1308 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
TABLE 168-3 Composition of World Health Organization
Reduced-Osmolarity Oral Rehydration Solution (ORS)a,b
CONSTITUENT CONCENTRATION, mmol/L
Na+ 75
K+ 20
Cl− 65
Citratec 10
Glucose 75
Total osmolarity 245
a
Contains (per package, to be added to 1 L of drinking water): NaCl, 2.6 g;
Na3
C6
H5
O7
·2H2
O, 2.9 g; KCl, 1.5 g; and glucose (anhydrous), 13.5 g. b
If prepackaged
ORS is unavailable, a simple homemade alternative can be prepared by combining
3.5 g (~1/2 teaspoon) of NaCl with either 50 g of precooked rice cereal or 6
teaspoons of table sugar (sucrose) in 1 L of drinking water. In that case, potassium
must be supplied separately (e.g., in orange juice or coconut water). c
10 mmol of
citrate per liter, which supplies 30 mmol of HCO3
/L.
hexose-Na+ co-transport mechanism to move Na+ across the gut
mucosa together with an actively transported molecule such as
glucose (or galactose); Cl–
and water follow. This transport mechanism remains intact even when cholera toxin is active. ORS may be
made by adding safe water to prepackaged sachets containing salts
and sugar or by adding 0.5 teaspoon (i.e., a small spoonful) of table
salt and 6 level teaspoons (i.e., 6 small spoonfuls) of table sugar to
1 L of safe water. Potassium intake in bananas or green coconut
water should be encouraged. A number of ORS formulations are
available, and the WHO now recommends “low-osmolarity” ORS
for treatment of individuals with dehydrating diarrhea of any cause
(Table 168-3). If available, rice-based ORS is considered superior to
standard ORS in the treatment of cholera. ORS can be administered
via a nasogastric tube to individuals who cannot ingest fluid; however, optimal management of individuals with severe dehydration
includes the administration of IV fluid and electrolytes. Because
profound acidosis (pH <7.2) is common in this group, Ringer’s lactate is the best choice among commercial products (Table 168-4);
it must be used with additional potassium supplements, preferably given by mouth. The total fluid deficit in severely dehydrated
patients (>10% of body weight) can be replaced safely within the
first 3–4 h of therapy, half within the first hour. Transient muscle
cramps and tetany are common. Thereafter, oral therapy can usually
be initiated, with the goal of maintaining fluid intake equal to fluid
output. However, patients with continued large-volume diarrhea
may require prolonged IV treatment to match gastrointestinal
fluid losses. Severe hypokalemia can develop but will respond to
potassium given either IV or orally. In the absence of adequate staff
to monitor the patient’s progress, the oral route of rehydration and
potassium replacement is safer than the IV route.
Although not necessary for cure, the use of an antibiotic to which
the organism is susceptible diminishes the duration and volume
of fluid loss and hastens clearance of the organism from the stool.
Adjunctive antibiotics should therefore be administered to patients
with moderate or severe dehydration due to cholera. In many areas,
macrolides such as erythromycin (adults, 250 mg orally four times
a day for 3 days; children, 12.5 mg/kg per dose four times a day for
3 days) or azithromycin (adults, a single 1-g dose; children, a single
20-mg/kg dose) are the agents of choice. Increasing resistance to
tetracyclines is widespread; however, in areas with confirmed susceptibility, tetracycline (nonpregnant adults, 500 mg orally four times a
day for 3 days; children >8 years old, 12.5 mg/kg per dose four times
a day for 3 days) or doxycycline (nonpregnant adults, a 300-mg single
dose; children >8 years old, a single dose of 4–6 mg/kg) may be used.
Similarly, increasing resistance to fluoroquinolones is being reported,
but in areas with confirmed susceptibility, a fluoroquinolone such
as ciprofloxacin may be used (adults, 500 mg twice a day for 3 days;
children, 15 mg/kg twice a day for 3 days). Oral administration of
supplemental zinc is associated with decreased volume and severity
of diarrhea in young children, including in those with cholera. Children <6 months of age with cholera should be treated with 10 mg of
zinc daily for 10 days; children from 6 to <60 months of age should
be treated with 20 mg of oral zinc daily for 10 days.
■ PREVENTION
Provision of safe water and of facilities for sanitary disposal of feces,
improved nutrition, and attention to food preparation and storage in
the household can significantly reduce the incidence of cholera. In
addition, precautions should be taken to prevent the spread of cholera
via infected and potentially asymptomatic persons from endemic to
nonendemic regions of the world (as was probably the case in the outbreak in Haiti; see “Microbiology and Epidemiology,” above).
Much effort has been devoted to the development of an effective
cholera vaccine over the past few decades, with a particular focus on
oral vaccine strains. In an attempt to maximize mucosal responses, two
types of oral cholera vaccine have been developed: oral killed vaccines
and live attenuated vaccines. Currently, three oral killed cholera vaccines have been prequalified by the WHO and are available internationally. BivWC (ShancholTM; Shantha Biotechnics, Hyderabad, India)
contains both biotypes and serotypes of V. cholerae O1 and V. cholerae
O139 without supplemental cholera toxin B subunit. A related vaccine
is produced in South Korea (EuvicholTM, Euvichol-PlusTM; Eubiologics,
Seoul). WC-rBS (Dukoral®
; Valneva, Lyon, France) contains both
biotypes and serotypes of V. cholerae O1 supplemented with 1 mg of
recombinant cholera toxin B subunit per dose. The vaccines are administered as a two- or three-dose regimen, with doses usually separated
by 14 days. They provide ~60–85% protection for the first few months.
Booster immunizations of WC-rBS are recommended after 2 years for
individuals ≥6 years of age and after 6 months for children 2–5 years of
age. For BivWC, which was developed more recently, no formal recommendation regarding booster immunizations exists. However, BivWC
was associated with ~60% protection over 5 years among recipients
of all ages in a study in Kolkata, India; the rate of protection among
children ≤5 years of age approximated 40%. In outbreak situations,
even a single dose of BivWC can provide some protection: 40% and
63% adjusted protection for 6 months for all and severely dehydrating
cholera, respectively; although there was no evidence of protection in
children younger than 5 years of age. Models predict significant herd
immunity when vaccination coverage rates exceed 50%. The killed
vaccines have been safely administered among populations with high
rates of HIV infection.
Oral live attenuated vaccines for V. cholerae O1 are also in development. These strains have in common their lack of the genes encoding
cholera toxin. One such vaccine, CVD 103-HgR (VaxchoraTM; PaxVax,
Redwood City, CA), is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for use in travelers to cholera-endemic regions. The vaccine
was 90 and 80% efficacious against severe cholera after experimental
infection of North American volunteers 10 days and 90 days after
vaccination, respectively. Vaxchora is approved for use in individuals
2–64 years of age; no recommendations concerning the timing or need
for booster vaccinations are currently available. Other live attenuated
vaccine candidate strains have been prepared from El Tor and O139 V.
cholerae and have been tested in studies of volunteers. An advantage
of live attenuated cholera vaccines is that they may induce protection
after a single oral dose. Conjugate and subunit cholera vaccines are also
being developed.
TABLE 168-4 Electrolyte Composition of Cholera Stool and of
Intravenous Rehydration Solution
SUBSTANCE
CONCENTRATION, mmol/L
NA+ K+ CL− BASE
Stool
Adult 135 15 100 45
Child 100 25 90 30
Ringer’s lactate 130 4a 109 28
a
Potassium supplements, preferably administered by mouth, are required to replace
the usual potassium losses from stool.
1309CHAPTER 168 Cholera and Other Vibrioses
Recognizing that it may be decades before safe water and adequate
sanitation become a reality for those most at risk of cholera, the WHO
has recommended incorporation of cholera vaccination into comprehensive control strategies and has established an international stockpile
of oral killed cholera vaccine to assist in outbreak responses. A global
strategy on cholera control was launched in 2017. This countryby-country approach aims to reduce cholera deaths by 90% and to
eliminate cholera in as many as 20 countries by 2030. Integral components of this strategy are advancing water, sanitation, and hygiene
(WASH) programs, as well as use of cholera vaccine. From 2016−2020,
>64 million doses of cholera vaccine have been requested from the
Global Vaccine Stockpile, and >33 million doses have been shipped to
requesting countries for use in control programs.
OTHER VIBRIO SPECIES
The genus Vibrio includes several human pathogens that do not cause
cholera. Abundant in coastal waters throughout the world, noncholera
vibrios can reach high concentrations in the tissues of filter-feeding
mollusks. As a result, human infection commonly follows the ingestion of seawater or of raw or undercooked shellfish (Table 168-5).
Most noncholera vibrios can be cultured on blood or MacConkey agar,
which contains enough salt to support the growth of these halophilic
species. In the microbiology laboratory, the species of noncholera
vibrios are distinguished by standard biochemical tests. The most
important of these organisms are Vibrio parahaemolyticus and Vibrio
vulnificus. Vibriosis causes an estimated 80,000 illnesses and 100 deaths
in the United States every year.
The two major types of syndromes for which these noncholera
vibrios are responsible are gastrointestinal illness (due to V. parahaemolyticus, non-O1/O139 V. cholerae, Vibrio mimicus, Vibrio fluvialis,
Vibrio hollisae, and Vibrio furnissii) and soft tissue infections (due to
V. vulnificus, Vibrio alginolyticus, and Vibrio damselae). V. vulnificus is
also a cause of primary sepsis in some compromised individuals.
■ SPECIES ASSOCIATED PRIMARILY WITH
GASTROINTESTINAL ILLNESS
V. parahaemolyticus Widespread in marine environments, the
halophilic V. parahaemolyticus is the leading seafood-borne bacterial
cause of enteritis worldwide. This species was originally implicated
in enteritis in Japan in 1953, accounting for 24% of reported cases in
one study—a rate that presumably was due to the common practice
of eating raw seafood in that country. In the United States, commonsource outbreaks of diarrhea caused by this organism have been linked
to the consumption of undercooked or improperly handled seafood
or of other foods contaminated by seawater. Since the mid-1990s, the
incidence of V. parahaemolyticus infections has increased in several
countries, including the United States. Serotypes O3:K6, O4:K68,
and O1:K-untypable, which are genetically related to one another,
account in part for this increase. The enteropathogenicity of V. parahaemolyticus is associated with its ability to cause hemolysis via a
thermostable direct hemolysin (Vp-TDH). Although the mechanisms
by which the organism causes diarrhea are not fully defined, most
V. parahaemolyticus genomes encode two type III secretion systems,
which directly inject toxic bacterial proteins into host cells. The activity
of one of these secretion systems is required for intestinal colonization
and virulence in animal models. V. parahaemolyticus should be considered a possible etiologic agent in all cases of diarrhea that can be
linked epidemiologically to seafood consumption or to the sea itself.
The incidence of V. parahaemolyticus infection in the United States
may be increasing, with this species accounting for almost half of all
Vibrio isolates reported in this country in 2014.
Infections with V. parahaemolyticus can result in two distinct
gastrointestinal presentations. The more common of the two presentations (including nearly all cases in North America) is characterized
by watery diarrhea, usually occurring in conjunction with abdominal
cramps, nausea, and vomiting and accompanied in ~25% of cases by
fever and chills. After an incubation period of 4 h to 4 days, symptoms
develop and persist for a median of 3 days. Dysentery, the less common
presentation, is characterized by severe abdominal cramps, nausea,
vomiting, and bloody or mucoid stools. V. parahaemolyticus also causes
rare cases of wound infection and otitis and very rare cases of sepsis.
Most cases of V. parahaemolyticus–associated gastrointestinal illness, regardless of the presentation, are self-limited. Fluid replacement
should be stressed. Antimicrobial agents may be of benefit in moderate or severe disease. Doxycycline, fluoroquinolones, macrolides, or
third-generation cephalosporins are usually used. Deaths are extremely
rare among immunocompetent individuals. Severe infections are associated with underlying diseases, including diabetes, preexisting liver
disease, iron-overload states, or immunosuppression.
Non-O1/O139 (Noncholera) V. cholerae The heterogeneous
non-O1/O139 V. cholerae organisms cannot be distinguished from V.
cholerae O1 or O139 by routine biochemical tests but do not agglutinate in O1 or O139 antiserum. Non-O1/O139 strains have caused
several well-studied food-borne outbreaks of gastroenteritis and have
also been responsible for sporadic cases of otitis media, wound infection, and bacteremia. Generally, non-O1/O139 V. cholerae strains do
not produce cholera toxin and do not cause large epidemics of diarrheal disease. Like other vibrios, non-O1/O139 V. cholerae organisms
are widely distributed in marine environments. In most instances,
recognized cases in the United States have been associated with the
consumption of raw oysters or with recent travel. The broad clinical
spectrum of diarrheal illness caused by these organisms is probably due
to the group’s heterogeneous virulence attributes.
In the United States, about half of all non-O1/O139 V. cholerae
isolates are from stool samples. The typical incubation period for gastroenteritis due to these organisms is <2 days, and the illness lasts for
~2–7 days. Patients’ stools may be copious and watery or may be partly
formed, less voluminous, and bloody or mucoid. Diarrhea can result
in severe dehydration. Many cases include abdominal cramps, nausea,
vomiting, and fever. Like those with cholera, patients who are seriously
dehydrated should receive oral or IV fluids; the value of antibiotics is
not clear.
Extraintestinal infections due to non-O1/O139 V. cholerae commonly follow occupational or recreational exposure to seawater.
TABLE 168-5 Features of Selected Noncholera Vibrioses
ORGANISM VEHICLE OR ACTIVITY HOST AT RISK SYNDROME
Vibrio parahaemolyticus Shellfish, seawater Normal Gastroenteritis
Seawater Normal Wound infection
Non-O1/O139 Vibrio cholerae Shellfish, travel Normal Gastroenteritis
Seawater Normal Wound infection, otitis media
Vibrio vulnificus Shellfish Immunosuppresseda Sepsis, secondary cellulitis
Seawater Normal, immunosuppresseda Wound infection, cellulitis
Vibrio alginolyticus Seawater Normal Wound infection, cellulitis, otitis
Seawater Burned, other immunosuppressed Sepsis
a
Especially with liver disease or hemochromatosis.
Source: Table 161-3 in Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine, 14th edition.
1310 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
Around 10% of non-O1/O139 V. cholerae isolates come from cases of
wound infection, 10% from cases of otitis media, and 20% from cases
of bacteremia (which is particularly likely to develop in patients with
liver disease). Extraintestinal infections should be treated with antibiotics. Information to guide antibiotic selection and dosing is limited,
but most strains are sensitive in vitro to tetracycline, ciprofloxacin, and
third-generation cephalosporins.
■ SPECIES ASSOCIATED PRIMARILY WITH SOFT
TISSUE INFECTION OR BACTEREMIA
(See also Chap. 129)
V. vulnificus Infection with V. vulnificus is rare, but this organism
is the most common cause of severe Vibrio infections in the United
States. Like most vibrios, V. vulnificus proliferates in the warm summer
months and requires a saline environment for growth. In the United
States, infections in humans typically occur in coastal states between
May and October and most commonly affect men >40 years of age. V.
vulnificus has been linked to two distinct syndromes: primary sepsis,
which usually occurs in patients with underlying liver disease, and primary wound infection, which generally affects people without underlying disease. (Vulnificus is Latin for “wound maker.”) Some authors have
suggested that V. vulnificus also causes gastroenteritis independent of
other clinical manifestations. V. vulnificus is endowed with a number
of virulence attributes, including a capsule that confers resistance to
phagocytosis and to the bactericidal activity of human serum as well
as a cytolysin. Measured as the 50% lethal dose in mice, the organism’s
virulence is considerably increased under conditions of iron overload;
this observation is consistent with the propensity of V. vulnificus to
infect patients who have hemochromatosis.
Primary sepsis most often develops in patients who have cirrhosis or hemochromatosis. However, V. vulnificus bacteremia can also
affect individuals who have hematopoietic disorders or chronic renal
insufficiency, those who are using immunosuppressive medications
or alcohol, or (in rare instances) those who have no known underlying disease. After a median incubation period of 16 h, the patient
develops malaise, chills, fever, and prostration. One-third of patients
develop hypotension, which is often apparent at admission. Cutaneous
manifestations develop in most cases (usually within 36 h of onset)
and characteristically involve the extremities (the lower more often
than the upper). In a common sequence, erythematous patches are
followed by ecchymoses, vesicles, and bullae. In fact, sepsis and hemorrhagic bullous skin lesions suggest the diagnosis in appropriate settings. Necrosis and sloughing may also be evident. Laboratory studies
reveal leukopenia more often than leukocytosis, thrombocytopenia,
or elevated levels of fibrin-split products. V. vulnificus can be cultured
from blood or cutaneous lesions. The mortality rate approaches 50%,
with most deaths due to uncontrolled sepsis (Chap. 304). Accordingly,
prompt treatment is critical and should include empirical antibiotic
administration, aggressive debridement, and general supportive care.
V. vulnificus is sensitive in vitro to a number of antibiotics, including
tetracycline, fluoroquinolones, and third-generation cephalosporins.
Data from animal models suggest that either a fluoroquinolone or the
combination of a tetracycline and a third-generation cephalosporin
should be used in the treatment of V. vulnificus septicemia.
V. vulnificus–associated soft tissue infection can complicate either
a fresh or an old wound that comes into contact with seawater; the
patient may or may not have underlying disease. After a short incubation period (4 h to 4 days; mean, 12 h), the disease begins with swelling,
erythema, and (in many cases) intense pain around the wound. These
signs and symptoms are followed by cellulitis, which spreads rapidly
and is sometimes accompanied by vesicular, bullous, or necrotic
lesions. Metastatic events are uncommon. Most patients have fever and
leukocytosis. V. vulnificus can be cultured from skin lesions and occasionally from the blood. Prompt antibiotic therapy and debridement
are usually curative.
V. alginolyticus First identified as a pathogen of humans in 1973,
V. alginolyticus occasionally causes eye, ear, and wound infections.
This species is the most salt-tolerant of the vibrios and can grow in salt
concentrations of >10%. Most clinical isolates come from superinfected
wounds that presumably become contaminated at the beach. Although
its severity varies, V. alginolyticus infection tends not to be serious
and generally responds well to antibiotic therapy and drainage. Cases
of otitis externa, otitis media, and conjunctivitis due to this pathogen
have been described. Tetracycline treatment usually results in cure.
V. alginolyticus is a rare cause of bacteremia in immunocompromised
hosts.
■ FURTHER READING
Domman D et al: Integrated view of Vibrio cholerae in the Americas.
Science 358:789, 2017.
Islam MS et al: Environmental reservoirs of Vibrio cholera. Vaccine
38(Suppl 1):A52, 2020.
Qadri F et al: Emergency deployment of oral cholera vaccine for the
Rohingya in Bangladesh. Lancet 391:1877, 2018.
Qadri F et al: Efficacy of a single-dose regimen of inactivated wholecell oral cholera vaccine: Results from 2 years of follow-up of a randomised trial. Lancet Infect Dis 18:666, 2018.
Weill FX et al: Genomic history of the seventh pandemic of cholera in
Africa. Science 358:785, 2017.
World Health Organization: Cholera vaccines: WHO position
paper. Wkly Epidemiol Rec 92:477, 2017.
■ DEFINITION
Brucellosis is a bacterial zoonosis transmitted directly or indirectly to
humans from infected animals, predominantly domesticated ruminants and swine. The disease is known colloquially as undulant fever
because of its remittent character. Although brucellosis commonly
presents as an acute febrile illness, its clinical manifestations vary
widely, and definitive signs indicative of the diagnosis may be lacking.
Thus the clinical diagnosis usually must be supported by the results of
bacteriologic and/or serologic tests.
■ ETIOLOGIC AGENTS
Human brucellosis is caused by strains of Brucella, a bacterial genus
that was previously suggested, on genetic grounds, to comprise a single
species, B. melitensis, with a number of biologic variants exhibiting
particular host preferences. This view was challenged on the basis of
detailed differences in chromosomal structure and host preference.
The traditional classification into nomen species is now favored both
because of these differences and because this classification scheme
closely reflects the epidemiologic patterns of the infection. The nomen
system recognizes B. melitensis, which is the most common cause of
symptomatic disease in humans and for which the main sources are
sheep, goats, and camels; B. abortus, which is usually acquired from
cattle or buffalo; B. suis, which is generally acquired from swine but has
one variant enzootic in reindeer and caribou and another in rodents;
and B. canis, which is acquired most often from dogs. B. ovis, which
causes reproductive disease in sheep, has not been clearly implicated
in human disease, while rare human infections have been reported
with B. neotomae, which is found in desert rodents. Two relatively
new species, B. ceti and B. pinnipedialis, have been identified in marine
mammals, including seals and dolphins. At least one case of laboratory-acquired human disease due to one of these species has been
described, and several cases of natural human infection have been
reported. As infections in marine mammals appear to be widespread,
more cases of zoonotic infection in humans may be identified. Other
newly reported species include B. microti (isolated from field voles),
169 Brucellosis
Nicholas J. Beeching
1311CHAPTER 169 Brucellosis
B. suis in several countries, including Australia. Family members of
individuals involved in animal husbandry may be at risk, although it
is often difficult to differentiate food-borne infection from environmental contamination under these circumstances. Laboratory workers
who handle cultures or infected samples also are at risk. Travelers and
urban residents usually acquire the infection through consumption
of contaminated foods. In countries that have eradicated the disease,
new cases are most commonly acquired abroad. Dairy products, especially soft cheeses, unpasteurized milk, and ice cream, are the most
frequently implicated sources of infection; raw meat and bone marrow
may be sources under exceptional circumstances. Infections acquired
through cosmetic treatments using materials of fetal origin have
been reported. Person-to-person transmission is extremely rare, as is
transfer of infection by blood or tissue donation. Although brucellosis
is a chronic intracellular infection, there is no evidence for increased
prevalence or severity among individuals with HIV infection or with
immunodeficiency or immunosuppression of other etiologies.
Brucellosis may be acquired by ingestion, inhalation, or mucosal or
percutaneous exposure. Accidental injection or ingestion of the live
vaccine strains of B. abortus (S19 and RB51) and B. melitensis (Rev 1)
can cause disease. B. melitensis and B. suis have historically been developed as biological weapons by several countries and could be exploited
for bioterrorism (Chap. S3). This possibility should be borne in mind
in the event of sudden unexplained outbreaks.
■ IMMUNITY AND PATHOGENESIS
Exposure to brucellosis elicits both humoral and cell-mediated
immune responses. The mechanisms of protective immunity against
human brucellosis are presumed to be similar to those documented in
laboratory animals, but such generalizations must be interpreted with
caution. The response to infection and its outcome are influenced by
the virulence, phase, and species of the infecting strain. Differences
have been reported between B. abortus and B. suis in modes of cellular entry and subsequent compartmentalization and processing.
Antibodies promote clearance of extracellular brucellae by bactericidal
action and by facilitation of phagocytosis by polymorphonuclear and
mononuclear phagocytes; however, antibodies alone cannot eradicate
infection. Organisms taken up by macrophages and other cells can
establish persistent intracellular infections. The key target cell is the
macrophage, and bacterial mechanisms for suppressing intracellular
killing and apoptosis result in very large intracellular populations.
Opsonized bacteria are actively phagocytosed by neutrophilic granulocytes and by monocytes. In these and other cells, initial attachment
takes place via specific receptors, including Fc, C3, fibronectin, and
mannose-binding proteins. Opsonized—but not unopsonized—bacteria
trigger an oxidative burst inside phagocytes. Unopsonized bacteria are
internalized via similar receptors but at much lower efficiency. Smooth
strains enter host cells via lipid rafts. Smooth lipopolysaccharide (LPS),
β-cyclic glucan, and possibly an invasion–attachment protein (IalB) are
involved in this process. Tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) produced
early in the course of infection stimulates cytotoxic lymphocytes and
activates macrophages, which can kill intracellular brucellae (probably
mainly through production of reactive oxygen and nitrogen intermediates) and may clear infection. However, virulent Brucella cells can
suppress the TNF-α response, and control of infection in this situation
depends on macrophage activation and interferon γ (IFN-γ) responses.
Cytokines such as interleukin 12(IL-12) promote production of
IFN-γ, which drives TH1-type responses and stimulates macrophage
activation. Inflammatory cytokines, including IL-4, IL-6, and IL-10,
downregulate the protective response. As in other types of intracellular
infection, it is assumed that initial replication of brucellae takes place
within cells of the lymph nodes draining the point of entry. Subsequent
hematogenous spread may result in chronic localizing infection at
almost any site, although the reticuloendothelial system, musculoskeletal tissues, and genitourinary system are most frequently targeted. Both
acute and chronic inflammatory responses develop in brucellosis, and
the local tissue response may include granuloma formation with or
without necrosis and caseation. Abscesses may also develop, especially
in chronic localized infection.
B. papionis (from baboons), B. vulpis (from foxes), and B. inopinata
(from a patient with a breast implant). Additional novel strains have
been described in diverse species, including frogs, bats, and various
rodents, and the genus likely will expand further in forthcoming years.
Moreover, it has become apparent that Brucella is closely related to the
genus Ochrobactrum, which includes environmental bacteria sometimes associated with opportunistic infections. Genomics-based studies are beginning to elucidate the pathway of evolution from free-living
soil bacteria to highly successful intracellular pathogens.
All brucellae are small, gram-negative, unencapsulated, nonsporulating rods or coccobacilli. They grow aerobically on peptone-based
medium incubated at 37°C; the growth of some types is improved
by supplementary CO2
. In vivo, brucellae behave as facultative intracellular parasites. The organisms are sensitive to sunlight, ionizing
radiation, and moderate heat; they are killed by boiling and pasteurization but are resistant to freezing and drying. Their resistance to
drying renders brucellae stable in aerosol form, facilitating airborne
transmission. The organisms can survive for up to 2 months in soft
cheeses made from goat’s or sheep’s milk; for at least 6 weeks in dry
soil contaminated with infected urine, vaginal discharge, or placental
or fetal tissues; and for at least 6 months in damp soil or liquid manure
kept in cool dark conditions. Brucellae are easily killed by a wide range
of common disinfectants used under optimal conditions but are likely
to be much more resistant at low temperatures or in the presence of
heavy organic contamination.
■ EPIDEMIOLOGY
Brucellosis is a zoonosis whose occurrence and control are closely
related to its prevalence in domesticated animals. Its distribution is
worldwide apart from the few countries where it has been eradicated
from the animal reservoir. The true global prevalence of human brucellosis is unknown because of the imprecision of diagnosis and the
inadequacy of reporting and surveillance systems in many countries.
Recently, there has been increased recognition of the high incidence
of brucellosis in India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and parts of China, and of
importations to countries in Oceania, such as Fiji, and in Asia, such
as Thailand and Vietnam. In Europe, the incidence of brucellosis in
a country is inversely related to gross domestic product, and, in both
developed and less well-resourced settings, human brucellosis is related
to rural poverty and inadequate access to medical care. Failure of
veterinary control programs due to conflicts or for economic reasons
contributes further to the emergence and re-emergence of disease, as
seen currently in some eastern Mediterranean countries.
Even in well-resourced settings, the true incidence of brucellosis in
domesticated animals may be 10–20 times higher than the reported
figures. Bovine brucellosis has been the target of control programs
in many parts of the world and has been eradicated from the cattle
populations of much of northern Europe, Australia, New Zealand,
and Canada, among other nations. Its incidence has been reduced to
a low level in the United States and most western European countries,
with a varied picture in other parts of the world. Efforts to eradicate
B. melitensis infection from sheep and goat populations have been
much less successful. These efforts have relied heavily on vaccination
programs, which have tended to fluctuate with changing economic
and political conditions. In some countries (e.g., Israel), B. melitensis
has caused serious outbreaks in cattle. Infections with B. melitensis
still pose a major public health problem in Mediterranean countries;
in western, central, and southern Asia; and in parts of Africa and
South and Central America. Infections with B. abortus are common
in cattle-rearing communities in African countries such as Kenya and
Uganda. Canine infection with B. canis is present on most continents—
the incidence appears to be increasing in North America and in
several European countries, often associated with importation of dogs
from an endemic area.
Human brucellosis is usually associated with occupational or
domestic exposure to infected animals or their products. Farmers,
shepherds, goatherds, veterinarians, and employees in slaughterhouses and meat-processing plants in endemic areas are occupationally exposed to infection. Feral pig hunters are at risk of infection with
1312 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
The determinants of pathogenicity of Brucella have not been fully
characterized, and the mechanisms underlying the manifestations of
brucellosis are incompletely understood. The organism is a “stealth”
pathogen whose survival strategy is centered on several processes
that avoid triggering innate immune responses and that permit
survival within monocytic cells. These processes include evasion of
intracellular destruction by restricting the fusion of type IV secretion
system–dependent Brucella-containing vacuoles with lysosomal compartments, inhibition of apoptosis of infected mononuclear cells, and
prevention of dendritic cell maturation, antigen presentation, and activation of naïve T cells. The smooth Brucella LPS, which has an unusual
O-chain and core-lipid composition, has relatively low endotoxin
activity and plays a key role in pyrogenicity and in resistance to phagocytosis and serum killing in the nonimmune host. In addition, LPS
is believed to play a role in suppressing phagosome–lysosome fusion
and diverting the internalized bacteria into vacuoles located in endoplasmic reticulum, where intracellular replication takes place. Specific
exotoxins have not been isolated, but a type IV secretion system (VirB)
that regulates intracellular survival and trafficking has been identified.
In B. abortus this system can be activated extracellularly, but in B. suis
it is activated (by low pH) only during intracellular growth. Brucellae then produce acid-stable proteins that facilitate the organisms’
survival in phagosomes and may enhance their resistance to reactive
oxygen intermediates. A type III secretion system based on modified
flagellar structures also has been inferred, although not yet confirmed.
Virulent brucellae are resistant to defensins and produce a Cu-Zn
superoxide dismutase that increases their resistance to reactive oxygen
intermediates. A hemolysin-like protein may trigger the release of brucellae from infected cells.
■ CLINICAL FEATURES
Brucellosis almost invariably causes fever, which may be associated
with profuse sweats, especially at night. In endemic areas, brucellosis
may be difficult to distinguish from the many other causes of fever.
However, two features recognized in the nineteenth century distinguish brucellosis from other tropical fevers, such as typhoid and
malaria: (1) Left untreated, the fever of brucellosis shows an undulating
pattern that persists for weeks before the commencement of an afebrile
period that may be followed by relapse. (2) The fever of brucellosis is
associated with musculoskeletal symptoms and signs in about one-half
of all patients.
The clinical syndromes caused by the different nomen species are
similar, although B. melitensis tends to be associated with a more acute
and aggressive presentation and B. suis with focal abscess induction.
B. abortus infections may be more insidious in onset and more likely to
become chronic. B. canis infections are generally regarded as less severe
but, like other species, can cause serious disease such as endocarditis.
The incubation period varies from 1 week to several months,
and the onset of fever and other symptoms may be abrupt or insidious. In addition to experiencing fever and sweats, patients become
increasingly apathetic and fatigued; lose appetite and weight; and have
nonspecific myalgia, headache, and chills. Overall, the presentation of
brucellosis often fits one of three patterns: febrile illness that resembles
typhoid but is less severe; fever and acute monoarthritis, typically of the
hip or knee, in a young child; and long-lasting fever, misery, and lowback or hip pain in an older man. In an endemic area (e.g., much of the
Middle East), a patient with fever and difficulty walking into the clinic
would be regarded as having brucellosis until it was proven otherwise.
Diagnostic clues in the patient’s history include travel to an endemic
area, employment in a diagnostic microbiology laboratory, consumption of unpasteurized milk products (including soft cheeses), contact
with animals, accidental inoculation with veterinary Brucella vaccines,
and—in an endemic setting—a history of similar illness in the family
(documented in almost 50% of cases). Focal features are present in the
majority of patients. The most common are musculoskeletal pain and
physical findings in the peripheral and axial skeleton (~40% of cases).
Osteomyelitis more commonly involves the lumbar and low thoracic
vertebrae than the cervical and high thoracic spine. Individual joints
that are most commonly affected by septic arthritis are the knee, hip,
sacroiliac, shoulder, and sternoclavicular joints; the pattern may be one
of monoarthritis or polyarthritis. Osteomyelitis may also accompany
septic arthritis.
In addition to the usual causes of vertebral osteomyelitis or septic
arthritis, the most important disease in the differential diagnosis is
tuberculosis. This point influences the therapeutic approach as well
as the prognosis, given that several antimicrobial agents used to treat
brucellosis are also used to treat tuberculosis. Septic arthritis in brucellosis progresses slowly, starting with small pericapsular erosions. In the
vertebrae, anterior erosions of the superior end plate are typically the
first features to become evident, with eventual involvement and sclerosis of the whole vertebra. Anterior osteophytes eventually develop, but
vertebral destruction or impingement on the spinal cord is rare and
usually suggests tuberculosis (Table 169-1).
Other systems may be involved in a manner that resembles typhoid.
About one-quarter of patients have a dry cough, usually with few
changes visible on the chest x-ray, although pneumonia, empyema,
intrathoracic adenopathy, or lung abscess can occur. Sputum or pleural
effusion cultures are rarely positive in such cases, which respond well
to standard brucellosis treatment. One-quarter of patients have hepatosplenomegaly, and 10%–20% have significant lymphadenopathy; the
differential diagnosis includes glandular fever–like illness such as that
caused by Epstein-Barr virus, Toxoplasma, cytomegalovirus, HIV, or
Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Up to 10% of men have acute epididymo-orchitis, which must be distinguished from mumps and from surgical problems such as torsion. Prostatitis, inflammation of the seminal
vesicles, salpingitis, and pyelonephritis all occur. There is an increased
incidence of fetal loss among infected pregnant women, although teratogenicity has not been described and the tendency toward abortion is
much less pronounced in humans than in farm animals.
Neurologic involvement is common, with depression and lethargy
whose severity may not be fully appreciated by either the patient or
the physician until after treatment. A small proportion of patients
develop lymphocytic meningoencephalitis that mimics neurotuberculosis, atypical leptospirosis, or noninfectious conditions and that
may be complicated by intracerebral abscess, a variety of cranial nerve
deficits, or ruptured mycotic aneurysms.
Endocarditis occurs in ~1% of cases, most often affecting the aortic
valve (natural or prosthetic). Any site in the body may be involved in
metastatic abscess formation or inflammation; the female breast and
the thyroid gland are affected particularly often. Nonspecific maculopapular rashes and other skin manifestations are uncommon and are
rarely noticed by the patient even if they develop.
■ DIAGNOSIS
Because the clinical picture of brucellosis is not distinctive, the diagnosis must be based on a history of potential exposure, a presentation
TABLE 169-1 Radiology of the Spine: Differentiation of Brucellosis
from Tuberculosis
BRUCELLOSIS TUBERCULOSIS
Site Lumbar and others Dorsolumbar
Vertebrae Multiple or contiguous Contiguous
Diskitis Late Early
Body Intact until late Morphology lost early
Canal compression Rare Common
Epiphysitis Anterosuperior General: upper and lower
disk regions, central,
subperiosteal
Osteophyte Anterolateral (parrot
beak)
Unusual
Deformity Wedging uncommon Anterior wedge, gibbus
Recovery Sclerosis, whole-body Variable
Paravertebral abscess Small, well-localized Common and discrete
loss, transverse process
Psoas abscess Rare More likely
1313CHAPTER 169 Brucellosis
consistent with the disease, and supporting laboratory findings.
Results of routine biochemical assays are usually within normal limits, although serum levels of hepatic enzymes and bilirubin may be
elevated. Peripheral leukocyte counts are usually normal or low, with
relative lymphocytosis. Mild anemia may be documented. Thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation with raised
levels of fibrinogen degradation products can develop. The erythrocyte
sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein levels are often normal but
may be raised.
In body fluids such as cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) or joint fluid, lymphocytosis and low glucose levels are the norm. Elevated CSF levels of
adenosine deaminase cannot be used to distinguish tubercular meningitis, as they may also be found in brucellosis. Biopsied samples of
tissues such as lymph node or liver may show noncaseating granulomas
without acid/alcohol-fast bacilli. The radiologic features of bony disease develop late and are much more subtle than those of tuberculosis
or septic arthritis of other etiologies, with less bone and joint destruction. Isotope scanning is more sensitive than plain x-ray and continues
to give positive results long after successful treatment.
Isolation of brucellae from blood, CSF, bone marrow, or joint fluid
or from a tissue aspirate or biopsy sample is definitive, and attempts
at isolation are usually successful in 50%–70% of cases. Blood culture
using modern nonradiometric or similar signaling systems (e.g., Bactec)
usually become positive within 7 days. Clinicians should alert the
laboratory to the possibility of brucellosis if suspected, as all cultures
should be handled under containment conditions appropriate for dangerous pathogens. Brucella species may be misidentified as Agrobacterium, Ochrobactrum, or Psychrobacter (Moraxella) phenylpyruvicus
by the gallery identification strips commonly used in the diagnostic
laboratory. In recent years, matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization
time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) has emerged as a
powerful tool in bacterial identification. The relative homogeneity of
classical Brucella species makes identification beyond the genus level
by routine approaches challenging, although further improvements
may facilitate discrimination at the species level, particularly in reference laboratories. The place of this technique in routine diagnostic
practice will depend on further refinements. Meanwhile, the author
is aware of cases in which blood culture isolates have been identified
incorrectly using MALDI-TOF MS.
The peripheral blood–based polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
has enormous potential to detect bacteremia, to predict relapse, and
to exclude “chronic brucellosis.” This method is more sensitive and
is certainly quicker than blood culture, and it does not carry the
attendant biohazard risk posed by culture. Nucleic acid amplification
techniques are now quite widely used, although no single standardized
procedure has been adopted. Primers for the spacer region between
the genes encoding the 16S and 23S ribosomal RNAs (rrs-rrl), various
outer-membrane protein–encoding genes, the insertion sequence
IS711, and the protein BCSP31 are sensitive and specific. Blood and
other tissues are the most suitable samples for analysis. The clinical
significance of prolonged PCR positivity, commonly seen in blood after
successful treatment, remains controversial.
Serologic examination often provides the only positive laboratory
findings in brucellosis. In acute infection, IgM antibodies appear early
and are followed by IgG and IgA. All these antibodies are active in
agglutination tests, whether performed by tube, plate, or microagglutination methods. The majority of patients have detectable agglutinins
at this stage. As the disease progresses, IgM levels decline, and the
avidity and subclass distribution of IgG and IgA change. The result
is reduced or undetectable agglutinin titers. However, the antibodies
are detectable by alternative tests, including the complement fixation
test, Coomb’s antiglobulin test, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assays. There is no clear cutoff value for a diagnostic titer. Rather,
serology results must be interpreted in the context of exposure history
and clinical presentation. In endemic areas or in settings of potential
occupational exposure, agglutinin titers of 1:320–1:640 or higher are
considered diagnostic; in nonendemic areas, a titer of ≥1:160 is considered significant. Repetition of tests after 2–4 weeks may demonstrate
a rising titer.
In most centers, the standard agglutination test (or a derivative such
as the microagglutination test) is still the mainstay of serologic diagnosis. In an endemic setting, >90% of patients with acute bacteremia
have standard agglutination titers of at least 1:320 at the time of clinical
presentation. Some investigators rely on the Rose Bengal test, which
has been only partially validated for human diagnostic use but can be
used for screening. Dipstick assays for anti-Brucella IgM have been
developed but are uncommonly utilized. Other near-patient or pointof-care tests are still in developmental stages.
Antibody to the Brucella LPS O chain—the dominant antigen—is
detected by all the conventional tests that employ smooth B. abortus
cells as antigen. Because B. abortus cross-reacts with B. melitensis
and B. suis, there is no advantage in replicating the tests with these
antigens. Cross-reactions also occur with the O chains of some other
gram-negative bacteria, including Yersinia enterocolitica O:9, Escherichia coli O157, Francisella tularensis, Salmonella enterica group N,
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, and Vibrio cholerae. Cross-reactions
do not occur with the cell-surface antigens of rough Brucella strains
such as B. canis or B. ovis; serologic tests for these nomen species must
employ an antigen prepared from either one. Similarly, the live B.
abortus vaccine strain RB51 does not elicit antibody responses in serologic tests that use smooth antigens, and this fact must be taken into
account if serologic tests are employed in attempts to identify or follow
the course of infections in persons accidentally exposed to the vaccine.
TREATMENT
Brucellosis
The broad aims of antimicrobial therapy are to treat and relieve the
symptoms of current infection and to prevent relapse. Focal disease
presentations may require specific intervention in addition to more
prolonged and tailored antibiotic therapy. In addition, tuberculosis must always be excluded, or—to prevent the emergence of
resistance—therapy must be tailored to specifically exclude drugs
active against tuberculosis (e.g., rifampin used alone) or to include
a full antituberculous regimen.
Early experience with streptomycin monotherapy showed that
relapse was common; thus dual therapy with tetracyclines became
the norm. This is still the most effective combination, but alternatives may be used, with the options depending on local or national
policy about the use of rifampin for the treatment of nonmycobacterial infection. For the several antimicrobial agents that are
active in vivo, efficacy can usually be predicted by in vitro testing.
However, numerous Brucella strains show in vitro sensitivity to a
whole range of antimicrobials that are therapeutically ineffective,
including assorted β-lactams. Moreover, the use of fluoroquinolones remains controversial despite the good in vitro activity and
white-cell penetration of most agents of this class. Low intravacuolar
pH is probably a factor in the poor performance of these drugs.
For adults with acute nonfocal brucellosis (duration, <1 month),
a 6-week course of therapy incorporating at least two antimicrobial agents is required. Complex or focal disease may necessitate
≥3 months of therapy. Adherence to the therapeutic regimen is very
important, and poor adherence underlies almost all cases of apparent treatment failure; such failure is rarely due to the emergence of
drug resistance, although increasing resistance to trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) has been reported at one center.
There is good retrospective evidence that a 3-week course of two
agents is as effective as a 6-week course for treatment and prevention of relapse in children, but this has not yet been investigated in
prospective studies.
The gold standard for the treatment of brucellosis in adults is IM
streptomycin (0.75–1 g daily for 14–21 days) together with doxycycline (100 mg twice daily for 6 weeks). In both clinical trials and
observational studies, relapse follows such treatment in 5%–10% of
cases. The usual alternative regimen (and the current World Health
Organization recommendation) is rifampin (600–900 mg/d) plus
doxycycline (100 mg twice daily) for 6 weeks. The relapse/failure rate
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