World-wide medical news for clinical use. Contributions edited by Dr.A.Franklin MBBS(Lond)Dip.Phys.Med (UK) DPH & DIH(Tor.)LMC(C) FLEx(USA) Fellow Med.Soc.London
24 May 2014
CDC:(Carlos) CHAGAS' DISEASE
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TRYPANOSOMIASIS (CHAGAS DISEASE) - USA
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A ProMED-mail post
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
Date: Tue 20 May 2014
Source: PawNation [edited]
Chagas disease, a condition caused by infection with the protozoal
parasite _Trypanosoma cruzi_, has always been a big problem for our
neighbors to the south. The US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) says
that it is "endemic throughout much of Mexico, Central America, and
South America where an estimated 8 million people are infected."
The United States has not been immune to Chagas disease, however. CDC
"estimates that more than 300 000 persons with _Trypanosoma cruzi_
infection live in the United States" but says that most of these
people "acquired their infections in endemic countries".
Chagas disease is becoming increasingly important in [the US] right
now for 2 reasons:
1. The range of the disease appears to be moving farther northward
into the United States (can anybody say "climate change?")
2. The disease affects many different species -- most notably dogs and
people.
The parasite that causes Chagas disease is transmitted by triatomine
bugs, more commonly called kissing bugs. Unlike many other types of
vector-borne diseases, the bite of a kissing bug is not responsible by
itself for transmission. The true story is a bit grosser. When a
kissing bug bites a person, dog, or other mammal, it tends to defecate
(poop) more or less at the same time. The bite causes the victim to
scratch, and that activity is likely to push the nearby feces and the
parasites it contains into the small wound caused by the bite. Dogs
can also become infected with _T. cruzi_ by eating infected bugs or
prey, or the disease can be passed congenitally from a mother to her
offspring.
The signs of Chagas disease in dogs vary with the duration of
infection:
- Acutely infected dogs typically have a fever, loss of appetite,
lethargy, swollen lymph nodes, and an enlarged liver and/or spleen.
This phase may go unnoticed by owners, particularly since the clinical
signs tend to resolve with time.
- Dogs have no symptoms at all in the latent phase, which may last for
several years.
- With chronic infection, however, dogs can develop a type of heart
disease called dilated cardiomyopathy. This may result in congestive
heart failure or more shockingly, affected dogs may drop dead before
developing any symptoms of heart disease.
Unfortunately, no medications have been found that effectively treats
Chagas disease in dogs. Symptomatic treatment for dilated
cardiomyopathy and congestive heart failure can help dogs feel better
and live longer than they would otherwise, but the underlying problem
remains. A vaccine is also not available, so prevention is limited to
practices that limit a dog's exposure to kissing bugs and other
sources of infection with _T. cruzi_. The Veterinary Medicine and
Biomedical Sciences program at Texas A&M (Texas is a Chagas disease
hotspot) makes the following recommendations:
- Prevent dogs from eating bugs
- House dogs indoors at night
- Prevent dogs from eating potentially infected animals (mice, rats,
etc.)
- Test breeding females to prevent congenital transmission
They also state that "although direct transmission from dogs to humans
has not been reported, infection in dogs indicates the local presence
of infected vectors, which may present an increased risk of vector
borne transmission to humans." See CDC's website
( ) for more information on
Chagas disease in people and for photos of the bug, as well as the
agent itself.
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Over the past decade, transmission of South American trypanosomiasis
ReplyDelete(Chagas disease) by food has been increasingly documented (see below).
This must be taken into account when an increasing prevalence of
Chagas disease in urban areas is discussed. Apart from transmission by
infected triatomid bugs, other routes of transmission are
mother-to-child transmission and transmission through blood
transfusion. No matter what the explanation, an increase in the
prevalence of Chagas disease is very worrying as it adds a burden of
chronic disease in the country. - Mod.EP