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Cholera

HASSAN QURESHI
About Myself


Born and Raised in
Jersey



Rutgers University
2007



LECOM class of 2014
OBJECTIVES
DEFINITION
     EPIDEMIOLOGY

ETIOLOGY
     RISK FACTORS
     HISTORY & EXAM
     TESTS
     SCREENING

DIAGNOSIS

TREATMENT
PREVENTION
Definition

Vibrio Cholerae

 Secretory diarrheal
    illness caused by gram
    negative curved rods
   Oxidase positive
   Ferments Sucrose
   Grow naturally in
    marine waters
   Fecal-oral
    transmission
Pathogenesis

Vibrio Cholerae

 Vibrio Cholerae
 enterotoxin activates the
 stimulatory Gs protein
 via ADP-ribosylation.
 This stimulates secretion
 of chloride ions and
 water from enterocytes
 into the small intestines,
 and causing watery
 diarrhea.
Epidemiology

   Major pandemics since 1817
       V. cholerae O1 biotype el tor
           Began in Asia in 1961, spread to Africa and Europe
           In 1991, the pandemic strain spread to Peru
       V. cholerae O139 Bengal emerged in 1992 in India


 History of travel (S. America, India, Asia)
Epidemiology




Cases have occurred in U.S. (1992)
Etiology

       Drinking contaminated and inadequately sterilized water or
        eating undercooked seafood
       Risk Factor: antacids and achlorhydria
           Gastric acid production is reduced will allow easier entrance of the
            bacteria to the small interstines
       Based on agglutination of antiserum against O1 (LPS) antigen
               O1 and non-O1 strains
               V. cholerae O1 and O139 associated with epidemics
                 Produce cholera toxin
               Non-O1, non-O139 serotypes
                 Cause diarrheal disease identical to classical cholera but does not
                  cause large outbreaks of disease.
                 Due to being a nonadherent strain.
DIAGNOSIS
Risk Factors

       Ingestion of contaminated water
         Replicates in fresh and low-salt-containing water
         Drinking unsterile water and ice in developing countries
       Ingestion of comtaminated food sources
         Shelfish, clams, oysters and crabs and its products or food handlers
       High poverty
         Urban slums, refugee camps, conflict zones, naterual disasters and
          prisons where sanitation facilities may not exist
       Periods of flooding
         Peope using tube-wells that become contaminated with fecal contents
          from the poo-quality sanitation.
       Blood Group O at a risk of more severe disease, but
        may actually be protective against initial infection.
Key Diagnostic Factors

       Onset begins 2-3 days after ingestion of bacteria
       Copious Watery Diarrhea
         Diarrhea >1 liter/hour is most likely cholera if sustained.
         >20 mL/kg during a 4-hour observation period
       Evidence of Volume Depletion (WHO Criteria)
         Mild (<5% volume depletion) = alert, but increased HR, dry mucous
          membranes and small postural BP drop (<20 mmHg)
         Moderate (5% to 10%) = irritability, sunken eyes, dry mouth, decreased
          skin turgor significant (>20 mmHg) postural BP drop.
         Severe (>10% volume depletion) = lethargy or coma, circulatory collapse
          (systolic BP< 80 mmHg
       Family History of recent, severe cholera outbreak
         Family clusters due to secondary cases or due to a common source
Key Diagnostic Factors Continued

Greater than 20 Liters
                         Rice Water Stool
lost per day
Diagnostic Tests



 CBC                             Elevated Hct / Neutrophil CT.
 Serum Electrolyes               K+ (low normal or high) and
                                   anion gap acidosis
 ECG                             Assess severtiy of volume
                                   depletion
                                  Serogroup confirmation
 Antisera
                                      Either O1 or O139

 Darkfield Phase contrast        Large quantity of curved
  microscopy of stool              bacteria
Diagnostic Tests Continued

Vibrio Cholerae

   Microscopy:
       Small, rarely seen on
        stool Gram stain
       Darkfield microscopy
        can be used
   Culture:
       Next Slide
Question

 What media does V. Cholerae grow on?

    A. Mannitol salt agar
    B. Eosin methylene blue
    C. Thiosulfate citrate bile salts sucrose
    D. Buffered charcoal yeast extract agar
    E. Don’t care, hurry up I want to leave.
C.
Thiosulfate
citrate bile
salts sucrose
(TCBS) agar
World Health Organization Diagnosis Criteria

[WHO: Standard clinical case definition]

 WHO Standard case definition:

A case of cholera suspected when:

 An area where the disease is not known to be present, a patient aged
  5 years or more develops severe dehydration or dies from acute
  watery diarrhoea;
 In an area where there is a cholera epidemic, a patient aged 5 years
  or more develops acute watery diarrhoea, with or without vomiting.
 A case of cholera is confirmed when Vibrio cholerae O1 or O139 is
  isolated from any patient with diarrhoea.
TREATMENT


  HYDRATION
  HYDRATION
  HYDRATION
  !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Treatment

 No need for a a formal diagnosis of cholera to initiate treatment

 Urgent rehydration is the most important feature of treatment.

 IV rehydration is usually started for severely volume-depleted
  patients, but oral replacement solution (ORS) is the mainstay of
  therapy for mild-to-moderate disease and should be added to IV
  therapy as soon as is clinically possible.

 Antibiotics (based on local resistances) reduce both the severity and
  length of disease and should be used where possible

 Vitamin and micronutrient supplements in specific cases.

 Antisecretory agents have NOT been shown to be useful
The standard
World Health
Organization
Oral
Rehydration
Salts (ORS)
comes
prepacked and
contains:
                Na+ 75, K+ 20, Cl- 65, citrate 10,
                and glucose 75, with an osmolality
                of 245 mosmol/L (all in mmol/L)
Treatment of Severe Volume Depleted

 Precisely calculating volume depletion is difficult. The
  equations provided in WHO document may be used in
  balance with clinical judgment. [WHO/UNICEF: Clinical
  mgmt of acute diarrhea]

 Secretory diarrhea is high in Sodium, Potassium and
  Bicarbonate therefore Ringer lactate should be used.

 With the loss of Bicarbonate and Potassium in the stool,
  cholera patients have a profound metabolic acidosis and
  total body K+ depletion.
     K+ should be replaced through inclusion of K+ in the IV or oral
      fluids regardless of initial K+ level.
Treatment of Moderate - Mild Volume Depleted

 Oral Rehydration is usually preferred as this avoids
 the complications of IV fluids

 Aggressive catch-up rehydration for 2-4 hours,
 followed by maintenance fluids until diarrhea stops,
 which takes 2 to 5 days later.
A SLIDE WITH NO USEFUL
    INFORMATION AT ALL

JUST FILLING IN THE GAP BETWEEN THE LAST SLIDE
AND THE NEXT ONE (WHICH WILL BE ALONG IN JUST A
MOMENT)

NO NEED TO WRITE THIS DOWN, UNLESS YOU FEEL
COMPELLED TO DO SO

NOTHING ON THIS SLIDE IS EXAMINABLE

IN FACT I’M NOT REALLY SURE WHY I BOTHERED WITH
IT
Cholera Cot

Death can occurs within hours if untreated
60% mortality rate in untreated patients and <1% in treated

 The use of the cholera
 Cot enables health care
 providers to measure
 the enteric loss and
 replace losses with an
 equal volume of oral or
 IV fluids.
PREVENTION
Prevention

 Water treatment and sanitation with chlorination of
    municipal water supplies.
   Boiling or filtration of water locally
   Health education
   Attention to careful handwashing with soap and water
   Disinfection of the dead and their belongings with simple
    burial procedures
   2 oral vaccines available
       Composed of Killed, whole-cell bateria
       Contains the B-toxin subunit
Questions
The Painted Veil (2006)
References

 https://online.epocrates.com/noFrame/showPage.do?
    method=diseases&MonographId=451&ActiveSectionId
    =11
   Google Images
   http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH000
    1348/
   http://www.nathnac.org/pro/factsheets/documents/C
    holerarevisedAug07.pdf
   http://www.uptodate.com/contents/minor-vibrio-and-
    vibrio-like-species-associated-with-human-
    disease?source=search_result&search=cholera&selecte
    dTitle=3~57#H631646153

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Vibrio cholera

  • 2. About Myself Born and Raised in Jersey Rutgers University 2007 LECOM class of 2014
  • 3. OBJECTIVES DEFINITION EPIDEMIOLOGY ETIOLOGY RISK FACTORS HISTORY & EXAM TESTS SCREENING DIAGNOSIS TREATMENT PREVENTION
  • 4. Definition Vibrio Cholerae  Secretory diarrheal illness caused by gram negative curved rods  Oxidase positive  Ferments Sucrose  Grow naturally in marine waters  Fecal-oral transmission
  • 5. Pathogenesis Vibrio Cholerae  Vibrio Cholerae enterotoxin activates the stimulatory Gs protein via ADP-ribosylation. This stimulates secretion of chloride ions and water from enterocytes into the small intestines, and causing watery diarrhea.
  • 6. Epidemiology  Major pandemics since 1817  V. cholerae O1 biotype el tor  Began in Asia in 1961, spread to Africa and Europe  In 1991, the pandemic strain spread to Peru  V. cholerae O139 Bengal emerged in 1992 in India  History of travel (S. America, India, Asia)
  • 8. Etiology  Drinking contaminated and inadequately sterilized water or eating undercooked seafood  Risk Factor: antacids and achlorhydria  Gastric acid production is reduced will allow easier entrance of the bacteria to the small interstines  Based on agglutination of antiserum against O1 (LPS) antigen  O1 and non-O1 strains  V. cholerae O1 and O139 associated with epidemics  Produce cholera toxin  Non-O1, non-O139 serotypes  Cause diarrheal disease identical to classical cholera but does not cause large outbreaks of disease.  Due to being a nonadherent strain.
  • 10. Risk Factors  Ingestion of contaminated water  Replicates in fresh and low-salt-containing water  Drinking unsterile water and ice in developing countries  Ingestion of comtaminated food sources  Shelfish, clams, oysters and crabs and its products or food handlers  High poverty  Urban slums, refugee camps, conflict zones, naterual disasters and prisons where sanitation facilities may not exist  Periods of flooding  Peope using tube-wells that become contaminated with fecal contents from the poo-quality sanitation.  Blood Group O at a risk of more severe disease, but may actually be protective against initial infection.
  • 11. Key Diagnostic Factors  Onset begins 2-3 days after ingestion of bacteria  Copious Watery Diarrhea  Diarrhea >1 liter/hour is most likely cholera if sustained.  >20 mL/kg during a 4-hour observation period  Evidence of Volume Depletion (WHO Criteria)  Mild (<5% volume depletion) = alert, but increased HR, dry mucous membranes and small postural BP drop (<20 mmHg)  Moderate (5% to 10%) = irritability, sunken eyes, dry mouth, decreased skin turgor significant (>20 mmHg) postural BP drop.  Severe (>10% volume depletion) = lethargy or coma, circulatory collapse (systolic BP< 80 mmHg  Family History of recent, severe cholera outbreak  Family clusters due to secondary cases or due to a common source
  • 12. Key Diagnostic Factors Continued Greater than 20 Liters Rice Water Stool lost per day
  • 13. Diagnostic Tests  CBC  Elevated Hct / Neutrophil CT.  Serum Electrolyes  K+ (low normal or high) and anion gap acidosis  ECG  Assess severtiy of volume depletion  Serogroup confirmation  Antisera  Either O1 or O139  Darkfield Phase contrast  Large quantity of curved microscopy of stool bacteria
  • 14. Diagnostic Tests Continued Vibrio Cholerae  Microscopy:  Small, rarely seen on stool Gram stain  Darkfield microscopy can be used  Culture:  Next Slide
  • 15. Question  What media does V. Cholerae grow on?  A. Mannitol salt agar  B. Eosin methylene blue  C. Thiosulfate citrate bile salts sucrose  D. Buffered charcoal yeast extract agar  E. Don’t care, hurry up I want to leave.
  • 17. World Health Organization Diagnosis Criteria [WHO: Standard clinical case definition]  WHO Standard case definition: A case of cholera suspected when:  An area where the disease is not known to be present, a patient aged 5 years or more develops severe dehydration or dies from acute watery diarrhoea;  In an area where there is a cholera epidemic, a patient aged 5 years or more develops acute watery diarrhoea, with or without vomiting.  A case of cholera is confirmed when Vibrio cholerae O1 or O139 is isolated from any patient with diarrhoea.
  • 18. TREATMENT HYDRATION HYDRATION HYDRATION !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • 19. Treatment  No need for a a formal diagnosis of cholera to initiate treatment  Urgent rehydration is the most important feature of treatment.  IV rehydration is usually started for severely volume-depleted patients, but oral replacement solution (ORS) is the mainstay of therapy for mild-to-moderate disease and should be added to IV therapy as soon as is clinically possible.  Antibiotics (based on local resistances) reduce both the severity and length of disease and should be used where possible  Vitamin and micronutrient supplements in specific cases.  Antisecretory agents have NOT been shown to be useful
  • 20. The standard World Health Organization Oral Rehydration Salts (ORS) comes prepacked and contains: Na+ 75, K+ 20, Cl- 65, citrate 10, and glucose 75, with an osmolality of 245 mosmol/L (all in mmol/L)
  • 21. Treatment of Severe Volume Depleted  Precisely calculating volume depletion is difficult. The equations provided in WHO document may be used in balance with clinical judgment. [WHO/UNICEF: Clinical mgmt of acute diarrhea]  Secretory diarrhea is high in Sodium, Potassium and Bicarbonate therefore Ringer lactate should be used.  With the loss of Bicarbonate and Potassium in the stool, cholera patients have a profound metabolic acidosis and total body K+ depletion.  K+ should be replaced through inclusion of K+ in the IV or oral fluids regardless of initial K+ level.
  • 22. Treatment of Moderate - Mild Volume Depleted  Oral Rehydration is usually preferred as this avoids the complications of IV fluids  Aggressive catch-up rehydration for 2-4 hours, followed by maintenance fluids until diarrhea stops, which takes 2 to 5 days later.
  • 23. A SLIDE WITH NO USEFUL INFORMATION AT ALL JUST FILLING IN THE GAP BETWEEN THE LAST SLIDE AND THE NEXT ONE (WHICH WILL BE ALONG IN JUST A MOMENT) NO NEED TO WRITE THIS DOWN, UNLESS YOU FEEL COMPELLED TO DO SO NOTHING ON THIS SLIDE IS EXAMINABLE IN FACT I’M NOT REALLY SURE WHY I BOTHERED WITH IT
  • 24. Cholera Cot Death can occurs within hours if untreated 60% mortality rate in untreated patients and <1% in treated  The use of the cholera Cot enables health care providers to measure the enteric loss and replace losses with an equal volume of oral or IV fluids.
  • 26. Prevention  Water treatment and sanitation with chlorination of municipal water supplies.  Boiling or filtration of water locally  Health education  Attention to careful handwashing with soap and water  Disinfection of the dead and their belongings with simple burial procedures  2 oral vaccines available  Composed of Killed, whole-cell bateria  Contains the B-toxin subunit
  • 29. References  https://online.epocrates.com/noFrame/showPage.do? method=diseases&MonographId=451&ActiveSectionId =11  Google Images  http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH000 1348/  http://www.nathnac.org/pro/factsheets/documents/C holerarevisedAug07.pdf  http://www.uptodate.com/contents/minor-vibrio-and- vibrio-like-species-associated-with-human- disease?source=search_result&search=cholera&selecte dTitle=3~57#H631646153