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Tropical Diseases
Reasons to Stay Home!

By Kathy Olson

Parasites....

  • T. cruzi--caused by the bite of the reduviid bug, usually from sleeping in huts/structures. It feeds at night, causes chagas disease. The bug can be cured in the acute stage, not in the chronic form. Invades heart muscle, and can cause heart arrythmia's, myositis, in the intestine toxic megacolon and esophageal problems. Hard to diagnose, can require zoological diagnosis...ie have a unifected bug bite someone and then see if the bug gets infected then you know the person was.

  • Schistosomiasis-in the water (white water) any place with snails around is at risk. Highest risk is Africa...Lake Malawi (and moderate risk Lake Tanganyika), but present now in South America. Also called swimmers itch. End up with cercariae (the water form) invade through the skin, get a bite/rash at the site of entry, they mature to flukes in the blood vessels and then lay eggs which penetrate through the blood vessel into the gut or the urinary bladder (where they exit the body...the bladder one S. haematobium isn't in south america). The eggs can get caught in the liver circulation and with time lead to cirrhosis of the liver. Can be treated if found early, cirrhosis of the liver is irreversible.

  • Leishmaniasis (Kala Azar)-sand fly bites....lead to enlarged spleen, low platlets, low RBC/anemia, fever and lethargy. If untreated and severe, it can be fatal. With treatment, the mortality is 5%.

  • Filariasis (Wuchereria bancroftii) transmitted by mosquito bites, a parasitic worm infection, blocks lymphatic ducts...causes edema, in worst stages called elephantiasis...not treatable/curable. [Ed: Your ankeles will be the size of your thighs.]

  • Onchocerciasis aka River blindness: Caused by Onchocerca volvulus...transmitted by a bite of the female blackfly. Get itchy bumps at the site of tthe bite and develop lumps under the skin...lasts awhile...the microfilariae migrate through tissue and concentrate in the eyes, cause lesions that lead to blindness (in endemic areas infection rates 80%, usually in areas along rivers) Treatment is available but only effective against the blood phase.

  • There is some amebic thing that my friend saw when she went and practiced medicine in Peru for two months...it usually infects kids, causes localized facial swelling, they know it is in the water and transmitted that way, but not all the details yet. No adults were reported with it...untreatable and universally fatal...progressive over years.

  • Other less worrisome stuff/treatable/avoidable/ Misc...Typhoid, Dengue (fever, arthlagias, vomiting rash...rare cases hemorrhagic, shock, etc), Malaria, Yellow Fever, Hepatitis A (get the vaccine if you haven't already, B is a good idea too), MMR (get updated if you haven't had another shot since High school), cholera, plaque, rabies (we saw a bat with this. Advice: Avoid caves with bat dung, and avoid bats who are out in the day light...with a large radius), Relapsing fever, Oropouch Virus Disease, Brucella (from Cheese, milk etc), Trichinosis from pork, Salmonella (eggs)


    http://www.geocities.com/NapaValley/5491
    Latest update: 17 March 2000
    Comments on this page: E-Mail the author: kathy at thekrib dot com
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