Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY Dysentery

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infection is weathered, the symptoms will subside within
approximately two weeks.
Adults experience a less severe course of disease. They
will initially feel a griping pain in the abdomen, develop diar-
rhea, though without any blood in the stool at first. Blood and
pus will appear soon, however, as episodes of diarrhea recur
with increasing frequency. Dysentery usually ends in the adult
within four to eight days in mild cases, and up to six weeks in
severe infections.
Shigella dysenteriaebrings about a particularly virulent
infection that can be fatal within 12 to 24 hours. The patient
has little or no diarrhea, but experiences delirium, convul-
sions, and lapses into a coma. Fortunately, infection with this
species is uncommon.
Treatment of the patient with dysentery usually is by
fluid therapy to replace the liquid and electrolytes lost in
sweating and diarrhea. Antibioticsmay be used, but some
Shigella species have developed resistance to them, and in
these cases, antibiotics may be relatively ineffective.
Some individuals harbor the bacterium without having
symptoms. Like those who are convalescent from the disease,
the carriers without symptoms can spread the disease. This
may occur by someone with improperly washed hands prepar-
ing food, which becomes infected with the organism.

Another form of dysentery called amebic dysenteryor
intestinal amebiasis is spread by a protozoan, Entamoeba his-
tolytica.The protozoan occurs in an active form, which infects
the bowel, and an encysted form, which forms the source of
infection. If the patient develops diarrhea, the active form of
amoeba will pass from the bowel and rapidly die. If no diarrhea
is present, the amoeba will form a hard cyst about itself and
pass from the bowel to be picked up by another victim. Once
ingested, it will lose its shell and begin the infectious cycle.
Amebic dysentery can be waterborne, so anyone drinking
infested water that is not purified is susceptible to infection.
Amebic dysentery is common in the tropics and rela-
tively rare in temperate climates. Infection may be so subtle as
to be practically unnoticed. Intermittent bouts of diarrhea,
abdominal pain, flatulence, and cramping mark the onset of
infection. Spread of infection may occur with the organisms
entering the liver, so abdominal tenderness may occur over the
area of the liver. Because the amoeba invades the lining of the
colon, some bleeding may occur, and in severe infections, the
patient may require blood transfusions to replace lost blood.
Treatment, again, is aimed at replacement of lost fluids
and the relief of symptoms. Microscopic examination of the
stool will reveal the active protozoan or its cysts. Special med-

Dysentery epidemic amongst Hutu refugees.

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