Schistosoma

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Schistosoma / (Redirected from Schistosoma mansoni)

Background

  • Infection with a species of the genus Schistosoma

Microbiology

Risk Factors

  • Fresh water exposure in endemic countries

Epidemiology

  • Seroprevalence in migrants by region of origin1
    • Latin America and the Caribbean (20%; 9-34)
    • Middle East and north Africa (6.4%; 0.3-19.5)
    • Sub-Saharan Africa (24.1%; 16-33)
    • South Asia (0%; 0-69)
    • East Asia and the Pacific (5.4%; 2-10)

Clinical Manifestations

Swimmer's Itch

  • Cercariae penetrate exposed skin and cause prickling sensation and occasionally urticaria, followed hours later by a macular rash
  • Caused by schistosomes that do not cause systemic illness
  • Common in Great Lakes region of North America, New England in the US, and other parts of North America and Europe

Katayama Fever

  • Syndrome of acute schistosomiasis that follows 4 to 8 weeks (range 2 to 12 weeks), after the flukes have migrated, developed into adults, and have started producing eggs
  • The syndrome represents a hypersensitivity reaction to the eggs produced by adult worms
  • More common with Schistosoma japonicum and Schistosoma mansoni, and less common with Schistosoma haematobium
  • Symptoms include abrypt onset of fever, chills, fatigue, headache, myalgias, abdominal pain, diarrhea, and occasionally bloody stool
  • Most also develop cough, dyspnea, chest pain, and diffuse infiltrates on chest x-ray
    • Lung nodules contain granulomas around eggs
  • Hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, and lymphadenopathy are common
  • Eggs may not be seen in stool until later in the course of the disease
  • Symptoms usually resolve within 2 to 10 weeks
  • Can involve symptoms anywhere the worms migrate and deposit eggs: CNS, genital tract, and skin
    • However, an induced small-vessel vasculitis can also cause neurological symptoms

Chronic Schistosomiasis

  • Can be asymptomatic or paucisymptomatic
  • Chronic granulomatous inflammation causes weight loss, anemia, stunted growth
  • Eosinophilia is common

Investigations

  • Labs
    • CBC, showing eosinophilia
    • Schistosoma serology (only positive 6 weeks after infection)
    • Egg detection in stool, urine, semen, or tissue biopsy
  • Imaging
    • Eggs can cause granulomatous disease in various organs
    • Bladder polyps and obstruction may be seen on ultrasound

Diagnosis

  • Usually based on serology
    • Can cross-react with other helminth co-infections, including trichinosis and filariasis
    • Can remain positive and even fluctuate for years after cure[1]

Management

  • Acute
  • Chronic
    • Praziquantel 20-40 mg/kg or 40-60 mg/kg (if at risk for S. japonica)
    • Given over one day split into 3 doses
    • May be repeated 6 weeks later, though this practice is not universal
    • No role for test-of-cure serology

Prognosis

  • Increased risk of squamous cell carcinoma, which increase with young age at infection, duration of infection, high burden of infection, and bladder wall fibrosis
  1. Michelle K. Yong, FRACP and others, Long‐Term Follow‐Up of Schistosomiasis Serology Post‐Treatment in Australian Travelers and Immigrants, Journal of Travel Medicine, Volume 17, Issue 2, 1 March 2010, Pages 89–93, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1708-8305.2009.00379.x

References

  1. ^  Archana Asundi, Alina Beliavsky, Xing Jian Liu, Arash Akaberi, Guido Schwarzer, Zeno Bisoffi, Ana Requena-Méndez, Ian Shrier, Christina Greenaway. Prevalence of strongyloidiasis and schistosomiasis among migrants: a systematic review and meta-analysis. The Lancet Global Health. 2019;7(2):e236-e248. doi:10.1016/s2214-109x(18)30490-x.