Amebiasis
Definition
Amebiasis is an infectious disease caused by a parasitic one-celled microorganism (protozoan) called Entamoeba histolytica. Persons with amebiasis may experience a wide range of symptoms, including diarrhea, fever, and cramps. The disease may also affect the intestines, liver, or other parts of the body.
Description
Amebiasis, also known as amebic dysentery,
is one of the most common parasitic diseases occurring in humans, with
an estimated 500 million new cases each year. It occurs most frequently
in tropical and subtropical areas where living conditions are crowded,
with inadequate sanitation. Although most cases of amebiasis occur in
persons who carry the disease but do not exhibit any symptoms
(asymptomatic), as many as 100,000 people die of amebiasis each year. In
the United States, between 1 and 5% of the general population will
develop amebiasis in any given year, while male homosexuals, migrant
workers, institutionalized people, and recent immigrants develop
amebiasis at a higher rate.
Human beings are
the only known host of the amebiasis organism, and all groups of people,
regardless of age or sex, can become affected. Amebiasis is primarily
spread in food and water that has been contaminated by human feces but
is also spread by person-to-person contact. The number of cases is
typically limited, but regional outbreaks can occur in areas where human
feces are used as fertilizer for crops, or in cities with water
supplies contaminated with human feces.
Causes and symptoms
Recently, it has been discovered that persons with symptom-causing amebiasis are infected with Entamoeba histolytica, and those individuals who exhibit no symptoms are actually infected with an almost identical-looking ameba called Entamoeba dispar.
During their life cycles, the amebas exist in two very different forms:
the infective cyst or capsuled form, which cannot move but can survive
outside the human body because of its protective covering, and the
disease-producing form, the trophozoite, which although capable of
moving, cannot survive once excreted in the feces and, therefore, cannot
infect others. The disease is most commonly transmitted when a person
eats food or drinks water containing E. histolytica cysts from
human feces. In the digestive tract the cysts are transported to the
intestine where the walls of the cysts are broken open by digestive
secretions, releasing the mobile trophozoites. Once released within the
intestine, the trophozoites multiply by feeding on intestinal bacteria
or by invading the lining of the large intestine. Within the lining of
the large intestine, the trophozoites secrete a substance that destroys
intestinal tissue and creates a distinctive bottle-shaped sore (ulcer).
The trophozoites may remain inside the intestine, in the intestinal
wall, or may break through the intestinal wall and be carried by the
blood to the liver, lungs, brain, or other organs. Trophozoites that
remain in the intestines eventually form new cysts that are carried
through the digestive tract and excreted in the feces. Under favorable
temperature and humidity conditions, the cysts can survive in soil or
water for weeks to months, ready to begin the cycle again.
Although
90% of cases of amebiasis in the United States are mild, pregnant
women, children under two years of age, the elderly, malnourished
individuals, and people whose immune systems may be compressed, such as cancer or AIDS
patients and those individuals taking prescription medications that
suppress the immune system, are at a greater risk for developing a
severe infection.
The signs and symptoms of amebiasis vary according to the location and severity of the infection and are classified as follows:
Intestinal amebiasis
Intestinal amebiasis can be subdivided into several categories:
ASYMPTOMATIC
INFECTION. Most persons with amebiasis have no noticeable symptoms.
Even though these individuals may not feel ill, they are still capable
of infecting others by person-to-person contact or by contaminating food
or water with cysts that others may ingest, for example, by preparing
food with unwashed hands.
CHRONIC
NON-DYSENTERIC INFECTION. Individuals may experience symptoms over a
long period of time during a chronic amebiasis infection and experience
recurrent episodes of diarrhea that last from one to four weeks and
recur over a period of years. These patients may also suffer from
abdominal cramps, fatigue, and weight loss.
AMEBIC
DYSENTERY. In severe cases of intestinal amebiasis, the organism
invades the lining of the intestine, producing sores (ulcers), bloody
diarrhea, severe abdominal cramps, vomiting, chills, and fevers as high
as 104-105°F (40-40.6°C). In addition, a case of acute amebic dysentery
may cause complications, including inflammation of the appendix (appendicitis), a tear in the intestinal wall (perforation), or a sudden, severe inflammation of the colon (fulminating colitis).
Key terms
Ameboma — A mass of tissue that can develop on the wall of the colon in response to amebic infection.
Antibody — A specific protein produced by the immune system in response to a specific foreign protein or particle called an antigen.
Appendicitis — Condition characterized by the rapid inflammation of the appendix, a part of the intestine.
Asymptomatic
— Persons who carry a disease and are usually capable of transmitting
the disease but who do not exhibit symptoms of the disease are said to
be asymptomatic.
Dysentery — Intestinal infection marked by diarrhea containing blood and mucus.
Fulminating colitis
— A potentially fatal complication of amebic dysentery marked by sudden
and severe inflammation of the intestinal lining, severe bleeding or
hemorrhaging, and massive shedding of dead tissue.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) — Disease in which the lining of the intestine becomes inflamed.
Lumen — The inner cavity or canal of a tube-shaped organ, such as the bowel.
Protozoan — A single-celled, usually microscopic organism that is eukaryotic and, therefore, different from bacteria (prokaryotic).
AMEBOMA.
An ameboma is a mass of tissue in the bowel that is formed by the
amebiasis organism. It can result from either chronic intestinal
infection or acute amebic dysentery. Amebomas may produce symptoms that
mimic cancer or other intestinal diseases.
PERIANAL
ULCERS. Intestinal amebiasis may produce skin infections in the area
around the patient's anus (perianal). These ulcerated areas have a
"punched-out" appearance and are painful to the touch.
Extraintestinal amebiasis
Extraintestinal
amebiasis accounts for approximately 10% of all reported amebiasis
cases and includes all forms of the disease that affect other organs.
The most common form of extraintestinal amebiasis is amebic abscess
of the liver. In the United States, amebic liver abscesses occur most
frequently in young Hispanic adults. An amebic liver abscess can result
from direct infection of the liver by E. histolytica or as a complication of intestinal amebiasis. Patients with an amebic abscess of the liver complain of pain in the chest or abdomen, fever, nausea, and tenderness on the right side directly above the liver.
Other
forms of extraintestinal amebiasis, though rare, include infections of
the lungs, chest cavity, brain, or genitals. These are extremely serious
and have a relatively high mortality rate.
Diagnosis
Diagnosis
of amebiasis is complicated, partly because the disease can affect
several areas of the body and can range from exhibiting few, if any,
symptoms to being severe, or even life-threatening. In most cases, a
physician will consider a diagnosis of amebiasis when a patient has a
combination of symptoms, in particular, diarrhea and a possible history
of recent exposure to amebiasis through travel, contact with infected
persons, or anal intercourse.
It is vital to
distinguish between amebiasis and another disease, inflammatory bowel
disease (IBD) that produces similar symptoms because, if diagnosed
incorrectly, drugs that are given to treat IBD can encourage the growth
and spread of the amebiasis organism. Because of the serious
consequences of misdiagnosis, potential cases of IBD must be confirmed
with multiple stool samples and blood tests, and a procedure involving a
visual inspection of the intestinal wall using a thin lighted, tubular
instrument (sigmoidoscopy) to rule out amebiasis.
A diagnosis of amebiasis may be confirmed by one or more tests, depending on the location of the disease.
Stool examination
This test involves microscopically examining a stool sample for the presence of cysts and/or trophozoites of E. histolytica
and not one of the many other intestinal amebas that are often found
but that do not cause disease. A series of three stool tests is
approximately 90% accurate in confirming a diagnosis of amebic
dysentery. Unfortunately, however, the stool test is not useful in
diagnosing amebomas or extraintestinal infections.
Sigmoidoscopy
Sigmoidoscopy
is a useful diagnostic procedure in which a thin, flexible, lighted
instrument, called a sigmoidoscope, is used to visually examine the
lower part of the large intestine for amebic ulcers and take tissue or
fluid samples from the intestinal lining.
Blood tests
Although
tests designed to detect a specific protein produced in response to
amebiasis infection (antibody) are capable of detecting only about 10%
of cases of mild amebiasis, these tests are extremely useful in
confirming 95% of dysentery diagnoses and 98% of liver abscess
diagnoses. Blood serum will usually test positive for antibody within a
week of symptom onset. Blood testing, however, cannot always distinguish
between a current or past infection since the antibodies may be
detectable in the blood for as long as 10 years following initial
infection.
Imaging studies
A number of sophisticated imaging techniques, such as computed tomography scans (CT), magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI), and ultrasound, can be used to determine whether a liver abscess
is present. Once located, a physician may then use a fine needle to
withdraw a sample of tissue to determine whether the abscess is indeed
caused by an amebic infection.
Treatment
Asymptomatic
or mild cases of amebiasis may require no treatment. However, because
of the potential for disease spread, amebiasis is generally treated with
a medication to kill the disease-causing amebas. More severe cases of
amebic dysentery are additionally treated by replacing lost fluid and
blood. Patients with an amebic liver abscess will also require
hospitalization and bed rest. For those cases of extraintestinal
amebiasis, treatment can be complicated because different drugs may be
required to eliminate the parasite, based on the location of the
infection within the body. Drugs used to treat amebiasis, called
amebicides, are divided into two categories:
Luminal amebicides
These
drugs get their name because they act on organisms within the inner
cavity (lumen) of the bowel. They include diloxanide furoate,
iodoquinol, metronidazole, and paromomycin.
Tissue amebicides
Tissue
amebicides are used to treat infections in the liver and other body
tissues and include emetine, dehydroemetine, metronidazole, and
chloroquine. Because these drugs have potentially serious side effects,
patients given emetine or dehydroemetine require bed rest and heart
monitoring. Chloroquine has been found to be the most useful drug for
treating amebic liver abscess. Patients taking metronidazole must avoid
alcohol because the drug-alcohol combination causes nausea, vomiting,
and headache.
Most
patients are given a combination of luminal and tissue amebicides over a
treatment period of seven to ten days. Follow-up care includes periodic
stool examinations beginning two to four weeks after the end of
medication treatment to check the effectiveness of drug therapy.
Prognosis
The
prognosis depends on the location of the infection and the patient's
general health prior to infection. The prognosis is generally good,
although the mortality rate is higher for patients with ameboma,
perforation of the bowel, and liver infection. Patients who develop
fulminant colitis have the most serious prognosis, with over 50%
mortality.
Prevention
There are no
immunization procedures or medications that can be taken prior to
potential exposure to prevent amebiasis. Moreover, people who have had
the disease can become reinfected. Prevention requires effective
personal and community hygiene.
Specific safeguards include the following:
- Purification of drinking water. Water can be purified by filtering, boiling, or treatment with iodine.
- Proper food handling. Measures include protecting food from contamination by flies, cooking food properly, washing one's hands after using the bathroom and before cooking or eating, and avoiding foods that cannot be cooked or peeled when traveling in countries with high rates of amebiasis.
- Careful disposal of human feces.
- Monitoring the contacts of amebiasis patients. The stools of family members and sexual partners of infected persons should be tested for the presence of cysts or trophozoites.
Generalized life cycle of intestinal amebae
Resources
Books
Friedman, Lawrence S. "Liver, Biliary Tract, & Pancreas." In Current Medical Diagnosis and Treatment, 1998, edited by Stephen McPhee, et al., 37th ed. Stamford: Appleton & Lange, 1997.
Citations:
For Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine:
amebiasis. (n.d.) Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine. (2008). Retrieved October 14 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/amebiasisFor Dorland's Medical Dictionary:
amebiasis. (n.d.) Dorland's Medical Dictionary for Health Consumers. (2007). Retrieved October 14 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/amebiasisFor The American Heritage® Medical Dictionary:
amebiasis. (n.d.) The American Heritage® Medical Dictionary. (2007). Retrieved October 14 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/amebiasisFor Mosby's Medical Dictionary:
amebiasis. (n.d.) Mosby's Medical Dictionary, 8th edition. (2009). Retrieved October 14 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/amebiasisFor Miller-Keane Encyclopedia:
amebiasis. (n.d.) Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. (2003). Retrieved October 14 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/amebiasisFor Dictionary of Complementary and Alternative Medicine:
amebiasis. (n.d.) Jonas: Mosby's Dictionary of Complementary and Alternative Medicine. (2005). Retrieved October 14 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/amebiasisFor Veterinary Dictionary:
amebiasis. (n.d.) Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary, 3 ed.. (2007). Retrieved October 14 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/amebiasisFor McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine:
amebiasis. (n.d.) McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine. (2002). Retrieved October 14 2012 from http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/amebiasisCategory: A



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