A member of the Giardia that causes intestinal disease (giardiasis ) in humans and animals
Also known as beaver fever
Background
Microbiology
Flagellated protozoan that infects the small bowel
Host specificity related to genotype ("assemblage")
Assemblages A & B infect humans, but also numerous non-human hosts including primates, dogs, cats, cattle, sheep, deer, rodents, horses, and beavers
Assemblages C & D affect dogs; E affects cattle, goats, sheep, and pigs; F affects cats; G affects rodents; and H affects marine vertebrates
Antigenic variation is determined by the variant-specific surface protein (VSP)
Replaced every few generations
Life Cycle
A cyst is ingested via fecal-oral contamination
In the small bowel, the cyst releases two trophozoites (free-living form) via excystation
Trophozoites multiply by binary fission
When they reach the large bowel, they encyst
Epidemiology
Worldwide distribution
Generally transmitted fecal-oral route (via environment), but person-to-person transmission is possible in daycares
Numerous animal reservoirs, not fully understood how important they are
Cysts can survive several months in cold water
Peak prevalence occurs in children of up to 15 to 30% in poor countries
Reinfection is common
Pathophysiology
Infected with as few as 10 to 25 cysts
Trophozoites colonize the upper small bowel, adhering to the mucosal enterocytes
Host response involves B- and T-cells, including production of IgM and IgG antibodies, possibly IgA antibodies as well
Causes villous atrophy, which can contribute to malabsorption
Inhibits disaccharidases, which contributes to lactose intolerance
Clinical Manifestations
Can have asymptomatic cyst passage (5 to 15%)
Can last up to 6 months in children
Most common syndrome is acute diarrhea (25 to 50%)
Incubation period 1 to 2 weeks
Usually presents after 7 to 10 days
Malaise, flatulence, cramps, bloating, nausea, anorexia, vomiting, and malabsorption
Sulfuric belching is classic
Fevers are uncommon but possible
Can also cause chronic diarrhea
More common in CVID , X-linked agammaglobulinemia , and AIDS
Malaise, occasional headache, diffuse abdominal and epigastric pain worse with food
May have malabsorption, often has weight loss
Symptoms can wax and wane, with periods of remission or constipation
Post-Giardia syndrome with irritable bowel syndrome and chronic fatigue may last for years
Can have significant malabsorption
Also, can have post-Giardia lactose intolerance lasting several weeks
Diagnosis
Stool microscopy
May see active trophozoites in saline wet prep
Look for cysts after iodine staining
Sensitivity 60-80% with one stool sample, up to 90% with three
Antigen assays are sometimes used during outbreaks or for screening
Sensitivity 85-98% and specificity 90-100%
PCR is becoming more common, and is the current standard in Ontario
Becomes negative by about 7 days after successful treatment1
String test
Put a string down into small bowel and then pull it back; it should have bile
Look with a microscope
Done when there is high suspicion but O&P negative
Management
References
^ W. van den Bijllaardt, I.T. Overdevest, A.G. Buiting, J.J. Verweij. Rapid clearance of Giardia lamblia DNA from the gut after successful treatment. Clinical Microbiology and Infection . 2014;20(11):O972-O974. doi :10.1111/1469-0691.12626 .