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Chagas disease

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http://www..drugs.com/enc/chagas_disease.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kissing bug

 

 

 

 

 

 

Antibodies

 

 

Chagas disease

 

Definition

Chagas disease is an illness spread by insects. It is common in South and Central America.

Alternative Names American trypanosomiasis

Causes

Chagas disease is caused by Trypanosoma cruzi, a parasite related to the African trypanosome that causes sleeping sickness. It is spread by reduvid bugs and is one of the major health problems in South America, where 20 million people are infected. Due to immigration, approximately 500,000 people in the United States are believed to be infected.

Risk factors for Chagas disease include living in Central or South America, poverty, living in a hut where the reduvid bugs live in the walls, and receiving a blood transfusion from a person who carries the parasite, but does not have active Chagas disease.

Chagas disease has two phases -- acute and chronic. The acute phase may have no symptoms or have very mild symptoms. Symptoms of the acute phase include swelling and reddening at the site of infection (where the blood-sucking insect caused the initial infection).

This may be followed by swelling of one eye. Lymph nodes that drain the area of the insect bite may become swollen. As the parasite spreads from the bite site, the patient develops fever, malaise, and generalized swelling of the lymph nodes. The liver and spleen may become enlarged.

The disease goes into remission after the acute phase and may become chronic with no further symptoms for many years. When symptoms finally develop, they appear as heart disease (cardiomyopathy) and digestive abnormalities.

Patients may develop congestive heart failure. Swallowing difficulties may be the first symptom of digestive disturbances and may lead to malnutrition. Patients who have parasitic infection of the colon may experience abdominal pain and constipation. Death is usually caused by heart disease.

Symptoms

 

History of exposure in an area where Chagas disease is known to occur

Swollen red area at site of previous insect bite

Enlarged lymph nodes

Swelling of one eye

Fever

Irregular heartbeat (arrhythmia)

Rapid heartbeat (tachycardia)

Swallowing difficulties

Exams and Tests

 

Physical examination can confirm the symptoms. It may demonstrate signs of heart failure (or cardiomyopathy) in the chronic form.

Peripheral blood smear demonstrates motile trypanosomes in the acute form.

Blood culture demonstrates Trypanosoma cruzi in the acute form.

ELISA can show past infection with Trypanosoma cruzi in the chronic form.

Treatment

The acute phase should be treated. Benznidazole has been shown to be effective. Experimental treatment may include nifurtimox. Treating the chronic phase with antibiotics is not helpful. Instead, the symptoms of heart and intestinal disease should be treated.

 

Outlook (Prognosis)

Approximately 30% of infected and untreated people will develop chronic or symptomatic Chagas disease. It may take more than 20 years from the time of the original infection to develop heart or digestive problems.

Abnormal heart rhythms (arrhythmias, ventricular tachycardia) may cause sudden death. Once congestive heart failure develops, death usually occurs within several years.

Possible Complications

 

Cardiomyopathy

Congestive heart failure

Enlargement of the esophagus (megaesophagus) with swallowing difficulty

Enlargement of the colon (megacolon) with constipation and abdominal pain

When to Contact a Medical Professional

Call for an appointment with your health care provider if symptoms suggestive of Chagas disease develop.

Prevention

Insect control with insecticides and housing structures less conducive to high insect populations will help control spread of the disease.

Blood banks in Central and South America screen donors for previous exposure to the parasite, and the blood is discarded if the donor tests positive. Because the incidence of Chagas disease is low in the United States, blood banks here do not screen donors for Chagas disease.

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This disease is what Charles Darwin picked up. He even says right in his diary that he would place the Benchuca bug on the table and starve it and tease it, to prompt it to bite him and draw blood. As the bug drew blood, it also injected the Chagas creature into Darwin. He was terrorized with this disease for 40 years and died screaming in agony in england.

 

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