#popular-container-secondary #left-nav-top span.left-nav-txt{font-size:1.5em;margin-bottom:-1px;}
Anthrax-Microbiology
- Bacillus anthracis-gram +, spore-forming, bacillus
- Spores may remain infectious in environment for as long as 50 years
- Endemic infection in animals
- Spores enter host, germinate in a macrophage and are transported to regional lymph nodes where local toxins cause edema and death of tissue
- Humans develop infection naturally from handling contaminated fluids or hides ("Woolsorters Disease") or eating contaminated raw or undercooked meat
Anthrax: Inhalational, N=10
- Incubation (known for 6 cases)
- Range: 4-6 days
- Median: 4 days
- Age
- Range: 43-73
- Median: 56 years
- 7 of 10: male
Symptom Number
- Myalgias 6
- Headache 5
- Confusion 4
- Abdominal pain 3
- Sore throat 2
- Rhinorrhea 1
Anthrax: Inhalational, N=10
- WBC: Median 9.8 (7.5 - 13.3)
- Differential - neutrophilia (>70%) in 7 of 10
- Elevated transaminases (9 of 10)
- Hypoxemia 6 of 10
- CXR: abnormal in all
- 2-initial reading WNL
- 8-pleural effusions
- Often large, hemorrhagic, reaccumulated
- 7-mediastinal widening
- 7-infiltrates (some multilobar)
- CT (N=8): Mediastinal changes present in all
Anthrax: Inhalational, N=10
- Confirmation of Bacillus anthracis
- 7-positive blood cultures
- Blood cultures positive in all who had not received antimicrobials
- Negative cultures
- Bronchial or pleural biopsy-specific immunohistochemical staining
- PCR
- 4x rise in IgG to protective antigen (with confirmatory inhibition test)
Anthrax: Patient requests for testing
- There are no screening tests for anthrax
- Nasal swabs are
- A research tool
- ONLY used as part of an epidemiological investigation of KNOWN anthrax exposure
- Are NOT used to determine who should be treated or prophylaxed
- Should only be done at the request of Public Health
Anthrax: Patient requests for testing, cont.
- Asymptomatic patient WITHOUT known exposure:
- Reassurance
- No lab tests
- Asymptomatic patient WITH suspected (as determined by law enforcement/FBI) or known exposure:
- Consult with Public Health for recommendations
- Patient with non-specific symptoms
- Reports having had an exposure to unknown substance-not evaluated by law enforcement
- Does not fit any known risk profile (occupation, previously identified exposures)
- Reassurance about rarity of infection and frequency of viral URIs
- Evaluate for symptoms
- If afebrile, instruct patient to monitor for fever and other symptoms
Anthrax: Cutaneous
- Incubation 1-12 days
- Skin lesion: Macule or papule è vesicles è ulcer è depressed black eschar
- Initially often have pruritis
- Usually painless
- Vesicles may surround ulcer
- Edema usually develops, may be severe
- May have fever, malaise, headache, regional lymphangitis, painful lymphadenopathy
Anthrax: Cutaneous, cont.
- Dx:
- Vesicular fluid/exudate/inflammed area of eschar
- Gram stain (may be falsely negative)
- Culture
- Biopsy-
- Immunohistochemical staining, PCR, silver stain
- Consider blood culture
Cutaneous Anthrax: D/dx
- Ecthyma
- Folliculitis
- Brown recluse spider bite
- Ecthyma gangrenosum
- Orf
- Pyoderma gangrenosum
- Sweet's syndrome
(http://www.acponline.org/-American College of Physicians)
Cutaneous Anthrax: Clues to the diagnosis
- Usually solitary lesion
- Initial pruritis
- Painless
- Most often on upper extremities
- Evolution to eschar formation
- Non-pitting edema
- Regional adenopathy
- May be associated with constitutional sx
Anthrax Treatment
- Inhalational
- Doxycyline or ciprofloxacin, IV
- Plus: 1 or 2 other drugs
- Rifampin, clindamycin, chloramphenicol, vancomycin, clindamycin
- Not cephalosporins or trimethopirm-sulfamethoxazole
Anthrax Epi Investigation
CDC, as of December 5
- 22 cases
- 11 inhalational-5 deaths
- 11 cutaneous (7 confirmed, 4 suspected)
- All but 2 cases: postal employees or media-related
- NJ and Washington DC mail sorting facilities
- Widespread environmental contamination
- ~85 million pieces of mail processed after implicated letters passed through until shutdown
- Mail from these facilities distributed to metropolitan areas with 10.5 million people
Anthrax Epi Investigation
CDC, as of December 5, cont.
- Risk for additional inhalational cases due to exposure to cross-contamination is very low
- Persons remaining concerned about their risk may want to
- Not open suspicious mail
- Keep mail away from face when opening
- Don't sniff mail or contents
- Wash hands after handling mail
- However, efficacy of these measures unknown