Please confirm topic selection

Are you sure you want to trigger topic in your Anconeus AI algorithm?

Please confirm action

You are done for today with this topic.

Would you like to start learning session with this topic items scheduled for future?

Updated: Dec 21 2016

Chagas Disease

Snapshot
  • A 58-year-old man presents to the clinic with a two month history of cough, dyspnea on exertion, and leg swelling. He immigrated from rural Bolivia when he was 25-years-old and visits home regularly. Past medical history is unremarkable. He does not smoke or drink. Physical exam reveals an anxious-looking man in respiratory distress. Cardiovascular exam reveals an elevated JVD, displaced PMI, S3 gallop with a holosystolic murmur radiating to the axillae, and pitting edema of both ankles. There are bibasal crackles on chest exam. A chest radiograph showed cardiomegaly. Cardiac catheterization showed no evidence of coronary artery disease. Echocardiogram revealed biventricular dilatation with an EF of 35%. The patient experienced symptomatic improvement with an anti-heart failure regimen. Further questioning revealed patient had numerous insect bites as a child. Blood smear was negative for Trypanosoma cruzi, but serological testing was positive.
Introduction
  • Primarily seen in Latin America
    • especially South America
  • An infection by reduviid bug ("kissing bug") 
    • painless bite
    • feeds on humans and defecates, transmitting trypanosome in feces

 

Presentation
  • Symptoms/Physical exam
    • Romaña sign
      • swelling around eye
      • early indicator of disease
    • chagoma develops at site of entry
      • hardened red area
    • acute phase
      • fever, malaise, and lymphadenopathy
      • tachycardia and EKG changes
      • CNS involvement
    • chronic phase
      • cardiac conduction abnormailities 
      • cardiomyopathy
      • megacolon/megaesophagus
Evaluation
  • Trypomastigote (motile, flagellated form) in blood smear
  • Xenodiagnosis
    • laboratory-grown bugs are allowed to feed on the patient and are examined one month later for the parasite
Differential
  • Etiology of dilated cardiomyopathy
    • alcohol
    • coxsackie virus
    • drug induced
  • Megaesophagus
    • scleroderma
Treatment
  •  Pharmacologic
    • nifurtimox
    • benzimidazole
Prognosis, Prevention and Complications
  • Complications
    • worsening heart failure
      • indication for AICD if EF is < 35%
      • decreases mortality from VT/VF
Question
1 of 2
Private Note

Attach Treatment Poll
Treatment poll is required to gain more useful feedback from members.
Please enter Question Text
Please enter at least 2 unique options
Please enter at least 2 unique options
Please enter at least 2 unique options