Published Date: 2014-12-14 21:16:38
Subject: PRO/EDR> Cholera, diarrhea & dysentery update (81): Africa, Asia
Archive Number: 20141214.3032623
CHOLERA, DIARRHEA AND DYSENTERY UPDATE (81): AFRICA, ASIA
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A ProMED-mail post
http://www.promedmail.org
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
http://www.isid.org
In this update:
Africa
[1] Diarrhea, probable cholera - Somalia (Mogadishu)
Asia
[2] Cholera - Philippines (Cotabato Province)
[3] Cholera - India (Maharashtra State)
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[1] Diarrhea, probable cholera - Somalia (Mogadishu)
Date: Thu 11 Dec 2014
Source: Press TV [edited]
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2014/12/11/389818/severe-diarrhea-kills-10-in-somalia/
A
severe outbreak of diarrhea has killed at least 10 people and
hospitalized around 100 others in the Somali capital, Mogadishu,
officials say.
The victims, mostly children and old men, are
thought to have drunk from wells containing contaminated water, said Dr.
Said Mohamed on Thu 11 Dec 2014. The doctor, who was treating some of
the patients at a local hospital, blamed poor management of water sites
and inadequate toilets for the spread of waterborne diseases.
Humanitarian
experts say only 30 percent of Somalis have access to clean water,
leaving the majority vulnerable to life-threatening diseases. According
to the WHO, some 75 percent of all cases of highly infectious diarrhea
in the famine-stricken African country are among children under the age
of 5. Among those highly-affected are displaced groups in Mogadishu
camps where refugees queue to receive water rations.
Acute watery diarrhea has been a recurrent medical condition in Somalia for over a decade.
The
Horn of Africa region has been plagued by wars, poverty and natural
disasters including repeated droughts, famine and flooding.
--
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[Cholera is endemic in Somalia, where "acute watery diarrhea" is often a term used for this infection. - Mod.LL]
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[2] Cholera - Philippines (Cotabato Province)
Date: Sun 14 Dec 2014
Source: GMA Network [edited]
http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/392552/news/regions/cholera-outbreak-suspected-in-cotabato-town-as-60-sent-to-hospital
At
least 60 people in Cotabato were hospitalized due to suspected cholera,
a radio report said late Sunday, 14 Dec 2014. The victims, mostly
children and the elderly, were from Sitio Bliss in Barangay Pagangan in
Aleosan town, Bombo Radyo reported.
The report said that most of
them experienced stomach pains, vomiting, and diarrhea. Nawal said
contaminated water in the area could be the cause of the suspected
outbreak.
Governor Emmylou Mendoza has ordered the Integrated Provincial Health Office to investigate the incident.
[Byline: Joel Locsin]
--
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[Cotabato (also North Cotabato) is a landlocked province (http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cotabato) of the Philippines located in the Soccsksargen region (Region XII) in Mindanao. Its capital is Kidapawan City. - Mod.LL]
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[3] Cholera - India (Maharashtra State)
Date: Sun 14 Dec 2014
Source: Times of India [edited]
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/kolhapur/Two-cholera-cases-found-in-city-contaminated-water-to-blame/articleshow/45508676.cms
With
2 cases of cholera reported in 2 days, the civic administration of
Kolhapur on Sat, 13 Dec 2014, issued a public notice over the rise of
the cases and the precautions to be taken by the citizens to prevent
infection from the waterborne disease. The polluted water supply through
leaking rusting old pipelines is being blamed for the cholera cases.
Two
patients from ward E were admitted at the Chhatrapati Pramila Raje
Civil Hospital in last 2 days with cholera. Laboratory tests have
confirmed the presence of the _Vibrio cholerae_ bacterium that causes
the disease. In addition, private doctors have informed civic health
officials that around 20 to 30 suspected cholera cases are being
reported every day since the last couple of days.
Since cholera
is a notifiable disease, the Kolhapur Municipal Corporation (KMC) health
department has directed all the private hospitals to provide the health
report of each and every patient admitted with suspected cholera. The
civic administration has requested the Food and Drug Administration to
check the quality of food sold on road-side stalls.
KMC's chief
health officer Dilip Patil said: "The cases of cholera are observed in
the areas where contaminated water has been supplied and used for
drinking. We have directed the ward level officials to help plug the
leakages of the water supply and drainage lines. Also, the family
welfare centres across the city have been told to conduct a survey of
the patients with diarrhea in the area where cholera has been reported."
Many
parts of the city have been receiving contaminated water for the last
one month. In the last general body meeting, agitated corporators had
expressed anger over the apathy of the civic officials to plug the
leakages and blamed the officials for the rise in water-borne diseases.
A
recent survey conducted by the health officials showed that major areas
in C and E wards such as Bapat Camp, Nagala Park, Takala, Rajarampuri
and Daulat Nagar area were receiving polluted water. Both of the cases
of cholera have been reported from the E ward.
Around 30 percent
of the water supply pipelines are more than 25 years old, and they are
in rusted condition. Recently, the civic administration resorted to
water cuts to repair the old pipes. The civic activists claim that the
city has been under the threat of water borne diseases due improper
management of the water supply and drainage network.
--
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[A
recent paper in PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases underscores the
importance of oral rehydration therapy (ORT) in the treatment of
cholera. as noted in the paper and historically, most ORT solutions
contain glucose to assist in fluid and electrolyte absorption. Kuhn and
colleagues present information that, at least in vitro, rice-based
starch containing ORT appears to diminish the production of virulence
factors of the bacillus in addition to facilitating fluid and
electrolyte absorption:
Kuhn J, Finger F, Bertuzzo E, Borgeaud S,
Gatto M, et al. (2014) Glucose- but Not Rice-Based Oral Rehydration
Therapy Enhances the Production of Virulence Determinants in the Human
Pathogen Vibrio cholerae. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 8(12): e3347.
doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0003347:
Abstract:
"Despite major
attempts to prevent cholera transmission, millions of people worldwide
still must address this devastating disease. Cholera research has so far
mainly focused on the causative agent, the bacterium _Vibrio cholerae_,
or on disease treatment, but rarely were results from both fields
interconnected. Indeed, the treatment of this severe diarrheal disease
is mostly accomplished by oral rehydration therapy (ORT), whereby water
and electrolytes are replenished. Commonly distributed oral rehydration
salts also contain glucose. Here, we analyzed the effects of glucose and
alternative carbon sources on the production of virulence determinants
in the causative agent of cholera, the bacterium _Vibrio cholerae_
during in vitro experimentation. We demonstrate that virulence gene
expression and the production of cholera toxin are enhanced in the
presence of glucose or similarly transported sugars in a ToxR-, TcpP-
and ToxT-dependent manner. The virulence genes were significantly less
expressed if alternative non-PTS carbon sources, including rice-based
starch, were utilized. Notably, even though glucose-based ORT is
commonly used, field studies indicated that rice-based ORT performs
better. We, therefore, used a spatially explicit epidemiological model
to demonstrate that the better performing rice-based ORT could have a
significant impact on epidemic progression based on the recent outbreak
of cholera in Haiti. Our results strongly support a change of carbon
source for the treatment of cholera, especially in epidemic settings." -
Mod.LL
ProMED-mail HealthMaps for the regions above can be found at
Somalia: http://healthmap.org/promed/p/125,
Cotabato, Philippines: http://healthmap.org/promed/p/2377,
Maharashtra State, India: http://healthmap.org/promed/p/310.]