Lymphatic Filariasis

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Lymphatic filariasis

Background

Lymphatic filariasis, more commonly known as elephantiasis, is a painful and profoundly disfiguring disease. While the disease is usually acquired in childhood its visible manifestations occur in adults leading to temporary and permanent disability. It has a major social and economic impact on countries in which it occurs.

The disease is caused by thread-like worms of genus Wuchereria and Brugia, known as filariae, that lodge in the lymphatic system, the network of nodes and vessels that maintains the delicate fluid balance between the tissues and blood -- both of which are essential components of the body's immune system.

Filariae are responsible for a variety of clinical manifestations, including lymphoedema of the limbs, genital disease (hydrocele, chylocele and swelling of the scrotum and penis) and recurrent secondary bacterial infections known as "acute attacks". The vast majority of infected people are asymptomatic but virtually all of them have sub clinical lymphatic damage and as many as 40% have renal involvement with proteinuria and haematuria.

The transmission cycle

Filariea are transmitted through mosquitoes. When an infected mosquito takes a blood meal, the parasites are deposited on the person's skin: from there they enter through the skin. These larvae then migrate to the lymphatic vessels and develop into adult worms. During a period of 6 to 12 months, they cause much damage and dilatation of the lymphatic vessels. The filariae live for several years in the human host. While alive, they produce millions of immature microfilariae that circulate in the peripheral blood. Mosquitoes ingest these larvae when they bite infected humans. The larval forms further develop inside the mosquito before becoming infectious to man. Thus, a cycle of transmission is established.

Current Treatments

Diethylcarbamazine


Albendazole

Further Reading

wikipedia:Lymphatic Filariasis
Wikipedia entry on Lymphatic Filariasis

CDC Fact Sheet
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Fact Sheet and other information

WHO - Lymphatic filariasis
Information from the World Health Organization

WHO-TDR-Lymphatic filariasis
The Tropical Disease Research and Training Division of WHO's information

TropIKA: Lymphatic filariasis
TDR's TropIKA.net (Tropical Disease Research to foster Innovation and Knowledge Application) contains many resources, such as journal articles, related to tropical diseases

The Global Alliance to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis