Title
Acute and Congenital Chagas Disease
Date Issued
01 January 2011
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
book part
Author(s)
Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health
Publisher(s)
Academic Press
Abstract
The acute phase of Chagas disease lasts 4-8 weeks and is characterized by microscopically detectable parasitaemia. Symptoms are usually mild with severe acute disease occurring in less than 1% of patients. Orally transmitted Trypanosoma cruzi outbreaks can have more severe acute morbidity and higher mortality than vector-borne infection. Congenital T. cruzi infection occurs in 1-10% of infants of infected mothers. Most congenital infections are asymptomatic or cause non-specific signs, requiring laboratory screening for detection. A small proportion of congenital infections cause severe morbidity with hepatosplenomegaly, anaemia, meningoencephalitis and/or respiratory insufficiency, with an associated high mortality. Infected infants are presumed to carry the same 20-30% lifetime risk of cardiac or gastrointestinal disease as other infected individuals. Most control programs in Latin America employ prenatal serological screening followed by microscopic examination of cord blood from infants of seropositive mothers. Recent data confirm that polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is more sensitive and detects congenital infections earlier than conventional techniques. For infants not diagnosed at birth, conventional serology is recommended at at 6 to 9 months of age. In programs that have been evaluated, less than 20% of at risk infants completed all steps of the screening algorithm. A sensitive, specific and practical screening test for newborns is needed to enable Chagas disease to be added to newborn screening programs. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd.
Start page
19
End page
47
Volume
75
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Medicina clínica
Parasitología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-79960992425
Resource of which it is part
Advances in Parasitology
ISSN of the container
0065308X
DOI of the container
10.1016/B978-0-12-385863-4.00002-2
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus