spleen is of limited utility due
to lack or normative data and the high degree of
individual variability in splenic size.
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