Title: Diarrheal Diseases
1 Diarrheal Diseases
2Leading Causes of Childhood Deaths
Source WHO estimates of the causes of death in
children, 2000-03 Bryce, Lancet, 26 March 2005
3Major 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.
4Objectives
- The organisms
- Clinical features
- Diagnosis
- Treatment
- Epidemiology
- Preparedness
5Diarrheal Diseases
- Viruses
- Rotavirus
- Norovirus
- Bacteria
- E. coli
- Shigella
- Salmonella
- Campylobacter
- Yersinia
- Cholera
- Parasites
- Giardia
- Cryptosporidia
- Entamoeba histiolytica
Common Causes of epidemic diarrhea
6- 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
7Shigella dysenteriae type 1(Shiga bacillus)
- Most virulent of four serogroups of Shigella
- Cause of epidemic dysentery
- Bloody diarrhea
- Abdominal cramps
- Fever
- Rectal pain
8Shigella 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
9Shigella 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
10Treatment 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
11Shigella 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
12Shigella 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
13Shigella dysenteriae type 1Transmission
- Thought to be
- Person-to-person
- Contaminated food
- Water
- Contact with objects contaminated with the
organism (fomites) - Sharing latrines
14Prevention of Shigella dysenteriae infections
- Handwashing with soap
- Breast-feeding
- Food safety
- Safe water
- Clean water supply
- Home storage and treatment
- No vaccines available!
15Three Simple Rules for the Prevention of Dysentery
- Cook your food
- Boil your water
- Wash your hands
- (Make sure your neighbors wash their hands)
16Preparation 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
17Surveillance 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
18When 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
19Questions about dysentery?
20Vibrio cholerae
21Vibrio Cholerae
22Vibrio 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
23Vibrio cholerae O1
- Infectious dose 106 108
- Varies with vehicle of transmission
- Gastric acidity
- Incubation period
- 1-3 days (½-5 days)
24Transmission-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
25Cholera in the world, 1960-2005
Source WHO Weekly Epi Record
26Cholera CFR, 1960-2005
Source WHO Weekly Epi Record
27Presentation- Rice water diarrhea
28Presentation- Dehydration
- Hypotension
- Rapid thready pulse
- Loss of skin turgor
- Sunken eyes
- Thirst
- Altered mental status but arousable
- Anuria
- Renal failure
29Cholera Gravis
- Severe diarrhea
- Vomiting
- Muscle cramps (leg cramps)
- Dehydration
- Electrolyte imbalance
- Death
30Cholera 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)
31Diagnosis
- 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!
32Diagnosis
- 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
33Role of Laboratory
- Confirmation of initial isolates in new areas
- Monitor antibiotic susceptibility
- Confirm when outbreak is over
34Treatment
- 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
35Effect of tetracycline treatment on duration of
diarrhea
36Recommended Antibiotics for Cholera
37Preparedness and control
- Cholera control committees
- Ensure access to treatment facilities
- Ensure adequate treatment supplies
- Surveillance
- Water and sanitation
- Epidemiologic investigation
- Public health education
38Surveillance
- 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
39When to investigate
- Increase in total cases of diarrhea
- Increase in cases of diarrhea in adults
- Deaths caused by dehydration
- Laboratory confirmation of cholera
40Epidemiologic 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
41Preparedness
- 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
42Cholera 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
43Cholera 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
-
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45Diarrheal 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
46Water
- 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
47Control measures
- Quarantine?
- No
- Mass chemoprophylaxis?
- No
- Antibiotic treatment of family contacts?
- Maybe
- Vaccine?
- Maybe?
48Cholera 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
49Cholera Case Study