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1 Giardiasis William A. Petri, Jr., M.D., Ph.D. William A. Petri, Jr., M.D., Ph.D. Professor of Medicine, Microbiology, and Pathology Chief, Division of Infectious Diseases & International Health University of Virginia Charlottesville VA 22908 [email protected]; 434/924-5621 (tel); 434/924-0075 (fax) Introduction Giardiasis is an important parasitic cause of diarrheal disease. It is the most common parasite identified in stool samples of individuals in the United States, present in about 4% of stool specimens submitted to clinical laboratories1 . The disease is quite common in developing countries, especially in urban slums where a substantial number of children are infected. Water and food borne transmission are the most frequent mechanisms of spread, with person to person spread important in day care settings and among sexually active homosexual males. In the military, giardiasis will most often be encountered during or after return from deployment to developing countries. An example of the increased risk for giardiasis in developing countries is the experience with diarrheal illness in expatriate residents and tourists to Nepal, where 9-16% had Giardia lamblia identified in their stools2. In Operation Restore Hope in Somalia from 1992-1993, 0.8% of personnel sought care for diarrheal illness each week and < 3% of all personnel reported a diarrheal illness per week. Giardia lamblia was isolated from 4% of personnel with diarrhea, making it the third most common enteropathogen identified (Shigella sp. were isolated from 33% and enterotoxigenic E. coli from 16%). The relatively low overall attack rate of diarrhea (compared to previous deployments in developing countries) likely was due to the lack of consumption of local food products due to the economic devastation and security threats within Somalia. As in previous deployments personnel drank bottled water from approved vendors and pre-prepared food from the United States3. A survey of 422 Marines returned from Operation Desert Storm similarly revealed a 2% incidence of Giardia lamblia cysts. The risk of contracting giardiasis is not only in developing countries however. In a Utah Army National Guard field training exercise in the Rocky Mountains of the United States, 15% of all personnel reported symptoms consistent with giardiasis, and symptoms were reported in 62% of personnel who supplemented their water supply with raw water from lakes, streams and a cattle watering trough4! Description of the Organism 2 Giardia lamblia has also been called G. intestinalis and G. duodenalis. The infective form of the parasite is the cyst, which is 7-10 µm wide and 8-12 µm long with a refractile cell wall and contains 2-4 nuclei. Trophozoites contain 2 nuclei and 4 flagella and are 12-15 µm long by 5-10 µm wide. The nuclei have a characteristic central karyosome which gives the trophozoite its face-like appearance in stained specimens. The dorsal surface of the trophozoite is round and smooth, while the ventral surface has a concave anterior disc that is thought to function in adhesion to the intestinal epithelium. Epidemiology The 3 most common intestinal parasites identified as causes of diarrhea in the United States are Giardia lamblia (9.5 cases per 100,000 population), Cryptosporidium parvum (1.4 cases/100,000 population), and Entamoeba histolytica (1.2 cases/100,000 population). Giardiasis is highly infectious - ingestion of as few as 10-25 cysts produces disease in human volunteers. Giardiasis occurs in all parts of the world and is a common cause of water borne outbreaks of diarrhea in the United States. In some urban slums in developing countries rates of giardia infection approach 100% 5 . Even seemingly pristine mountain streams in North America can be contaminated with giardia, with the infectious giardia cysts extremely stable in cool water. Water borne transmission is an important route of acquisition of giardiasis. Consumption of improperly treated surface water (as opposed to well water) is the most important risk factor. Water borne outbreaks have occurred in the Rocky Mountain areas of the United States and Canada, and the Northwestern and Northeastern United States. Proper filtration of surface water supplies is the most important factor in prevention of these outbreaks, as the cysts of giardia are not completely inactivated by the flocculation, sedimentation and chlorination steps of water purification. Hikers and campers who consume untreated stream or other surface water are at risk for infection with giardia. Surface water may be contaminated not only with giardia from human sources, but also with giardia from beavers, muskrats and possibly other animals which have the potential to transmit giardia to humans6 . Person to person spread of giardia infection is documented in children and employees in day care centers, in sexually active male homosexuals, and in residents of institutions for the mentally handicapped. Surveys of children under age 3 in day care centers have measured giardia infection rates as high as 25-50%7 . Most of these infections are asymptomatic: studies demonstrated that children with giardia infection had normal nutritional status and were not more likely to have enteric symptoms. Parents of children in day care, and day care workers, have a higher rate of giardia infection than the overall population. Homosexual men seen in sexually transmitted disease clinics have rates of giardia infection as high as 10%. Food borne transmission has more recently been appreciated to occur with giardia. In one instance 32 employees of a public school system developed symptomatic giardiasis after eating home-canned salmon. The salmon had been prepared by a grandmother who had just diapered her grandson, and the grandson was subsequently shown to have giardia infection8 . Outbreak investigations need to consider the possibility of food borne transmission, although water borne is more common. 3 Pathogenesis Infection is initiated by the oral ingestion of G. lamblia cysts. Excystation follows ingestion, with the trophozoites multiplying in the small bowel. The infection remains luminal in almost all cases, with rare exceptions of mucosal invasion by the trophozoites. The parasite may adhere to the intestinal epithelium via its ventral disk or via a parasite carbohydrate-binding adhesin protein. Trophozoites encyst in the bowel lumen, with an encystation-specific secretory vesicle system implicated in synthesis of the cyst wall9 . The pathogenesis of diarrhea is not clear. No enterotoxin has been characterized, and the organism is normally not invasive. Damage to intestinal epithelial cells and atrophy of microvilli have been shown in biopsies of some patients with giardiasis. Malabsorption of protein, D-xylose and fat soluble vitamins as well as disaccharidase deficiency occurs in some patients with giardiasis. Different strains of the parasite differ in their ability to cause infection and diarrhea in human challenge studies. Parasite surface antigen variation has been documented in vitro and in experimental human infections, and the antibody response has been shown to be isolate specific, suggesting that antigenic variation may be a mechanism of immune evasion1 0 . Evidence for acquired immunity to giardiasis includes the lower incidence of infection in adults than in children, and the observation from epidemiologic and human experimental challenge studies that symptomatic infections with giardia are more common with the first episode of infection than with later infections5 , 1 0 . Clinical Findings Infection can be manifest after return from an endemic or high risk area, as the average incubation period from infection to onset of diarrhea is 7 days, and can be as late as 28 days. The typical patient with symptomatic giardiasis will have an illness lasting 7 days or more with some combination of symptoms including diarrhea, flatulence, foulsmelling stools, nausea, abdominal cramps and excessive tiredness. The most notable feature of the illness is the prolonged nature of the diarrhea and the malabsorption that may be present1 1 . Lactase deficiency and malabsorption of D-xylose, protein, fat and fat soluble vitamins may all occur to varying degrees. Stool specimens are semi-formed or loose, lack occult blood, but may contain mucus and/or fecal leukocytes. Especially in endemic settings such as day care centers in the developed world and urban slums in developing countries, most giardia infection is asymptomatic. Protection against symptomatic infection in children under 18 months of age has been associated with breast feeding. Diagnostic Approaches and Differential Diagnosis 4 Consider the diagnosis of giardiasis in outbreaks or individual cases of diarrheal illnesses of 5-7 days or more duration. Travel to a developing country, exposure to children in day care or to institutionalized individuals, and active male homosexual practices should all increase the suspicion of giardiasis. Common source outbreaks can be either water- or food-borne. Historically giardiasis has been diagnosed by identification of the trophozoite and/or cyst in stool specimens. The motile trophozoite can sometimes be identified in saline wet mount of fresh stool. Cysts can be stained with iodine or in polyvinyl alcohol preserved stools with trichrome or iron hematoxylin stains. Because of the difficulties in morphologic identification of the parasite, most laboratories are now detecting the infection using antigen detection assays. Antigen detection assays are now available in immunofluorescent and enzyme immunoassay formats (TechLab, Meridian Diagnostics, Alexon, Trend Scientific, Cambridge Biotech, and Seradyn all market antigen detection tests for giardia). These tests have comparable, and in many cases improved sensitivity and specificity, compared to microscopy. Sampling of duodenal contents for giardia by aspiration, biopsy, or string test is almost never necessary if careful examination of stool with antigen detection tests or stool microscopy is performed. Recommendations for Therapy and Control Metronidazole or tinidazole are the drugs of first choice for treatment of giardiasis, although they do not have a Food and Drug Administration indication for this use; tinidazole has recently become available in the U.S. Tinidazole (2 grams once in adults) or metronidazole (250 mg tid for adults x 7 days) are 80-95% effective. Side effects of treatment include a disulfiram-like reaction when taken with alcohol, as well as nausea, dry mouth and headache. Dizziness, vertigo, paresthesias, and rarely encephalopathy or convulsions can be neurologic side effects and warrant discontinuation of the drug. A temporary neutropenia has been associated with metronidazole, and is reversible upon discontinuation of the drug. There is no evidence of carcinogenicity or mutagenicity of metronidazole in humans, although use during the first trimester is not indicated. Alternative drugs include furazolidone (100 mg QID x 7-10 D in adults), which can cause hemolysis in individuals with glucose -6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, quinacrine (100 mg tid x 5D in adults) which is poorly tolerated because of nausea, vomiting and cramping and is currently unavailable in the U.S., and paromomycin (25-35 mg/kg/D in 3 doses x 7D in adults) for which clinical experience in the treatment of giardiasis is limited1 2 . In patients with a history of exposure and clinical findings consistent with giardiasis, but with negative stool diagnostic studies for G. lamblia and other enteropathogens, many authorities recommend empiric treatment because of the difficulties in sensitivity of diagnostic tests. Prevention of water borne outbreaks requires proper flocculation, sedimentation, filtration, and chlorination of water supplies. Filtration is the single most important step for removal of the chlorine-resistant giardia cysts from community water supplies. Good personal hygiene is required to prevent transmission by food handlers and in day care centers. For military personnel in the field, all surface water should be considered to be contaminated with giardia. Approaches to field water purification include bringing the water to a boil for 1 min, filtration through a 2 µm filter, or treatment for 30 min with halazone (5 tablets/liter for 30 min), Globaline (tetraglycine hydroperiodide, 1 tablet per 5 quart), or saturated crystalline iodine (12.5 ml/liter for 30 min). Halazone or iodine treatment of water is less effective at 3° C than at 20° C1 0 . References 1. Hill DR. Giardia lamblia. In Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases 4th Edition (Mandell GL, Bennett JE, Dolin R eds) Churchill Livingstone, N.Y., 1995: 248792. 2. Hoge CW, Shlim DR, Echeverria P et al. Epidemiology of diarrhea among expatriate residents living in a highly endemic environment. JAMA 1996; 275:533-8. 3. Sharp TW, Thornton SA, Wallace MR et al. Diarrheal disease among military personnel during operation Restore Hope, Somalia, 1992-3. Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg. 1995; 52:188-93. 4. Laxer MA. Potential exposure of Utah Army National Guard personnel to giardiasis durig field training exercises: a preliminary survey. Military Med 1985; 150:23-26. 5. Oyerinde PO, Ogunbi O, Alonge AA. Age and sex distribution of infections with Entamoeba histolytica and Giardia intestinalis in the Lagos population. International J Epidemiology. 1977; 6:231-4. 6. Erlandsen SL, Sherlock LA, Januschka M, Schupp DG, Schaeffer FW III, Jakubowski W, Bemrick WJ. Cross-species transmission of Giardia spp.: Inoculation of beavers and muskrats with cysts of human, beaver, mouse and muskrat origin. Applied Environmental Microbiol. 1988; 54:2777-85. 7. Pickering LK, Woodward WE, DuPont HL, Sullivan P. Occurrence of Giardia lamblia in children in day care centers. J Pediatrics. 1984; 104:522-6. 8. Osterholm MT, Forfang JC, Ristinen TL, Dean AG, WAshburn JW, Godes JR, Rude RA, McCullough JG. An outbreak of foodborne giardiasis. New Engl J Med. 1987; 304:24-27, 9. Reiner DS, McCaffery M, Gillin FD. Sorting of cyst wall proteins to a regulated secretory pathway during differentiation of the primitive eukaryote, Giardia lamblia. European J Cell Biology. 1990; 53:142-153. 10. Nash TE, Herrington DA, Levine MM, Conrad JT, Merritt JW Jr. Antigenic variation of Giardia lamblia in experimental human infections. J Immunol. 1990; 144:4362-9. 11. Hopkins RS, Juranek DD. Acute giardiasis: an improved clinical case definition for epidemiologic studies. American J Epidemiol. 1991; 133:402-7. 12. Tracy JW, Webster LT. Drugs used in the chemotherapy of protozoal infections: Trypanosomiasis, leishmaniasis, amebiasis, giardiasis, trichomoniasis, and other 6 protozoal infections. In Goodman & Gilman’s The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 9th Edition (Hardman JG, Limbird LE eds), McGraw Hill, NY, 1996: 9871008. 13. Kahn FH, Visscher BR. Water disinfection in the wilderness. West J Med. 1975; 122:450-453. Table: Symptoms and Signs of Giardiasis11 Prolonged diarrhea Fatigue 100% 97% Abdominal cramps 83% Bloating 79% Malodorous stool 79% Flatulence 76% Weight loss 59% Fever 21% Vomiting 17%