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LYMPHATIC FILARIASIS Lymphatic
Filariasis, known as Elephantiasis, puts at risk more than a billion people
in more than 80 countries. Over 120 million have already been affected
by it, over 40 million of them are seriously incapacitated and disfigured
by the disease. One-third of the people infected with the disease live
in India, one third are in Africa and most of the remainder are in South
Asia, the Pacific and the Americas. In tropical and subtropical areas
where lymphatic filariasis is well-established, the prevalence of infection
is continuing to increase. A primary cause of this increase is the rapid
and unplanned growth of cities, which creates numerous breeding sites
for the mosquitoes that transmit the disease. In
its most obvious manifestations, lymphatic filariasis causes enlargement
of the entire leg or arm, the genitals, vulva and breasts. In endemic
communities, 10-50% of men and up to 10% of women can be affected. The
psychological and social stigma associated with these aspects of the disease
are immense. In addition, even more common than the overt abnormalities
is hidden, internal damage to the kidneys and lymphatic system caused
by the filariae. The
thread-like, parasitic filarial worms Wuchereria bancrofti and
Brugia malayi that cause lymphatic filariasis live almost exclusively
in humans. These worms lodge in the lymphatic system, the network of nodes
and vessels that maintain the delicate fluid balance between the tissues
and blood and are an essential component for the body's immune defence
system. They live for 4-6 years, producing millions of immature microfilariae
(minute larvae) that circulate in the blood. The
disease is transmitted by mosquitoes that bite infected humans and pick
up the microfilariae that develop, inside the mosquito, into the infective
stage in a process that usually takes 7-21 days. The larvae then migrate
to the mosquitoes' biting mouth-parts, ready to enter the punctured skin
following the mosquito bite, thus completing the cycle. The
development of the disease itself in humans is still something of an enigma
to scientists. Though the infection is generally acquired early in childhood,
the disease may take years to manifest itself. Indeed,
many people never acquire outward clinical manifestations of their infections.
Even though there may be no clinical symptoms, studies have now disclosed
that such victims, outwardly healthy, actually have hidden lymphatic pathology
and kidney damage as well. The asymptomatic form of infection is most
often characterized by the presence in the blood of thousands or millions
of larval parasites (microfilariae) and adult worms located in the lymphatic
system. The
worst symptoms of the chronic disease generally appear in adults, and
in men more often than in women. In endemic communities, some 10-50% of
men suffer from genital damage, especially hydrocoele (fluid-filled balloon-like
enlargement of the sacs around the testes) and elephantiasis of the penis
and scrotum. Elephantiasis of the entire leg, the entire arm, the vulva,
or the breast - swelling up to several times normal size - can affect
up to 10% of men and women in these communities. Acute
episodes of local inflammation involving skin, lymph nodes and lymphatic
vessels often accompany the chronic lymphoedema or elephantiasis. Some
of these are caused by the body's immune response to the parasite, but
most are the result of bacterial infection of skin where normal defences
have been partially lost due to underlying lymphatic damage. Careful cleansing
can be extremely helpful in healing the infected surface areas and in
both slowing and, even more remarkably, reversing much of the overt damage
that has occurred already. In
endemic areas, chronic and acute manifestations of filariasis tend to
develop more often and sooner in refugees or newcomers than in local populations
continually exposed to infection. Lymphoedema may develop within six months
and elephantiasis as quickly as a year after arrival. Until
very recently, diagnosing lymphatic filariasis had been extremely difficult,
since parasites had to be detected microscopically in the blood, and in
most parts of the world, the parasites have a "nocturnal periodicity"
that restricts their appearance in the blood to only the hours around
midnight. The new development of a very sensitive, very specific simple
"card test" to detect circulating parasite antigens without
the need for laboratory facilities and using only finger-prick blood droplets
taken anytime of the day has completely transformed the approach to diagnosis.
With this and other new diagnostic tools, it will now be possible both
to improve our understanding of where the infection actually occurs and
to monitor more easily the effectiveness of treatment and control programmes.
Communities
where filariasis is endemic.
The primary goal of treating the affected community is to eliminate microfilariae
from the blood of infected individuals so that transmission of the infection
by the mosquito can be interrupted. Recent studies have shown that single
doses of diethylcarbamazine (DEC) have the same long-term (1-year) effect
in decreasing microfilaraemia as the formerly-recommended 12-day regimens
of DEC and, even more importantly, that the use of single doses of 2 drugs
administered concurrently (optimally albendazole with DEC or ivermectin)
is 99% effective in removing microfilariae from the blood for a full year
after treatment. It is this level of treatment effectiveness that has
made feasible the new efforts to eliminate lymphatic filariasis. Treating
the individual. Both albendazole and DEC have been shown
to be effective in killing the adult-stage filarial parasites (necessary
for complete cure of infection), but ideal treatment regimens still need
to be defined. It is clear that this anti-parasite treatment can result
in improvement of patients' elephantiasis and hydrocoele (especially in
the early stages of disease), but the most significant treatment advance
to alleviate the suffering of those with elephantiasis has come from recognizing
that much of the progression in pathology results from bacterial and fungal
"superinfection" of tissues with compromised lymphatic function
caused by earlier filarial infection. Thus, rigorous hygiene to the affected
limbs, with accompanying adjunctive measures to minimize infection and
promote lymph flow, results both in a dramatic reduction in frequency
of acute episodes of inflammation ("filarial fevers") and in
an astonishing degree of improvement of the elephantiasis itself. WHO's
Strategy to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis The
strategy of the Global Programme to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis has
two components: firstly, to stop the spread of infection (i.e. interrupt
transmission), and secondly, to alleviate the suffering of affected individuals
(i.e. morbidity control). To
interrupt transmission, districts in which lymphatic filariasis is endemic
must be identified, and then community-wide ("mass treatment")
programmes implemented to treat the entire at-risk population. In most
countries, the programme will be based on once-yearly administration of
single doses of two drugs given together: albendazole plus either diethylcarbamazine
(DEC) or ivermectin, the latter in areas where either onchocerciasis or
loiasis may also be endemic; this yearly, single-dose treatment must be
carried out for 4-6 years. An alternative community-wide regimen with
equal effectiveness is the use of common table/ cooking salt fortified
with DEC in the endemic region for a period of one year. To
alleviate the suffering caused by the disease, it will be necessary to
implement community education programmes to raise awareness in affected
patients. This would promote the benefits of intensive local hygiene and
the possible improvement, both in the damage that has already occurred,
and in preventing the debilitating and painful, acute episodes of inflammation. The
generous pledge in 1998 by the global healthcare company SmithKline Beecham
to collaborate with the World Health Organization in its elimination efforts
included the donation of numerous resources (but especially albendazole,
one of the mainstay drugs in the elimination strategy), free of charge,
for as long as necessary to ensure success of the elimination programme.
This donation, coupled with the recent decision by Merck and Co., Inc.,
to expand its ongoing Mectizan® (ivermectin) Donation Programme
to include treatment of lymphatic filariasis where appropriate, and the
creation of additional partnerships with other private, public and international
organizations, including the World Bank, have all further strengthened
the prospects for success of these elimination efforts. Economic
and Social Impact Because
of its prevalence often in remote rural areas, on the one hand, and in
disfavoured periurban and urban areas, on the other, lymphatic filariasis
is primarily a disease of the poor. In recent years, lymphatic filariasis
has steadily increased because of the expansion of slum areas and poverty,
especially in Africa and the Indian sub-continent. As many filariasis
patients are physically incapacitated, it is also a disease that prevents
patients from having a normal working life. The fight to eliminate lymphatic
filariasis is also a fight against poverty. Lymphatic
filariasis exerts a heavy social burden that is especially severe because
of the specific attributes of the disease, particularly since chronic
complications are often hidden and are considered shameful. For men, genital
damage is a severe handicap leading to physical limitations and social
stigmatization. For women, shame and taboos are also associated with the
disease. When affected by lymphoedema, they are considered undesirable
and when their lower limbs and genital parts are enlarged they are severely
stigmatized; marriage, in many situations an essential source of security,
is often impossible. Home
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