SummaryLymphatic filariasis is associated with considerable disability related to the intensity and frequency of acute adenolymphangitis (ADL) attacks. The global programme for elimination of lymphatic filariasis emphasizes the need to combine transmission control with alleviation of disability. Footcare aimed at the prevention of secondary bacterial infections is the mainstay of disability alleviation programmes. We evaluated the efficacy and sustainability of an unsupervised, personal footcare programme by examining and interviewing 127 patients who had previously participated in a trial that assessed the efficacy of diethylcarbamazine, penicillin and footcare in the prevention of ADL. During the trial period these patients had been educated in footcare and were supervised. During the unsupervised period, which lasted 1 year or longer, 47 patients developed no ADL, and ADL occurred less frequently in 72.5%. Most patients were practising footcare as originally advised, unsupervised and without cost, which proves that such a programme is sustainable and effective.keywords Brugian filariasis, acute adenolymphangitis, footcare programme, disability, socio-economic correspondence Dr R. K. Shenoy,
Lymphatic filariasis is a major health problem in many parts of the tropical world. Although the disease itself is rarely fatal, the disability caused by the swollen extremities, the acute attacks of adenolymphangitis and the consequent sufferings of those afflicted are considerable. The economic burden imposed by lymphatic filariasis is not fully quantified and information on the social and psychological problems caused by the disease is scanty. Semi-structured interviews were therefore used, in southern India, to assess the perceptions, practices and socio-psychological problems of 127 patients with brugian filariasis. The patients were aware of the causative factors and the precautions to be taken to prevent progression of the disease. However, depression and loss of job opportunities were common in the study population. Patients also complained that the disease eroded their standing in the community and diminished their prospects of marriage. Awareness of these factors will be of help in planning suitable disability-management packages, including the rehabilitation of those who find it difficult to carry on with their existing jobs because of the severity of their disease.
In order to assess the role of circulating blood in early microglial activation after traumatic brain injury (TBI), controlled cortical impact injury was applied to adult rat brain slices (400 microm in thickness) and the microglial response was examined. The complement receptor (CR3) expression and morphological transformation of the microglia were evaluated by OX42 immunohistochemistry. At 5 min following injury, activated microglia with intense CR3 expression appeared throughout the hemisphere on the injured side. In contrast, the morphology and CR3 expression of the microglia on the contralateral side were indistinguishable from those of the resident ramified microglia seen in normal brains. At 30 min following injury, microglial activation was more pronounced on the injured side, while the microglia on the contralateral side still retained a ramified morphology. These results are consistent with our previous observations made in in vivo experiments, which indicate that, as the brain slice paradigm excludes variables arising from the circulating blood, the rapid and widespread microglial activation observed following TBI can not be attributed exclusively to the infiltration of blood-borne macrophages or molecules. Rather this activation is most likely caused by intrinsic mechanisms within the brain tissue, such as traumatic depolarization.
Lymphatic filariasis is increasingly viewed as the result of an infection that is often acquired in childhood. The lymphatic pathology that occurs in the disease is generally believed to be irreversible. In a recent study in India, Doppler ultrasonography and lymphoscintigraphy were used to explore subclinical pathology in 100 children from an area endemic for Brugia malayi infection. All the children investigated showed some evidence of current or previous filarial infection. Some were microfilaraemic but asymptomatic, some were amicrofilaraemic but had filarial disease or a past history of microfilaraemia and/or filarial disease, and the rest, though amicrofilaraemic, asymptomatic and without any history of microfilaraemia or filarial disease, were seropositive for antifilarial IgG(4) antibodies. All the children were treated every 6 months, with a single combined dose of diethylcarbamazine (6 mg/kg) and albendazole (400 mg), and followed up for 24 months. By the end of this period all but one of the children were amicrofilaraemic and the 'filarial dance sign' could not be detected in any of the 14 children who had initially been found positive for this sign. Although lymphoscintigraphy revealed lymph-node and lymph-vessel damage in 82% of the children at enrolment, in about 67% of the children this pathology was markedly reduced by the 24-month follow-up. These results indicate that the drug regimens used in the mass drug administrations run by the Global Programme to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis are capable of reversing subclinical lymphatic damage and can provide benefits other than interruption of transmission in endemic areas. The implications of these findings are presented and discussed.
Acute attacks of adenolymphangitis (ADL) contribute significantly to the morbidity seen in cases of filarial lymphoedema. Such cases are now being treated with multiple courses of the antifilarial drug diethylcarbamazine (DEC), either alone or in combination with antibiotics or anti-inflammatory drugs, based on anecdotal experience. In this, the first double-blind, placebo-controlled study, 150 patients with lymphoedema caused by brugian filariasis, each of whom recalled two or more ADL attacks in the previous year, were enrolled on a comprehensive foot-care programme. Each was also randomly allocated to one of the following five daily regimens (30 patients/regimen) for 1 year: 800 mg oral penicillin; 1 mg DEC/kg; 800 mg oral penicillin plus 1 mg DEC/kg; local antibiotics; or placebo. Each patient was followed up for another year. For each regimen group (including the placebo group), the number of ADL attacks in the treatment year was significantly less than that in the year prior to treatment (P < 0.001). Although, in all but the placebo group, there was a slight increase in the number of episodes in the follow-up year compared with the treatment year, the increase was only significant in the two groups given penicillin. Of all the treatments tested therefore, foot care seems to play the most important role in the prevention of ADL attacks. Additional benefit may accrue from local or systemic antibiotic use in those with high grades of oedema, but antifilarials have no place in the prevention of ADL attacks in an individual patient. These observations should help in the rational management and prevention of ADL attacks in filarial lymphoedema, so that the progression of the disease may be halted and morbidity reduced.
Acute attacks of adenolymphangitis (ADL) not only force patients with lymphatic filariasis to seek medical attention but also hasten the progression of filarial oedema. Patients with filariasis-associated ADL are currently treated with repeated courses of the antifilarial drug diethylcarbamazine (DEC), with or without antibiotics and anti-inflammatory agents. In this double-blind, placebo-controlled study, the efficacy of local treatment of the affected limb combined with repeated doses of ivermectin or DEC, in preventing the occurrence of ADL in Brugia malayi lymphatic filariasis, was examined. Overall, 120 patients who had each had at least two ADL attacks in the previous year were each admitted to the study at the time of an ongoing episode of ADL. The patients were randomly allocated to receive 12, monthly treatments of ivermectin (400 micrograms/kg), DEC (10 mg/kg) or placebo, in addition to local care of the affected limbs. There was a significant reduction in the frequency of ADL attacks in each of the three groups during the 2-year study period (P < 0.001 for each comparison). Most importantly, there were no significant differences in frequency of attacks between the three groups, either at the end of the treatment phase or at the end of the post-treatment phase (P > 0.15 for each comparison), suggesting that foot care combined with appropriate use of local antibiotics or antifungals is adequate to reduce the number of ADL attacks. The implications of these observations for planning morbidity control in lymphatic filariasis are discussed.
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