Symptoms of giardiasis disease
Giardiasis is the disease caused by Causative
agent: known as Giardia lamblia. Habitat
of giardia in human being: Upper part of the small intestine, the duodenum
and upper jejunum.Geographic
distribution:Worldwide, more prevalent in warm climates, and in children.
Giardia lamblia can exist into two different
system which include
1.trophozoite
— Prevalence is higher in areas of
poor sanitation and in institutions with children not toilet trained, including
day care centres
— Many
animals are major reservoirs: dogs, beaver, muskrat, elk, deer, voles, mice,
horses and sheep.
— Animal-to-human transmission occurs, but pathogenicity and virulence of non-human sources for humans is still uncertain.
2.Cyst
— In formed stools
— Infective form, formed in the lower
bowel
— Oval in shape, 10.5x 7.4µm
— 4 nuclei in mature cysts
— Axostyles (axonemes)
Many animals are major reservoirs: dogs, beaver, muskrat,
elk, deer, voles, mice, horses and sheep.
Animal-to-human transmission occurs, but pathogenicity and
virulence of non-human sources for humans is still uncertain.
Epidemiologic of giardiasis disease
1.
Endemic –
— - In rural areas of the tropics, a
family disease
— -
Children <3 years more
affected than adults and excretes large numbers of cysts
— - Faecal-oral route, from
hand feeding in poor hygienic conditions
— - Related to poor
personal hygiene, poverty and poor sanitation
2. Sporadic
– Acquired by travellers
- Common cause of travellers
diarrhoea
3. Epidemic
– Waterborne in large outbreaks,
in UK and US.
- Attributed to resort or
municipal water supplies.
- Also in campers and hikers
drinking stream wate
How is giardiasis can be transmitted
- Faecal-oral in institutions – for mentally
retarded, children homes and day care centres
— Fecal-oral
route: Ingestion of viable
cysts;
- hand to mouth transfer of
cysts from the feces
of an infected
individual.
— Dogs, beavers, cattle can be
infected and excrete cysts
— Man is the usual source of infection
– usually children
Life cycle of giardiasis
— Infection occurs by the ingestion of
cysts in contaminated water, food, or by the fecal-oral route (hands or
fomites)
— In the small intestine, excystation
releases trophozoites (each cyst produces two trophozoites)
— Trophozoites multiply by
longitudinal binary fission, remaining in the lumen of the proximal small bowel
where they can be free or attached to the mucosa by a ventral sucking disk
— Encystation
occurs as the parasites transit toward the colon. The cyst is the stage
found most commonly in nondiarrheal faeces
— Infective
cysts are passed in stool (person-person transmission)
Pathological condition of giardiasis
— Potential explanations for how
Giardia causes Malabsorption and diarrhoea
— - Mechanical interference with gut
absorption
— - Host inflammatory response and
damage
— - Trophozoite invasion and toxin
elaboration - rare
— - Bacterial overgrowth in the small
bowel (Enterobacter)
Symptoms of giardiasis disease
- — Children exhibit clinical symptoms more frequently than adults
- — The incubation period is generally 2 weeks
- — The acute stage usually resolves in 3-4 days
- — Diarrhea with loose, fool-smelling stools with fat and mucus but no blood
- — Flatulence
- — Epigastric pain
- — Abdominal cramps and bloating
- — Nausea
- — anorexia
- — Malaise
- — Weight loss
- — Malabsorption
Diagnosis of giardiasis
1.
Demonstration of trophozoites in samples from jejunum and cysts in stool
- Stool examination– not always positive
Three examinations on separate
days improve recovery
Formol-ether concentration
technique useful
2.
Immunodiagnosis
— Fluorescent antibody test
— ELISA - detection of Giardia
specific antigen in stool. 90-98% sensitive and highly specific.
3. Molecular
detection by PCR is now being used
Prevention and control of giardiasis
— Treatment of water
— Super-chlorination of drinking water
— Combining chlorination and
filtration
— Boiling drinking water
— Prevent contamination of water
supplies
— Proper excreta disposal
— Personal hygiene – hand washing
— Health
education on measures to reduce person-person transmission
- CORONA VIRUS
- MONKEY POX
- VAGINAL DRYNESS
- FIBROID
- INFERTILITY
- OVULATION CYCLE
- OVARIAN CANCER
- VAGINAL BACTERIA
- MALE INFERTILITY
- BEST DAYS OF CONCIEVING
- MUCUS AFTER OVULATION
- FOODS FOR ERECTILE FUNCTIONS
- PREGNANCY ANEMIA
- DO AND DONT DURING PREGNANCY
- ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION
- U.T.I IN PREGNANCY
- STROKE RISK
- EAT THIS NOT THAT
- HOOKWORMS INFECTION
- OMEGA 3 BENEFITS
- FASTING
- WEIGHT LOSS TIPS
- vitiligo
- ABORTION
- DENGUE VIRUS
- EBORA VIRUS
- FEVER
- URINARY TRACT INFECTION
- HOSPITAL INFECTIONS
- WEST NILE VIRUS
- YELLOW FEVER
- EYE DISEASE
- ZIKA VIRUS
- STRESS
- IRON DEFFICIENCE
- INSOMNIA (SLEEPING PROBLEMS)
- HEART PROBLEMS
- COMPONENTS OF BLOOD
- BLOOD DISORDER
- LABORATORY TEST OF BLOOD DISORDER
- BONE MARROW EXAMINATION
- BLOOD ANEMIA
- ANIMAL BITES
- EYE BURN
- CHOCKING
- HEAT STROKE
- SMOKE EFFECTS
- SNAKE BITE
- MALARIA VACCINE
- BEST WAY TO SLEEP A CHILD
- CHILD FEVER REDUCING
- ELEPHANTIASIS
- WOMEN BEARDS
- DATES
- PAPAYA FRUITS
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