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Download Report of an unusual case of persistent bacteriemia by Bartonella
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Human Bartonellosis caused by Bartonella bacilliformis 1 Henríquez César Paul Pachas2 Phillip Lawyer3 Larry Laughlin3 Ciro Maguiña1 1. Instituto de Medicina Tropical Alexander von HumboldtUniversidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia 2. Oficina General de Epidemiologia 3. Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences 2002 Introduction • Human bartonellosis is the clinical term to define the bacterial infections by the genus Bartonella. • There are five important species that produce human diseases. History and Archeology Bartonellosis has been known since Pre-Inca times. Numerous artistic representations in clay “huacos” depict the chronic phase of the disease. The historian Garcilazo De La Vega described a disease with warts in Spanish troops when they arrived for the first time in CoaqueEcuador. For a long time it was thought that the disease was endemic only in Peru and that it had only one phase: “Peruvian wart” or “Verruga peruana” Historical Figures Daniel A. Carrión (1858-1885) In 1875 an outbreak, characterized by fever and anemia (Oroya fever) occurred in the region of construction of the railroad line between Lima and Oroya. In 1885, Daniel A. Carrion, a Peruvian medical student, inoculated himself with material taken from a patient with Peruvian wart. He subsequently acquired Oroya fever and died a month later. Later, Alberto Barton discovered the etiologic agent of “Carrion’s disease” Dr. Alberto L. Barton (1871-1950) Epidemiology • Bartonellosis is endemic in Perú, Ecuador and Colombia. • Geography and weather conditions vary depending of the region. • Emergence or re-emergence of several infectious diseases, including bartonellosis, seem to coincide with “el Niño” weather phenomena. CASOS DE ENFERMEDAD DE CARRION EN EL PERU Carrion’s disease cases Y EL DEPARTAMENTO DE ANCASH. 1945-2001 (1945-2001) 3500 3000 CASOS 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 AÑ0 YEAR BO LETIN ESTADISDICA MINSA-O RE-PCMYO EM DIRECCIO N REG IO NAL DE SALUD-CHAVIN * HASTA LA S.E. 6 ANCASH PERU 02 99 96 93 90 87 84 81 78 75 72 69 66 63 60 57 54 51 48 45 0 Ancash department was the most CASOS DE ENFERMEDAD DE CARRION important endemicDEPARTAMENTOS. area of PERU 1945-94 bartonellosis since 1945 until 1994. OTROS 16.9% ANCASH 83.1% PO Reported cases of Carrion’s disease AMAZONAS AMAZONAS PIURA CAJAMARCA PIURA PIURA CAJAMARCA CAJAMARCA SAN MARTIN SAN MARTIN AMAZONAS AMAZONAS AR CA CAJAM (1995-2001) LORETO LIMA ANCASH HUANUCO LIMA HUANUCO LIMA HUANUCO A ANCASH JUNIN M LI ANCASH SH CA AN LA LIBERTAD CUSCO CUSCO AYACUCHO 1995 1997 1999 2001 PIURA 2.4% LIMA 3.4% OTROS 2.9% AMAZONAS 10.8% CAJAMARCA 12.3% CUSCO 15.5% ANCASH 52.6% Incidence of Carrion’s disease by regions (1996-2002) TASA DE INCIDENCIA ENFERMEDAD DE CARRION POR REGIONES NATURALES. PERU 1996-02 50 TASA x 100,000 hab. 40 30 20 10 0 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 AÑO YEARS DIRECCIO N EJECUTIVA DE INVESTIG ACIO N O FICINA G ENERAL DE EPIDEMIO LO G IA Coast COSTA Jungle SELVA Andes SIERRA 2001 2002 New foci of Carrion’s disease New epidemic areas identified. ALTO AMAZONAS SAN IGNACIO UTCUBAMBA RIOJA Mortality during the outbreaks is high. MOYOBAMBA RODR IGUEZ DE MENDOZA HUAMALIES LEONCIO PRADO CASMA YAROWIL CA OYON No cases of chronic phase (Peruvian wart)in epidemic areas. PACHITEA CHANCHAMAYO BARRANCA HUAURA LA CONV ENCION CALCA PAUCARTAMBO URUBAMBA No animal reservoir identified. QUISPIC ANC HI ANTA CUSCO February 2002 CANC HIS Suspected vectors: Phlebotomine sand flies • Smaller than a mosquito, larger than a midge • Coloration varies from light brown (sandy or fawn) to gray or black • Require humid, not wet, conditions • Only female sand flies take a blood meal • Nocturnal feeding behavior Lutzomyia verrucarum Photo Courtesy Dr.Grieco and Dr. Lawyer Suspected Vectors: Phlebotomine sand flies • Sand fies are weak fliers • Fly only at night unless disturbed in their daytime resting site • Sand flies transmit Bartonella bacilliformis from infected to uninfected hosts by bite • At least two species suspected in Peru: Lu. verrucarum and Lu. peruensis Lutzomyia peruensis Courtesy Dr.Grieco and Dr. Lawyer Distribution of Carrion’s disease cases and Lutzomyia verrucarum Provinces with Lutzomya verrucarum Provinces with Carrion’s disease cases Etiologic agent: Bartonella bacilliformis Gram negative aerobic, pleomorphic, flagellated, motile, coccobacillary, 2-3 m large and 0,2 - 0,5 m wide and facultative intracellular bacterium. For its isolation, special cultures are required containing complemental soy agar, proteases, peptones, some essential amino acids and blood. The optimum growing temperature is 19-29 ºC. Pathogenesis • Bartonella bacilliformis is transmitted by the bite of the suspected vector Lutzomyia spp • Following transmission, the bacterium infects red blood cells and endothelial cells • The physical damage and introduction of antigens in the membranes of the red cells stimulate the Reticuloendothelial System to produce an intense erythrophagocytosis by macrophages and histiocytic cells resulting in severe extra vascular hemolytic anemia Endothelial cells: the last target? • The invasion of endothelial cells is an active process dependent on the activation of Rho, which is an intracellular signal implicated in the rearrangement of the host cell actin cytoskeletal network The disease • The clinical symptoms of bartonellosis are pleomorphic and some patients may be asymptomatic • The two classical clinical presentations are the acute phase and the chronic phase, corresponding to the two different host cell types invaded by the bacterium Acute phase: Oroya fever or Carrion’s disease • The mean incubation time is 21 days (range 10 to 270 days) • The diagnostic tests in this phase are: Diagnostic test Blood smear Immunoblot PCR(16S-23S) Sensitivity Values in porcentaje Specificity Reference 36-73 91-96 1 70 94 2 47 98 3 The diagnosis The diagnosis in the acute phase can be done using the thin blood film with Giemsa stain. It is possible to observe the bacillus inside the red blood cells. Molecular technics M Base pairs 1500 bp 600 bp 1 2 3 4 M: DNA ladder (100 bp). 1: B. bacilliformis DNA from culture extracted by thermal lysis (100°C, 10 min.) using 16S 23S primers (positive control). 2: Whole blood extraction from an acute phase patient, using 16S 23S primers. 3: Whole blood extraction from an acute phase patient, using primers for Citrate Synthetase gene. 4: B. bacilliformis DNA from a culture extraction using primers for Citrate Synthetase gene. Immunologic technics: Sonicated immunoblot 20 18 17 14 kDa kDa kDa kDa A B C D Lane A: Positive control pool Lane Band C: Bartonella bacilliformispositive serum taken from a patient in acute phase Lane D: Negative control pool Chronic Phase: Peruvian wart (Verruga Peruana) Mularlesions Chronic Phase: Peruvian wart (Verruga Peruana) Miliary lesions Chronic Phase: Peruvian wart (Verruga Peruana) Miliary lesions with overwhelming infection Chronic phase: some numbers • The diagnostic tests in this phase are blood culture (13% of patients with verruga have bacteriemia), culture of the verrugous warts and Immunoblot with a sensitivity of 70% and specificity of 100% • The IFA has a sensitivity of 82% and specificity of 92% Immunity and infection • One factor that complicates the clearance of the bacterium is that intraerythrocytic Bartonella are protected from both humoral and cellular immune responses due to a lack of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules on the surface of the mature erythrocytes • They are unable to present antigens of their invaders to the immune system Conclusion • Human bartonellosis is a bacterial infection by the genus bartonella • Bartonellosis caused by B. bacilliformis (Oroya’s fever or Carrion’s disease) is endemic in Peru, Ecuador and Colombia • No animal reservoir identified • Suspected vectors: Phlebotomine sand flies • About the disease, there are two classical clinical presentations: acute and chronic phase • New endemic areas identified: Emergent infectious disease