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EPIDEMIOLOGY OF LEPTOSPIROSIS

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Title: EPIDEMIOLOGY OF LEPTOSPIROSIS


1
EPIDEMIOLOGY OF LEPTOSPIROSIS
CONTROL MEASURES
Dr.I.Selvaraj
2
  • Leptospirosis is an acute anthropo-zoonotic
    infection
  • It occurs in tropical, subtropical and temperate
    zones.
  • Weil Disease, Hemorrhagic Jaundice, Mud Fever,
    Swineherd Disease,Canicola Fever, seven-day fever
    found commonly in Japan, Cane cutters disease in
    Australia, Rice field Leptospirosis in Indonesia
    , Fort Bragg fever in U.S.Andaman haemorrhagic
    fever(AHF)

3
L2 - Endemic Locations where the infection is
commonplace, caused by high rainfall, close human
contact with livestock or wild animals, poor
sanitation or workplace exposure (rice farming,
etc). Example countries in class L2 are India,
Central America and certain areas of the Pacific
Rim. L1 - General Locations where the infection
is at the international average of 0.05 cases per
100,000, and infection is usually the result of
accidental exposure through wild rats, livestock
or direct contact with water through leisure or
occupation. Example countries in class L1 are
North America, Europe, Australia and the former
Soviet territories.
4
  • 1883 it was recognized as an occupational disease
    of sewer workers
  • 1886 first description (by Weil, Professor of
    Medicine at Heidelberg (1886) ) of the clinical
    manifestations seen in men (severe jaundice,
    fever, and hemorrhage with renal involvement)
  • 1907- Stimson described the lesion in the renal
    tubules who died of so called yellow fever.
  • 1916 the causal agent was identified by Inada in
    Japan
  • Noguchi proposed the name Leptospira (thin
    spirals) in 1918
  •  

5
SERO POSITIVITY RATE - INDIA
  • 2000-2001 0 to 46.8
  • S.India 25.6
  • N.India 8.3
  • W.India 3.5
  • E.India 3.1
  • C.India 3.3

6
  • INDIA
  • The first of its kind in India was reported in
    the 1920s from Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
  • In 1993, a serosurvey of conservancy workers in
    Madras (using MAT) revealed a prevalence rate of
    32.9.
  • In 1994, an increase in the number of individuals
    with uveitis was noted at Aravind Eye hospital,
    Madurai, India after an epidemic of leptospirosis
    in South India the epidemic followed severe
    flooding of the Tamil Nadu District in the autumn
    of 1993
  • In 1995, a seroprevalence rate of 12
    leptospirosis was found among febrile and
    jaundice patients in Pondicherry

7
LEPTOSPIROSIS IN INDIA In 1905, Chowdry
presented 585 cases of the disease in the Andaman
islands, calling it "malaria with jaundice". In
the Andamans, this disease was also called as
"Andaman haemorrhagic fever" with a predominance
of haemorrhagic signs. In Kerala, it was the
same type as seen in the Andamans. In Chennai
city, the most severe form was jaundice and a
haemorrhagic type. Of late, eye disorders as
late complications of leptospirosis have been
recorded in Madurai. Cardiac arrhythmias in
Mysore are the latest reports on the
manifestations of the disease.
8
  • Classification
  • Phylum Spirochaetes
  • Class Spirochaetes
  • Order Spirochaetales
  • Species Leptospira
  • Family Leptospiraceae

9
  • The genera Leptospira contains three species,
    namely L interrogans, L biflexa and L parva. The
    first includes 23 serogroups and more than 250
    serovars and is the principal cause of
    leptospirosis in humans and animals. most common
    being L. canicola, L. hardjo and L. hebdomadis.
  • Two types of leptospirosis
  • 1. Anicteric leptospirosis or self-limited
    illness (85 to 90 of the cases)
  • 2. Icteric leptospirosisor weils syndrome
    (5 to 10 )

10
  • The etiologic agent of leptospirosis is
    Leptospira interrogans.
  • It is a thin spiral organism 0.1mm x 6 - 20mm,
    with tightly set coils
  • It is characterized by very active motility, by
    rotating (spinning) and bending. Usually one or
    both ends of this single-cell organism are bent
    or hooked
  • Because of their narrow diameter, the leptospires
    are best visualized by dark-field illumination or
    phase contrast microscopy and they do not stain
    readily with aniline dyes.

11
  • A microscopic view of LeptospiraI bacteria
    stained apple green with a fluorescent dye (from
    the CDCs Public Health Image Library)

12
  • Reservoirs
  • Wild and domestic animals rodents, livestock
    (cattle, horses, sheep, goats, swine), canines,
    and wild mammals are the reservoir for
    leptospirosis. Many animals have prolonged
    leptospiruria without suffering from the disease
    themselves.

13
  • Modes of Transmission
  • By direct or indirect contact of nasal, oral, or
    eye mucosal membranes or abraded or traumatized
    skin with urine or carcasses of infected animals.
  • Urine Indirect exposure through water, soil, or
    foods contaminated by urine from infected animals
    is the most common route. After a short period of
    circulating high levels of the spirochete in
    their blood, animals shed the spirochete in their
    urine, contaminating the environment.
  • Inhalation of droplet aerosols of contaminated
    fluids can occasionally occur.

14
  • Incubation period
  • The incubation period is usually 2-26 days, but
    usually (7 12 days) days.
  • Period of Communicability or Infectious Period
  • Humans with leptospirosis usually excrete
    the organism in the urine for 4-6
    weeks and occasionally for as long as 18 weeks.
  • Person-to-person transmission is considered
    extremely rare.

15
  • Cases are seen sporadically throughout the year.
    But an outbreak occurs during the rainy season
    because of widespread contamination by infected
    rodent urine in flood water.
  • Rodents are displaced from their burrows and
    drains by the water.
  • High humidity and heavy rainfall intensify the
    outbreak.
  • Rats and bandicoots distribute more virulent
    leptospires through their urine into the
    environment than other animals.

16
  • COMPLICATIONS
  • Azotemia
  • Oliguria
  • Hemorrhage
  • Purpura
  • Hemolysis
  • Gastrointestinal bleeding
  • Hypoprothrombinemia and Thrombocytopenia

17
Differential diagnosis
  • Influenza
  • Meningitis (encephalitis)
  • Viral hepatitis
  • Rickettsiosis
  • Typhoid fever
  • Septicemia
  • Toxoplasmosis
  • Legionnaires disease
  • If with jaundice during or after an acute
    febrile illness,
  • Malaria,septicemia, alcoholic hepatitis and
    typhoid fever

18
  • Direct Evidence
  • Demonstration of leptospires or their products
  • Microscopy
  • Dark-field microscopy
  • Phase contrast microscopy

19
  • Indirect Evidence
  • Detection of antibodies to leptospira
  • Macroscopic agglutination test (MSAT)
  • Indirect fluorescent antibody test (IFAT)
  • Indirect haemagglutination test (IHA)
  • Counter immuno electrophoresis (CIEP)
  • Complement fixation test (CFT)
  • Newer techniques
  • ELISA
  • Microcapsule agglutination test (MCAT)
  • Lepto-Dipstick
  • Serogroup/serovar specific tests
  • Microscopic agglutination test (MAT)
  • Serovar specific ELISA

20
  • Demonstration of a rise in antibody levels either
    through MAT or ELISA is essential by repeating
    the sampling at least four days after taking the
    first sample.
  • In Chennai, the MAT test is available at the
    Veterinary University, Madhvaram, the MGR Medical
    University, Guindy and the microbiology
    department of the Madras Medical College.
  • The IgM dip stick ELISA is commercially available
    from Organon Teknika (Infar India) and Pan Bio
    (Australia). Using this test could help detect
    leptospirosis during the acute (early) phase of
    the illness.

21
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23
TREATMENT
  • Penicillin 6 million units daily I.V (10-14 days)
  • Amoxycillin, Erythromycin, Doxycycline
  • Patients with MOF(Multi organ failure) to be
    observed and treated in intensive care unit

24
  • PREVENTION
  • Environmental Measures
  • To prevent illness, prevent contamination of
    living, working and recreational areas by urine
    of infected animals.
  • Control rodent populations in areas of human
    habitation.
  • Domestic animal owners should take necessary
    precautions to minimize their animals potential
  • contact with wildlife ( e.g., do not feed pets
    outside or allow animals to roam unsupervised).
  • Do not allow animals to urinate in or near ponds
    or pools.
  • Keep animals away from gardens, playgrounds,
    sandboxes, and other places children may play.
  • Among domesticated animals, vaccination of
    swine, cattle, and dogs.
    Cont

25
  • Chlorination is seldom useful, as virulent
    leptospires withstand up to 4 ppm in potable
    water.
  • Filtered water is not safe.
  • Using boiled or ultraviolet irradiated water is
    advisable.
  • Water tanks must be sealed if possible.
  • Food articles must be stored in properly fitting
    containers.
  • Bathroom and kitchen waste pipes must be blocked
    at night.
  • Try avoiding walking in flood water. If you have
    to, wear gum boots.
  • Heavy drinking and smoking predispose damage to
    the liver and the kidneys which in turn become
    vulnerable to leptospiral infection.

26
  • PREVENTION
  • Protected water supply to all.
  • Proper collection, transport, treatment and
    secured disposal of garbage.
  • Drinking boiled water.
  • Disinfections of contaminated work areas.
  • Providing proper protective clothing, shoes,
    gloves, etc. to high-risk Occupational groups.

27
Disinfection
  • Leptospira species can be inactivated by 1sodium
    hypochlorite
  • 70ethanol,
  • glutaraldehyde,
  • formaldehyde,
  • detergents and acid.
  • This organism is sensitive to moist heat (121 C
    for a minimum of 15 min))and is also killed by
    pasteurization.

28
  • HIGH RISK GROUPS
  • DAIRY FARMERS AND MILKERS
  • SLAUGHTER-HOUSE WORKERS
  • MEAT INSPECTORS
  • VETERINARIANS AND MEAT CARRIERS IN FOOD
    INDUSTRIES
  • PEOPLE WHO WORK HABITUALLY IN WET OCCUPATIONS
    (RICE FARMERS, SUGAR CANE HARVESTERS, DRAINERS,
    SEWER WORKERS, MINERS)
  • ADVENTURE TRAVELLERS (CAVE EXPLORATION, WHITE
    WATER RAFTING, WATER SPORTS)
  • AND MILITARY OR CIVIL EMERGENCY PERSONNEL.

29
All the people involved in high-risk activities
should wear protective clothing and need to adopt
a reasonable standard of hygiene. Impervious
knee-high boots, aprons, gloves, face masks or
eye protection should be used wherever
indicated.Immunization of high risk groups
(USSR, CHINA,ITALY) Chemo prophylaxis
Doxycycline can prevent leptospirosis, if given
before and during exposure.
30
In the ICD10 disease classification system,
leptospirosis is code A27.
31
The International Leptospirosis Society (ILS) was
formed in 1994 to promote knowledge on
leptospirosis through the organisation of
regional and global leptospirosis meetings.
32
  • REFERNCE
  • Leptospirosis in India and the Rest of the World
  • Rao R. Sambasiva, Gupta Naveen, Bhalla P. and
    Agarwal S.K
  • - Nursing Journal of India,  Jul 2002  by Xavier,
    Shalini
  • - Leptospirosis An overview by TK Dutta,
    M.Christopher (JAPI.VOL.53.JUNE 2005)
  • -k.park 18 th edition

33
THANK YOU
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