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Leptospirosis outbreak following severe flooding: a rapid assessment and mass prophylaxis campaign; Guyana, January-February 2005.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Leptospirosis is a zoonosis usually transmitted through contact with water or soil contaminated with urine from infected animals. Severe flooding can put individuals at greater risk for contracting leptospirosis in endemic areas. Rapid testing for the disease and large-scale interventions are necessary to identify and control infection. We describe a leptospirosis outbreak following severe flooding and a mass chemoprophylaxis campaign in Guyana.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS
From January-March 2005, we collected data on suspected leptospirosis hospitalizations and deaths. Laboratory testing included anti-leptospiral dot enzyme immunoassay (DST), immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining, and microscopic agglutination testing (MAT). DST testing was conducted for 105 (44%) of 236 patients; 52 (50%) tested positive. Four (57%) paired serum samples tested by MAT were confirmed leptospirosis. Of 34 total deaths attributed to leptospirosis, postmortem samples from 10 (83%) of 12 patients were positive by IHC. Of 201 patients interviewed, 89% reported direct contact with flood waters. A 3-week doxycycline chemoprophylaxis campaign reached over 280,000 people.
CONCLUSIONS
A confirmed leptospirosis outbreak in Guyana occurred after severe flooding, resulting in a massive chemoprophylaxis campaign to try to limit morbidity and mortality.

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  • Authors

    Dechet AM, Parsons M, Rambaran M, Mohamed-Rambaran P, Florendo-Cumbermack A, Persaud S, Baboolal S, Ari MD, Shadomy SV, Zaki SR, Paddock CD, Clark TA, Harris L, Lyon D, Mintz ED

    Institution

    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America. adechet@gmail.com

    Source

    PloS one 7:7 2012 pg e39672

    MeSH

    Adult
    Agglutination Tests
    Animals
    Anti-Bacterial Agents
    Disease Outbreaks
    Doxycycline
    Female
    Floods
    Guyana
    Humans
    Immunoassay
    Immunohistochemistry
    Leptospira
    Leptospirosis
    Male
    Survival Rate

    Pub Type(s)

    Journal Article

    Language

    eng

    PubMed ID

    22808049