Tuesday, 26 March 2019

Parasites & Viruses can affect pregnat women-->thereby affect foetus. Toxoplasmosis


Prevention of Toxo-How?? Pregnant women should be advised to avoid contact with cat litter if at all possible. If they must change the litter they should do so daily wear gloves and wash their hands afterward. They should always wash their hands after preparing meat for cooking and should never eat raw or rare meat. Meat should be cooked thoroughly until the juices are clear. Fruits and vegetables also should be washed carefully to remove possible contamination by oocysts.
What is Congenital toxoplasmosis?It is  an infection of newborns that results from the transplacental passage of parasites from an infected mother to the fetus. These infants usually are asymptomatic at birth but later manifest a wide range of signs and symptoms including chorioretinitis strabismus epilepsy and psychomotor retardation.

Most tachyzoites are eliminated by the host’s humoral and cell – mediated immune responses but not all tachyzoites. Some do remain as cysts in various parts of body... Tissue cysts containing many bradyzoites develop 7-10 days after systemic tachyzoite infection. These tissue cysts occur in various host organs but persist principally within the central nervous system (CNS) and muscle. The development of this chronic state completes the nonfeline portion of the life cycle.

 What is not known to us?? What is enter-epithelial   cycle? This enteroepitheial cycle begins with the ingestion of the bradyzoite tissue cysts and culminates in the production of gametes. Gamete fusion produces a zygote which envelops itself in a rigid wall and id secreted in the feces as an unsporulated occyst. After 2-3 days of exposure to air at ambient temperature the noninfectious oocyst sporulates to produce eight sporozoite progeny. The sporulated occyst can be ingested by an intermediate host such as a person emptying a cat’s litter box or a pig rummaging in a barnyard. It is in the intermediate host that T gondii completes its life cycle.
What is the prevalence / EPIDEMIOLOGY
T gondii infects a wide range of mammals and birds. Its seroprevalence depends on the locale and the age of the population. Generally hot arid climatic conditions are associated with a low prevalence of infection. In the United States and most European countries the seroprevalence increases with age and exposure. For example in the United States 5-30 % of individuals 10-19 years old and 10-67% of those >50 years old have serologic evidence of exposure seroprevalence increases by ~1 % per year. In Central America, France, Turkey and Brazil the seroprevalence is higher. There may be as many as 2100 cases of toxoplasmic encephalitis each year in the United States.
 Last Query by an old man?? What % of women transmIts       parasites to foetus if acute infection occurs:-About one- third of all women who acquire infection with T. gondii during pregnancy transmit the parasite to the fetus; the remainder gives birth to normal uninfected babies. Of the various factors that influence fetal outcome gestational age at the time of infection is the most critical. Few data support a role for recrudescent maternal infection as the source of congenital disease. Thus women who are seropostive before pregnancy usually are protected against acute infection and do not give birth to congenitally infected neonates.
Do not scratch your head!!! How best to evaluate congenital infection?? . The following general guidelines can be used to evaluate congenital infection. There is essentially no risk if the mother becomes infected>26 months before conception. If infection is acquired <6 months before conception the likelihood of transplacental infection increases as the interval between infection and conception decreases. In pregnancy if the mother becomes infected during the first trimester the incidence of transplacental infection is lowest but the disease in the neonate is most severe. If maternal infection occurs during the third trimester the incidence of transplacental infection is greater but the infant is usually asymptomatic at birth. Infected infants who are normal at birth may have a higher incidence of learning disabilities and chronic neurologic sequelae than uninfected children. Only a small proportion of women infected with T. gondii develop clinical signs of infection. Often the diagnosis is first appreciated when routine post conception serologic tests show evidence of specific antibody.
 What about Toxoplasmosis in Immunocompetent patients
The most common manifestation of acute toxoplasmosis is cervical lymphadenopathy. The nodes may be single or multiple are usually nontender are discrete and vary in firmness. Lymphadenopathy also may be found in sub occipital supraclacicular inguinal and mediastinal areas. Generalized lymphadenopathy occurs in 20-30 % of symptomatic patients.
Between 20 and 40 % of patients with lymphadenopathy also have headache malaise fatigue and fever. A smaller proportion of symptomatic individuals have Myalgia sore throat abdominal pain maculopapular rash meningoencephalitis and confusion. Rare complications associated with infection in the normal immune host include pneumonia myocarditis encephalopathy pericarditis and polymyositis .Symptoms associated with acute infection usually resolve within several weeks although the lymphadenopathy may persist for some months. In ones epidemic toxoplasmosis is considered in the differential diagnosis, routine laboratory and serologic screening should precede node biopsy.
 What is the prevalence of Congenital Toxoplasmosis in other countries, many of them was Gig was positive!!! 
Between 400 and 4000 infants born each year in the United States are affected by congenital toxoplasmosis. Infection of the placenta leads to hematogenous infection of the fetus. As stated earlier the proportion of fetuses that becomes infected increases but the clinical severity of the infection declines as gestation proceeds. Persistence of T. gondii can ultimately result in reactivation and further damage decades later. Factors associated with relatively severe disabilities include delays in diagnosis and in initiation of therapy neonatal hypoxia and hypoglycemia profound visual impairment uncorrected hydrocephalus and increased intracranial pressure. If treated appropriately upwards of 70% of children have normal developmental neurologic and ophthalmologic findings at follow up evaluations. Treatment for 1 year with Pyrimethamine and a sulfonamide is tolerated with minimal toxicity.
How frequent is Ocular infection in children whose mothers ARE Ig G positive or not evaluated in Pre preg period/ at booking visit??
Infection with T gondii is estimated to cause 35% of all cases of chorioretinitis in the United States and Europe. Most ocular involvement is believed to be due to congenital infection with a very low incidence following acquired infection. Ophthalmologic examination

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