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BRUCELLOSIS Hail M. Al-Abdely, M.D. Associate Consultant Infectious Diseases Historical Background • Malta Fever – Major health problem to British troops in Malta in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Cases(1901-07) Deaths Navy 1705 30 Army 1947 55 Civil services 4627 489 Historical Background • 1860 J.A. Maraston; assistant surgeon in the British Army in Malta -- first accurate description “Mediterranian Gastric Remittent Fever” • David Bruce (1855-1931) -1883 sent to Malta to provide medical care to the troops. - 1887 isolated “micrococcus” from spleens of 4 soldiers died of the disease. Historical Background • 1897 A.E. Wright ; pathologist in British army developed agglutination test. What is the source? “Mediterranean Fever Commission” 1904 Historical Background • 1905 Zammit; Maltese physician - Goats were the source of infection. • 1897 E. Bang; Danish veterinarian -described intracelular pathogen causing abortion in cattle named “Bacillus abortus”. • 1918 A. Evans; American microbiologist -made the connection between Bacillus abortus and micrococcus melitensis & named it Bacteriaceae. Historical Background • 1920 Meyer and Shaw suggested BRUCELLA • 1914 Mohler isolated organism from liver & spleen of Pigs--B.suis. • 1957 B. neotome, 1963 B. ovis, 1966 B. canis Epidemiology • Worldwide zoonosis • Only 17 countries declared brucellosis free1986 • Six species 1. B.abortus - mainly cattle 2. B.melitensis - sheeps & goats 3. B.suis - pigs 4. B. canis - dogs 5. B. ovis - sheep (not human pathogen) 6. B. neotomae - desert wood rat (not human pathogen) • B. melitensis -- most common worldwide Epidemiology in Saudi Arabia • Endemic disease • Mostly B. melitensis & b. abortus. • No clear figures about incidence & prevalence. • Incidence : 5.4 per 1000 per year. • Prevalence : 8.6 - 38 % - some regions. Bacteriology • • • • Gm - ve cocci, coccobacilli, bacilli. Strict aerobic, nonmotile, nonspore forming. B. ovis, B. abortus --CO2 supplementation. Grow in regular media -- prolonged incubation > 4 weeks. Bacteriology • Surface lipopolysccharide cell wall – smooth vs non-smooth. – determine virulence. » smooth LPS : B. melitensis,suis,abortus » Non-smooth LPS B.canis, ovis. – the basis for agglutination test. Transmission • Zoonosis affecting domestic animals. • Concentrated in milk, urine, genital organs. ROUTES OF TRANSMISSION • Oral : unpasteurised milk & products raw milk or meet. • Respiratory: lab workers. • Skin: accidental penetration or abrasion – - at risk farmers & veterinarians. • Other routes: Conjunctival, Blood transfusion, Transplacental, ? person to person. Pathogenesis Entry to the body Macrophage activation Intracelluar multiplication Lymphatics RES organs Blood Any organ Polymorph migration & Phagocytosis Pathogenesis • Cell mediated immunity also activated with granuloma formation (mainly with B. abortus) • Humoral antibody response of little importance • Main way of body control of the infection is through committed T-lymphocytes producing lymphokines (Interferon) which activate macrophage killing • Pyogenic infection more with B. melitensis and B. suis Clinical Manifestations • • • • • Incubation period: variable 2- 8 wks. Presentation: acute 50% & insidious 50% Sx & signs not specific. Can affect any organ. Common nonspecific Sx: - fever with rigors. - sweats, malaise, anorexia. - headache, back pain. Clinical Manifestations Acute (8wks) Undulant (<52 wks) Chronic (>52wks) Young adults > 40 yrs Arthralgia Children, young adults ++ +++ +++ High fever 95% 50-70% No Hepatomegaly 66% 50% Occasional Splenomegaly 50-70% < 40% Rare Psychiatric No Occasional Frequent Ocular (uveitis) No 1-2% 5-10% Age Clinical Manifestations • GIT 70% : anorexia, abd. pain, vomiting, diarrhea,contipation, hepatosplenomegaly. • LIVER : Involved in most cases but LFTs normal or mildly abnormal. – granulomas (B. abortus). – hepatitis (B.melitensis). – abscesses (B.suis). Clinical Manifestations • • • • Skeletal 20-60% : arthritis, spondylitis, osteomyelitis. sacroiliitis - most common. athritis - oligoarticular : hip, knee & ankles. Joint asp. - monocytosis, culture +ve in 50 % Clinical Manifestations • Neurologic – Meningitis, encephalitis, radiculopathy & peripheral neuropathy, intracerebral abscesses – Meningitis » acute or chronic » neck rigidity < 50% » CSF • lymphocytic pleocytosis • (N) or low sugar • increase protein • culture +ve < 50% • agglutination +ve in >95% Clinical Manifestations • Cardiovascular – Edocarditis 2% (major cause of mortality) – Rx: valve replacement and antibiotics – Pericarditis & myocarditis • Pulmonary – Inhalation or hematogenous – Cause any chest syndrome – Rarely Brucella isolated from sputum Clinical Manifestations • Genitourinary – Epidydemoorchitis – Pyonephrosis (rare) • Cutaneous – Nonspecific • Hematologic – Anemia – Leukopenia – Thrombocytopenia Diagnosis • History of animal contact is pivotal • In endemic area, it should be in the DDx of any nonspecific febrile illness Diagnosis • Laboratory – WBC (N) or . monocytosis – ESR of little help – Blood cultures » slow growth = 4 weeks » new automated system BATEC identifies he organism 4-8 days » more recent (BACT/ALERT) - 2.8 days • PCR Diagnosis • Serology – Main laboratory method of diagnosis – Serum agglutination test - most widely used » measures agglutination for IgG, IgM, IgA » 2ME - break sulf-hydrile bonds in IgM polymer no agglutination » which level is diagnostic ?? 1 : 160 - non endemic area 1 : 320 - endemic area » SAT - false negative • Prozone • Blocking antibodies – Other tests: coombs, ELISA, CFT, FTA S IgM Brucella Antibodies • AGG = IgG + IgM • 2ME = IgG Prognosis • Preantibiotic era – Mortality 2% mainly endocarditis • Morbidity – High with B. melitensis – Nerve deafness – Spinal cord damage Prevention – Control of disease in domestic animals » immunization using B. abortus strain 19 and B. melitensis strain Rev 1 – Routine pasteurization of milk – In labs strict biosafety precautions Treatment Drugs against Brucella • Tetracyclines • Aminoglycosides – Streptomycin since 1947 – Gentamicin – Netilmicin • Rifampicin • Quinolones - ciprofloxacin • ?3rd generation cephalosporins Treatment Drugs against Brucella • Treatment for uncomplicated Brucellosis – Stremptomycin + Doxycycline for 6 weeks » ? TMP/SMX + Doxycycline for 6 weeks – WHO recommendation 1986 » Rifampicin + Doxycycline for 6 weeks • Treatment of complicated Brucellosis – Endocarditis, meningitis – No uniform agreement – Usually 3 antibrucella drugs for 3 months Untreated Brucellosis 10000 Titer 1000 IgG IgM 100 10 1 2 3 4 Weeks 5 6 Treated Brucellosis 10000 Treatment Titer 1000 IgG IgM 100 10 1 2 3 4 Months 5 6 7 Relapse Predictors of Relapse Male sex Inadequate antibiotic therapy. Positive culture on initial disease Thrombocytopenia Ariza, et al: CID 20:1241, 1995