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Shigella are the most important organisms causing dysentery, and dysentery may be simply defined as diarrhea containing blood. The Shiga bacillus, called Sd1, is the most virulent of the four serogroups of shigella. Sd1 is the only cause of epidemic dysentery. In addition to bloody diarrhea, the illness caused by Sd1 often includes abdominal cramps, fever and rectal pain. Approximately 5-15% of Sd1 cases are fatal. Shigella Sd1 has caused epidemics of dysentery throughout the world. It caused a 4-year epidemic in Central America beginning in 1968 that resulted in more than 500 000 cases and at least 20 000 deaths. No epidemics have occurred in the region since then, but Sd1 continues to occur sporadically in the Western hemisphere. In Africa, epidemic dysentery due to Sd1 appeared in eastern Zaire in 1979 and has subsequently been confirmed in Angola, Burundi, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, Sao Tome and Principe, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. The latest outbreaks have been in Guinea (small scale) and Sierra Leone (on a threatening, much larger scale) in 2000. Four main species of shigella are able to cause diarrheal diseases. The symptoms of shigellosis include diarrhea and/or dysentery with frequent (not systematically) bloody stools and abdominal cramps. Shigella infections are more severe in children who are malnourished and have a greater adverse effect on nutritional status than do other infections that cause watery diarrhea.
Transmission Children and diarrheal diseases in Africa
The prevention of death from dehydration arising from diarrhea is straightforward, using cheap oral rehydration salts or simple home-made fluids. Since 1992, Sub-Saharan Africa has been facing a severe epidemic of shigella dysentery. The bacteria causing this epidemic are rapidly developing resistance to the first line antibiotics normally used for treatment. The second line treatment is very expensive. In addition to killing children directly, dysentery is a common cause of persistent diarrhea, which is responsible for 15% of deaths from diarrhea in children. Treatment However, in several areas of the world, shigella is resistant to available and affordable antibiotics. In one central African country the bacillus was resistant to all oral antibiotics that were locally available. Furthermore, shigella Sd1 can quickly develop resistance. Antibiotics are often effective against it for only one or two years after being introduced; resistance has even been observed to develop during the course of an epidemic. As resistance to commonly available antibiotics becomes more prevalent, alternative antibiotics are needed which are more expensive and more difficult to procure. No vaccines against shigella infection currently exist. However, different vaccine candidates are under development, and there is much research on this field. Prevention The WHO in general recommends that health education efforts should promote improved personal, domestic, and environmental hygiene. This includes hand washing with soap after defecation and before handling food, use of clean drinking water, safe practices for preparing and storing food, and safe disposal of faeces. More information Source:
WHO
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