- Onchocerciasis (River blindness)
- Lymphatic filariasis (Elephantiasis)
- Loiasis (Loa loa infection)
All are caused by parasitic filarial nematode
worms that are transmitted between humans by blood-sucking insects.
- Onchocerciasis is caused by Onchocerca volvulus,
transmitted by the bite of an infected female blackfly
- Lymphatic filariasis is caused by Wuchereria
bancrofti (90% of cases), Brugia malayi (most of
the remainder) and Brugia timori, and is transmitted by
various mosquito species
- Loa loa worms
are transmitted by the bites of Mango flies or by Deer flies (Chrysops
spp.).
Lymphatic filariasis
- Lymphatic filariasis is caused by three thread-like
parasitic worms, called filariae. The species Wuchereria bancrofti is
the most prevalent worldwide, Brugia malayi is found
mostly in eastern Asia, and B. timori is confined to East
Timor and adjacent islands.
- Filarial parasites in their adult stage live in the
lymphatic system.
- The worms have an estimated active reproductive span of
4–6 years, producing millions of small immature larvae, microfilariae,
which circulate in the peripheral blood.
Diagnosis
- The standard method for diagnosing active infection is
the identification of microfilariae in a blood smear by microscopic
examination.
- The microfilariae that cause lymphatic filariasis
circulate in the blood at night (called nocturnal periodicity). Blood
collection should be done at night to coincide with the appearance of the
microfilariae, and a thick smear should be made and stained with Giemsa or
hematoxylin and eosin.
- For increased sensitivity, concentration techniques can
be used.
- Serologic techniques provide an alternative to
microscopic detection of microfilariae for the diagnosis of lymphatic
filariasis.
- Patients with active filarial infection typically have
elevated levels of antifilarial IgG4 in the blood and these can be
detected using routine assays.
- Because lymphedema may develop many years after
infection, lab tests are most likely to be negative with these patients.
Goal of treatment
- The main goal of treatment of an infected person is to kill the adult worm.
Choice of medications
Diethylcarbamazine citrate (DEC)
- Have both microfilaricidal and active against the adult
worm, is the drug of choice for lymphatic filariasis. The late phase of
chronic disease is not affected by chemotherapy.
Ivermectin
- Effective against the microfilariae of W. bancrofti,
but has no effect on the adult parasite.
Albendazole
- No direct effect on microfilariae but leads to a slow
decline in microfilaremia due to macrofilaricidal activity against the
adult worms. Albendazole can be used in patients with concomitant loiasis
or onchocerciasis.
Treatment
- All people with filariasis who are positive in the immunochromatographic test or have microfilaraemia should receive anti-filarial drug treatment to eliminate microfilariae (and adult worms when diethylcarbamazine is used)
- They can be treated with one of the following regimens:
(i) a single dose of
a combination of albendazole (400 mg) with ivermectin (150–200 μg/kg) in
areas where onchocerciasis is co-endemic
(ii) a single dose of a combination albendazole (400 mg) plus diethylcarbamazine (6 mg/kg)
or
(iii) diethylcarbamazine 6 mg/kg alone for 12 days in areas where onchocerciasis is non co-endemic
For tropical pulmonary eosinophilia (TPE), a longer DEC treatment course of 14-21 days is generally recommended. DEC is generally well tolerated.
Diethycarbamazine
precaution
- DEC is contraindicated in patients who may also have
onchocerciasis due to the possibility of severe exacerbations of skin and
eye involvement.
- DEC should be used with extreme caution in patients
with circulating Loa loa microfilarial levels > 2,500/mm3 due to the
potential for life-threatening side effects, including encephalopathy and
renal failure. Neither steroids pre-treatment nor slow dose escalation
prevents these complications.
References
1. https://www.cdc.gov/parasites/lymphaticfilariasis/health_professionals/dxtx.html
2. https://www.uptodate.com.ezp.imu.edu.my/contents/diagnosis-treatment-and-prevention-of-lymphatic-filariasis
3. World helath
Organization Global Programme To Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis, 2013
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