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Diarrheal disease is common in tropical countries, affecting individuals of all ages and including indigenous residents as well as travelers to these countries. The frequency of diarrheal disease in warm tropical climates relates to multiple factors, including poor hygiene, poor sanitation, and the ability of the pathogens to survive and proliferate in food and water under such ambient conditions. In indigenous residents of the tropics, infection with enteric pathogens often is asymptomatic whereas short-term visitors tend to develop symptomatic infections with diarrhea of variable duration. Cross-sectional studies using molecular methods have identified enteric pathogen carriage in 50% to 94% of children and adults residing in tropical countries. The development of diarrheal illness in individuals silently harboring pathogens may be related to pathogen load and multiplicity of infection largely attributable to heavy microbial contamination of foodstuffs resulting from poor sanitation.
Subclinical and overt malabsorption are common in long-term residents of the tropics, the predominant cause varying with geographic location. Tropical sprue (TS) remains the major cause of adult malabsorption in many tropical countries but is less common in children in whom a variety of other etiologies, including celiac disease and transient post-infection malabsorption, may be implicated; tropical enteropathy (TE) is another cause of significant morbidity and long-term consequences in children. Parasitic infections of the small intestine are the next most common cause of chronic diarrhea and malabsorption in tropical countries. Intestinal TB and tropical pancreatitis with pancreatic insufficiency are other significant causes of malabsorption in the tropics. This chapter focuses on TS andTE but touches briefly upon other specific causes of diarrhea and malabsorption in the tropics.
Acute and chronic infectious diarrhea in the tropics are caused by a variety of bacterial, viral, and parasitic agents ( Box 108.1 ). Although these pathogens affect the indigenous population of the tropics, many infected adults remain asymptomatic, probably because of immunity acquired by earlier exposures to the same or related infectious agents. Short-term visitors to the tropics, however, are at significant risk for diarrhea with nearly 50% developing a diarrheal illness during their stay. In the past decade, incidence rates of diarrhea during travel to countries with improving economies dropped significantly, although rates remained high with travel to South Asia, Western Asia, northern and tropical Africa, and Central America.
Aeromonas hydrophila
Arcobacter butzleri
Bacteroides fragilis , enterotoxigenic
Campylobacter jejuni
Escherichia coli : enterotoxigenic, enteroaggregative, enteroinvasive, enterohemorrhagic
Laribacter hongkongensis
Listeria monocytogenes
Plesiomonas shigelloides
Salmonella , non-typhoidal
Shigella species: S. dysenteriae, S. flexneri, S. sonnei, S. boydii
Vibrio cholerae O1, O139, non-O1 non-O139
Vibrio parahaemolyticus
Yersinia enterocolitica
Anisakis simplex
Fasciolopsis buski
Heterophyiasis (Haplorchis taichui, Metagonimus yokogawai)
Hymenolepis nana
Paracapillaria philippinensis
Schistosoma mansoni
Strongyloides stercoralis
Trichinella spiralis
Trichuris trichiura
Blastocystis hominis
Encephalitozoon intestinalis
Enterocytozoon bieneusi
Cryptosporidium parvum
Cyclospora cayetanensis
Cystoisospora belli
Giardia lamblia
Leishmania donovani
Astroviruses
Caliciviruses: norovirus and sapovirus
Enteric adenoviruses
HIV
Picornaviruses
Rotavirus
Cholera is the most dramatic form of acute diarrhea, and results in death from dehydration and electrolyte imbalance if untreated. Cholera continues to be endemic in the Indian subcontinent, particularly in the southern and eastern parts; the Indonesian islands; the Philippines; and Latin America; it may also afflict travelers to these countries. Epidemics of cholera occur intermittently in tropical developing countries, related to breakdown in sanitation and hygiene during or shortly after the rainy season, during large gatherings of people such as occurs at places of religious significance, and also during war or civil strife. In the past decade, cholera has become endemic in major parts of sub-Saharan Africa, affecting nearly 150,000 persons per year. Among 10,032 patients in the US with illness related to foreign travel, acute diarrhea was most common, accounting for 22% of cases. The etiology of acute diarrheal illness in travelers is often geographically determined. Thus, enterotoxin-producing Escherichia coli was associated with travel to South America or to Mexico; Giardia lamblia and Cryptosporidium spp.with travel to South Central Asia; and Campylobacter spp. with travel in South and Southeast Asia and less commonly to West or East Africa, and not with travel to or in South America or the Caribbean. Campylobacter exhibited a high degree of resistance to fluoroquinolones. When molecular methods are used to diagnose which infection is causing diarrhea, multiple pathogens are detected in nearly a half of samples. Enteropathogenic E. coli and enteroaggregative E. coli were more common than enterotoxigenic E. col i or Campylobacter. Arcobacter species and enterotoxin-producing Bacteroides fragilis have been identified as important causes of diarrhea in some areas. Infection with the coccidian parasites, Cyclospora, Cryptosporidium and Cystoisospora, and with the fungus, microsporidia, causes transient or no illness in immunocompetent residents of the tropics, but may cause persistent diarrhea in travelers who have returned from the tropics. The opportunistic heterokont Blastocystis and the protozoan Dientamoeba fragilis may often be identified in the stools of symptomatic returned travelers, but their frequent carriage in stool even prior to travel means these must be viewed with caution when assigning causation for diarrhea. Noroviruses are another emerging cause of diarrhea associated with travel to tropical countries.
TS remains the major cause of malabsorption in tropical countries. Despite much investigation, the etiology of this disease has never been satisfactorily elucidated. In recent times, TS has been overshadowed by the emergence of celiac disease as a major cause of malabsorption in some parts of the world (e.g., in some states of northern India). TS continues to be reported in individuals who return to temperate climates after prolonged stays in tropical developing countries. TS needs to be differentiated from a variety of other conditions that also cause malabsorption in residents of the tropics ( Box 108.2 ).
Mycobacterium avium intracellulare complex
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Hymenolepis nana
Paracapillaria philippinensis
Strongyloides stercoralis
Cryptosporidium parvum
Cyclospora cayetanensis
Cystoisospora belli
Giardia lamblia
Leishmania donovani
Encephalitozoon intestinalis
Enterocytozoon bieneusi
Intestinal lymphangiectasia
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