skip navigation
student.bmj.com

Kala-azar and elephantiasis

Under-represented in the Indian press, elephantiasis and kala-azar take their toll on poor communities. Sanjit Bagchi reports on these endemic parasitic infections

Terai region, in the foothills of the middle Himalayas, is a holiday haven for trekkers from all over the world. The picturesque valleys-of India, Nepal, Bangladesh and Bhutan-are also a happy hunting ground of sand flies, the deadly vectors of a fatal parasitic disease called kala-azar or visceral leishmaniasis. Those who become infected have irregular bouts of fever, substantial weight loss and anaemia. If the condition is left untreated mortality is about 100%.1

In the top five

According to an estimate by Médicins Sans Frontières (MSF), kala-azar is one of the top five neglected diseases of the world, infecting about 500 000 people and killing 60 000 people each year.2 3 Most deaths occur in the Terai region because people in these areas are so impoverished that they cannot afford the $150 to buy the basic sodium stibogluconate treatment. The average annual income of a person in this area is mere $200.

Moreover in recent years the parasite leishmania has become resistant to this traditional treatment, which has led to several small outbreaks in areas of north Bihar (in India) and in adjoining Nepal and Bangladesh.

Treatment is a deterrent

Because of a lack of facilities for early diagnosis, poverty, and lack of awareness in rural people the disease rarely gets treated in its initial stages. In addition, the duration of the first line treatment--a course administered daily through injections over at least three weeks--is a deterrent for many patients, who cannot afford to stay away from work

At later stages of the disease, many associated problems such as malnutrition, immunosuppression, secondary infection, drug toxicity, and drug resistance further deteriorate the response to the drug. Moreover, untreated cases act as human reservoirs, spreading the disease far and wide beyond the endemic zone.

One major need is a new generation drug with a simpler regimen. But as visceral leishmaniasis mainly affects poor people, research and development of new diagnostics and drugs have been neglected. Projects rank low in the private sector, and only limited funds are available. Pharmaceutical companies prefer to invest money in research for anti-parasites for pets in rich countries rather than life saving drugs for millions in developing countries.4

However, in recent years organisations such as MSF, Drugs for Neglected Diseases (DNDi), and the Indian Council for Medical Research have come forward to develop vaccines and new drugs for visceral leishmaniasis as a part of the World Health Organization's Tropical Disease Research (WHO/TDR) initiative. They expect that in the next few years better treatment will appear.5

Controlling the sandfly

Until the new treatments appear the governments should channel their meagre resources into basic hygienic measures--for example, spraying malathion or pyrethroids in the endemic zones to get rid of the sandflies.

However, these simple steps are not implemented because of gross mismanagement. According to a report from India's health ministry, from the cash allocated by the central government of the state of Bihar to control sandflies a mere 15% of the money was used by the state health department.

Meanwhile the death toll of the disease is steadily increasing, particularly affecting children and young adults. The latest projections by WHO are even scarier. Cases of co-infections with leishmania and HIV are being reported in various parts of the Terai.

Elephantiasis

Another neglected disease is lymphatic filariasis (elephantiasis) spread by mosquito bites. This rarely hits headlines, for two major reasons. Firstly, it's not fatal, and secondly, it affects poor people, who either fail to recognise the symptoms in the early stages or simply don't have the resources to fight the disease.

Asia is bearing the brunt

Asia is believed to carry 60% of the global disease burden, with India contributing about 74% of the endemic population. According to estimates 28 million people are carriers of the filarial parasite, and there are 21 million clinical cases in India.6

Although the death toll due to filaria is negligible, the country loses money and manpower to this debilitating disease--through both incapacitation and stigmatisation. The external manifestation of the disease has a role in this. Externally it causes swollen heavy arms and legs because of lymphoedema, and internally, it can damage the lymphatic circulation system. In severe cases it painfully affects the genitals.

The disease is caused by slender, parasitic nematodes (Wuchereria bancrofti, Brugia malayi, or Brugia timori) which can stay undetected in the body for a long time--even up to a decade--showing up only at night, which is why a daytime blood test fails to detect anything. The adults, lying deep inside the lymphatic vessels, release the young (called microfilariae) in huge numbers to overwhelm the lymphatic system. Since it takes a long time to get to the stage when the limbs are swollen, victims may never know that they have been infected until it is too late. The disease is transmitted in rural areas and slum clusters through mosquito bites.

Failure of government

Although the disease is preventable, successive filarial control programmes by the Indian government since 1956 have failed to eradicate the disease.7 Recently WHO has resolved to eliminate the disease by 2020. Last year an elaborate strategy was devised at the second meeting of the Global Alliance for the Elimination of Lymphatic Filariasis at New Delhi.8 Although the ambitious strategy--identifying endemic zones, followed by mass administration of once yearly single doses of the drugs diethylcarbamazepine and albendazole--seems simple, it is easier to plan than execute. An alternative is to educate people about prevention methods. Simple rules of hygiene and cutting down mosquito breeding will help to stop the transmission chain. New diagnostic tools to detect the circulating parasites are also needed.



Sanjit Bagchi sixth year medical student, Calcutta National Medical College, India
Email: sanjitbagchi@yahoo.com

Thanks to Susmita Barman and Tapash Sarkar, doctors of communicable diseases, Department of Preventive and Social Medicine, Calcutta National Medical College, Kolkata, India.



studentBMJ 2003;11:437-480 December ISSN 0966-6494

  1. www.who.int/inf-fs/en/fact116.html
  2. http://www.oneworldhealth.org/news/iowh_press_rel0802a.html;
  3. http://www.msf.org/content/page.cfm?articleid=0BCEC424-5D21-496D-9E3E5D1D23BF8D52
  4. Yamey G. The world’s most neglected diseases. BMJ 2002;325:176-177
  5. http://www.neglecteddiseases.org/1-2.pdf
  6. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/cms.dll/html/uncomp/articleshow?art_id=8122621
  7. http:/w3.whosea.org/lymphatic/india
  8. http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/mag/2002/03/17/stories/2002031700110700.htm
  9. Sen N. Current Science 2002, Vol 82, No12, (June 25 2002)


Previous article    Return to top    Next article
Printer friendly page    Download article PDF    Email this article to a friend   


LIFE
Kala-azar and elephantiasis
      (Sanjit Bagchi, January 2003)

Santosh Neupane
(May 28th, 2008)
 Third year Student MBBS, Institute of Medicine, Maharajgunj Campus santosh_64@hotmail.com

TOP


EDITOR- Sanjit Balaji's article about Kala-azar and elephantiasis talks about the need of governments to utilize their meagre resources into basic hygienic measures1. In fact, the need for raising the KAP (knowledge, attitude and practice) levels of the people is equally important. In Nepal, the disease affects eastern Terai region which lies adjacent to the Bihar state of India. Although leishmaniasis is regarded as a significant health problem in Nepal by the Ministry of Health, there is no active case detection programme in the country. Information on the morbidity and mortality is thus very limited. Since the very first case identified in 1980, the incidence of visceral leishmaniashis seem to be increasing at a faster rate indicating the existing control programmes have been ineffective.

In one study conducted in Eastern Terai, the difference in the prevalence of Kala-azar in people who had lands and in those who did not have were significant. Sleeping on ground, non-use of bed-nets, landlessness, cracks and crevices on the floor and wall of living houses, poor living condition and overcrowding in houses, labors, dalit groups were identified as risks for Kala-azar2. Added to this, the people are poorly informed about the transmission of kala-azar. They consider mosquitoes to be responsible and not sandflies.

The economic burden of the disease is catastrophic. The total costs incurred per episode are above the median annual per capita income. People either have to sell part of their livestock or to take a loan to cover the costs. Also since they prefer local faith healers, and private services, much of the cost is incurred before the patient actually receives treatment for the disease.

  1. Bagchi S. Kala-azar and elephantiasis. studentBMJ 2003; 11: 473. (December)
  2. Shah H. Prevalence of visceral leishmaniasis associated with the behaviours of the people in rural areas. JNMA Journal of Nepal Medical Association 2005;44(160): 116-120. (October-December)