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Anthrax of the gastrointestinal tract. (Perspective).


When swallowed, anthrax spores may cause lesions from the oral cavity to the cecum cecum (sē`kəm): see intestine. . Gastrointestinal anthrax is greatly underreported in rural disease-endemic areas of the world. The apparent paucity of this form of anthrax reflects the lack of facilities able to make the diagnosis in these areas. The spectrum of disease, ranging from subclinical infection to death, has not been fully recognized. In some community-based studies, cases of gastrointestinal anthrax outnumbered those of cutaneous anthrax. The oropharyngeal oropharyngeal /oro·pha·ryn·ge·al/ (-fah-rin´je-al)
1. pertaining to the mouth and pharynx.

2. pertaining to the oropharynx.
 variant, in particular, is unfamiliar to most physicians. The clinical features of oropharyngeal anthrax include fever and toxemia toxemia (tŏksē`mēə), disease state caused by the presence in the blood of bacterial toxins or other harmful substances. The effects of the bacterial toxins known as endotoxins are relatively uniform, regardless of which bacterial , inflammatory lesion(s) in the oral cavity or oropharynx oropharynx /oro·phar·ynx/ (-far´inks) the part of the pharynx between the soft palate and the upper edge of the epiglottis.

o·ro·phar·ynx
n.
, enlargement of cervical lymph nodes Cervical lymph nodes are lymph nodes found in the neck. Anterior cervical nodes
The anterior cervical nodes are a group of nodes found on the anterior part of the neck.
 associated with edema of the soft tissue of the cervical area, and a high case-fatality rate. Awareness of gastrointestinal anthrax in a differential diagnosis remains important in anthrax-endemic areas but now also in settings of possible bioterrorism.

**********

The epidemiology of human anthrax has been described as agricultural and industrial (1). In the agricultural setting, infections occur from exposure to Bacillus anthracis spores on the skin or the mucosal surfaces of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Primary infections of the respiratory tract are rare in agricultural settings. Generally, reports state that the cutaneous form of anthrax is much more common than the GI form (2,3). We propose that the apparently overwhelming predominance of the cutaneous form of anthrax is rather a reflection of the difficulty of diagnosis of the GI form.

GI anthrax may be diagnosed on the basis of epidemiology or microbiologic, pathologic, or serologic testing. Serologic diagnosis is available only in a few research laboratories; pathologic evaluation requires surgery or necropsy in an appropriate hospital; microbiologic testing requires at least microscopy and preferably bacterial culture capacity; and epidemiology requires a level of suspicion and an ability to properly perform outbreak investigations. Herbivores, which provide most of the human exposure risk for anthrax, become infected in rural parts of the world where spores in the soil perpetuate endemicity. Mild cases of gastroenteritis attract little attention, and people with severe infections, leading to death within 2-3 days, may never reach a medical facility.

Areas endemic for anthrax exist in all continents containing tropical and subtemperate sub·tem·per·ate  
adj.
Of, relating to, or occurring within the colder regions of the Temperate Zones.



subtemperate  

Relating to the colder regions of the Temperate Zones.
 regions. In the EnGIish published reports, deaths from GI anthrax have been reported in Thailand (4-6), India (7,8), Iran (9-11), Gambia (12), and Uganda (13). Anthrax-contaminated beef from a locally infected cow was eaten in Minnesota in 2000. Cooking the meat may have prevented human cases (14). Despite this wide distribution of endemicity, no large series of pathologically described cases exists. Based on limited reports of GI anthrax, the disease spectrum ranges from the asymptomatic to the fatal, by shock or sepsis. When swallowed, anthrax spores may cause lesions from the oral cavity to the cecum. Ulcer active lesions, usually multiple and superficial, may occur in the stomach, sometimes in association with similar lesions of the esophagus and jejunum jejunum: see intestine.  (4,5,15). These ulcerative ulcerative /ul·cer·a·tive/ (ul´se-ra?tiv) (ul´ser-ah-tiv) pertaining to or characterized by ulceration.

ulcerative

pertaining to or characterized by ulceration.
 lesions may bleed; hemorrhaging in severe cases may be massive and fatal (4,5).

Reported cases indicate that lesions farther down the GI tract, in the mid-jejunum, terminal ilium Ilium: see Troy. , or cecum, tend to develop around a single site or a few sites of ulceration and edema, more analogous to cutaneous lesions. These lesions may lead to hemorrhage (6,16), obstruction (10,17,18), perforation (17,18), or any combination of these. Ascites may complicate GI anthrax (6,7,9,11,18,19). In some patients, the fluid shift from the vascular compartment leads to shock and death (6,7,9).

The pathologic examination of anthrax lesions with entry via the GI tract shows that the mucosa is always involved, as are regional lymph nodes, which are enlarged and hemorrhagic Hemorrhagic
A condition resulting in massive, difficult-to-control bleeding.

Mentioned in: Hantavirus Infections


hemorrhagic

pertaining to or characterized by hemorrhage.
 (15). The GI tract may also be involved after disseminated infection in pulmonary and sometimes cutaneous cases (20-22). In this situation, the localization is in the submucosa submucosa /sub·mu·co·sa/ (sub?mu-ko´sah) areolar tissue situated beneath a mucous membrane.

sub·mu·co·sa
n.
A layer of loose connective tissue beneath a mucous membrane.
 as a result of its blood flow, and the mucosa and regional lymph nodes become involved only secondarily.

These reports are biased toward the hospitalized patients with severe cases. Thorough epidemiologic reports are scarce. One informative description of an outbreak investigation and response comes from Uganda (13). Gastroenteritis developed and death occurred in 155 persons who feasted on an infected zebu zebu (zē`by), domestic animal of the cattle family, Bos indicus, found in parts of E Asia, India, and Africa.  (Asian ox); 2 days after exposure, the incident was reported to authorities who flew in a multiministry team the next day. Gastroenteritis developed in most (92%) of those exposed within 15-72 hours. All nine deaths were in children and occurred in the first 2 days; all 12 asymptomatic cases were in adults. Authorities referred 134 symptomatic people to the hospital for rehydration rehydration /re·hy·dra·tion/ (-hi-dra´shun) the restoration of water or fluid content to a patient or to a substance that has become dehydrated.

re·hy·dra·tion
n.
1.
 and treatment with antibiotics; all recovered. Thus, for most people exposed, the syndrome was gastroenteritis; a differential diagnosis would not normally have included anthrax. The age differences suggest that in this setting previous exposure may have occurred, leaving some adults with partial immunity.

Another community anthrax outbreak of note was investigated by officers from the Field Epidemiology Training Program of the Thai Ministry of Public Health (23). From January through June 1982, an outbreak of human anthrax was recognized in two districts in Udon Thani Province Udon Thani (Thai: อุดรธานี) is one of the north-eastern provinces (changwat) of Thailand.  in northeastern Thailand after an outbreak in cattle that killed 36 water buffalos (Bubalus bubalus) and 7 cows and bulls. Of the 102 patients, 28 had cutaneous anthrax and 74 gastrointestinal anthrax. The only symptom in 67 of these 74 patients with gastrointestinal anthrax was acute diarrhea (i.e., gastroenteritis). The other seven patients had additional symptoms of nausea, vomiting, abdominal distention dis·ten·tion or dis·ten·sion
n.
The act of distending or the state of being distended.


distention,
n a state of dilation.
, and severe abdominal pain. Three patients died; the case-fatality rate was 4%. Thus, in these two community-based studies, the number of patients with GI anthrax far outnumbered those with the cutaneous form of the disease.

In addition to lack of epidemiologic, microbiologic, pathologic, and serologic expertise and facilities in the rural settings where anthrax outbreaks take place, the oropharyngeal form is underreported because few physicians are aware of the disease. Only six publications in the MEDLINE The online medical database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine (NLM) whose parent is the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD. MEDLINE contains millions of articles from thousands of medical journals and publications. The consumer section of the site (http://medlineplus.  database report anthrax lesions in the mouth or oropharynx (24-29). Davies described a major epidemic of anthrax involving >9,000 patients in Zimbabwe from 1978 to 1980 (24). He cited four cases in which lesions were on the tonsil tonsil

Small mass of lymphoid tissue in the wall of the pharynx. The term usually refers to the palatine tonsils on each side of the oropharynx. They are thought to produce antibodies to help prevent respiratory and digestive tract infection but often become infected
 and the tongue but provided no details. We reported an outbreak of human anthrax after anthrax was found in water buffaloes in March-April 1982 in Chiang Mai, northern Thailand (25). A total of 52 cases of cutaneous anthrax and 24 cases of oropharyngeal anthrax were recognized in humans. All patients with oropharyngeal anthrax had recently eaten water buffalo meat. The mean incubation period was 42 hours (range 2-144 hours). All but one patient were admitted to the hospital. All patients sought medical attention because of painful neck swelling, and all but one complained of fever.

The other common symptoms were sore throat, dysphagia, and hoarseness. The neck swelling was usually marked and was caused by enlargement of cervical lymph nodes and soft tissue edema (Figure 1). Mouth lesions were located on the tonsils tonsils, name commonly referring to the palatine tonsils, two ovoid masses of lymphoid tissue situated on either side of the throat at the back of the tongue. , posterior pharyngeal pharyngeal /pha·ryn·ge·al/ (fah-rin´je-al) pertaining to the pharynx.

pha·ryn·geal or pha·ryn·gal
adj.
Of, relating to, located in, or coming from the pharynx.
 wall, or the hard palate. In severe cases, the tonsillar tonsillar /ton·sil·lar/ (ton´si-lar) of or pertaining to a tonsil.

ton·sil·lar or ton·sil·lar·y
adj.
Of or relating to a tonsil, especially the palatine tonsil.
 lesions extended to involve the anterior and posterior pillars of fauces pillars of fauces
pl.n.
The palatoglossal arch and palatopharyngeal arch.
, as well as the soft palate and uvula uvula: see palate. . Early lesions were edematous e·dem·a·tous
adj.
Marked by edema.
 and congested con·gest·ed
adj.
Affected with or characterized by congestion.


congested ENT adjective Referring to a boggy blood-filled tissue. See Nasal congestion.
. By the end of the first week, central necrosis and ulceration had produced a whitish patch (Figure 2). In the second week, this patch developed into a pseudomembrane pseudomembrane /pseu·do·mem·brane/ (-mem´bran) false membrane.pseudomem´branous

pseu·do·mem·brane
n.
See false membrane.
 covering the ulcer (Figure 3). Diagnosis could be made by culture taken from the lesion in the mouth. A Gram-stained smear from the lesion showed numerous polymorphonuclear leukocytes and gram-positive bacilli. Studies of serum antibody to anthrax antigens confirmed the diagnosis (27). Despite hospital admission and antibiotic treatment, 3 of the 24 patients died, for a case-fatality rate of 12.4%. In 1986, Doganay and colleagues reported six patients from Turkey with essentially the same clinical syndrome (28). The case-fatality rate in that study was 50%. The most recent case report, also from Turkey, was in 1993 (29).

[FIGURES 1-3 OMITTED]

When cattle die of anthrax, the bacteremia is massive, and manifestations of the infection are visible to the butcher. In some settings, people may eat meat they know to be contaminated, as was the situation in a poor village of Harijans ("untouchables") in India (8). More common may be the situation in which meat is sold to those unaware of the animal disease as was the case in the Chiang Mai outbreak (25). Only those who eat dishes that are raw or undercooked are exposed to infectious material. Disease is likely related to a dose of viable spores and the immune state of host. In contrast to the extreme susceptibility of cattle to this infection and its bacteremia, studies in chimpanzees suggest that primates are relatively resistant (30).

While the biowarfare and bioterrorist development of anthrax has focused on inhalation, ingestion has been considered as well. The Japanese experiments in China during the 1930s and 1940s included attempts to poison children with chocolate impregnated im·preg·nate  
tr.v. im·preg·nat·ed, im·preg·nat·ing, im·preg·nates
1. To make pregnant; inseminate.

2. To fertilize (an ovum, for example).

3.
 with anthrax (31). More recently, the apartheid government of South Africa The Republic of South Africa is a constitutional democracy with a three-tier system of government and an independent judiciary, operating under a Westminster-styled parliamentary system. South Africa's government differs greatly from those of other Commonwealth nations.  had developed biological weapons, including another attempt at anthrax-containing chocolate (32). Given the large community outbreak of salmonellosis salmonellosis (săl'mənĕlō`sĭs), any of a group of infectious diseases caused by intestinal bacteria of the genus Salmonella,  caused by an intentional contamination of restaurant salad bars the in United States by the Rajneeshees (33), awareness of the potential for GI anthrax due to bioterrorism is important.

In conclusion, GI anthrax is probably greatly underreported in rural disease-endemic areas of the world. The spectrum of disease, ranging from no symptoms to death, has not been fully appreciated. Awareness of anthrax in a differential diagnosis remains important in disease-endemic areas and also in settings of possible bioterrorism.

References

(1.) LaForce FM. Anthrax. Clin Infect Dis 1994; 19:1009-14.

(2.) Jaax NK, Fritz DL. Anthrax. In: Connor DH, Chandler FW, Manz HJ, Schwartz DA, Lack EE, editors. Pathology of infectious diseases. Stamford (CT): Appleton & Lange; 1997. p. 397-406.

(3.) Dixon TC, Meselson M, Guillemin J, Hanna PC. Anthrax. N Eng1 J Med 1999;341:815-26.

(4.) Viratchai C. Anthrax gastro-enteritis and meningitis. J Med Assoc Thai 1974;57:147-50.

(5.) Kunanusont C, Limpakarnjanarat K, Foy JM. Outbreak of anthrax in Thailand. Ann Trop Med Parasitol 1990;84:507-12.

(6.) Tantajumroon T, Panas-Ampol K. Intestinal anthrax: report of two cases. J Med Assoc Thai 1968;51:477-80.

(7.) Baht P, Mohan DN, Srinivasa H. Intestinal anthrax with bacteriological investigations. J Infect Dis 1985; 152:1357-8.

(8.) Sekhar PC, Jaya Singh RS, Sridhar MS, Jaya Bhaskar C, Sreehari Rao Y. Outbreak of human anthrax in Ramabhadrapuram village of Chittoor district in Andhra Pradesh. Indian J Med Res [A] 1990;91:448-52.

(9.) Dutz W, Saidi F, Kohout E. Gastric anthrax with massive ascites. Gut 1970; 11:352-4.

(10.) Kohout E, Sehat A, Ashraf AM. Anthrax: a continuous problem in Southwest Iran. Am J Med Sci 1964;3:565-75.

(11.) Alizad A, Ayoub EM, Makki N. Intestinal anthrax in a two-year-old child. Pediatr Infect Dis J 1995;14:394-5.

(12.) Heyworth B, Ropp ME, Voos UG, Meinel HI, Darlow HM. Anthrax in the Gambia: an epidemiological study. Br Med J 1975;4:79-82.

(13.) Ndyabahinduka DGK, Chu IH, Abdou AH, Gaifuba JK. An outbreak of human gastrointestinal anthrax. Annali dell Instituto Superiore di Sanita 1984;20:205-8.

(14.) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. . Human ingestion of Bacillus anthracis-contaminated meat--Minnesota, August 2000. MMWR MMWR Morbidity & Mortality Weekly Report Epidemiology A news bulletin published by the CDC, which provides epidemiologic data–eg, statistics on the incidence of AIDS, rabies, rubella, STDs and other communicable diseases, causes of mortality–eg,  Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2000;49:813-6.

(15.) Per1 DP, Dooley JR. Anthrax. In: Binford CH, Connor DH, editors. Pathology of tropical and extraordinary diseases. Washington: Armed Forces Institute of Pathology Armed Forces Institute of Pathology A section of the US military which provides consultations, reference atlases and educational programs for pathologists ; 1976. p. 118-23.

(16.) Tantachumroon T. Pathologic studies of intestinal anthrax: report of 2 cases. Chiang Mai Medical Bulletin 1966;4:135-44.

(17.) Jena GP. Intestinal anthrax in man: a case report. Cent Afr J Med 1980;26:253-4.

(18.) Sirisanthana T, Jesadaporn U. Survival of a patient with gastrointestinal anthrax. Chiang Mai Medical Bulletin 1985;24:1-5.

(19.) Nalin DR, Sultana B, Sahunja R, Islam AK, Rahim MA, Islam M, et al. Survival of a patient with intestinal anthrax. Am J Med 1977;62:130-2.

(20.) Albrink WS, Brooks SM, Biron RE, Kopel M. Human inhalation anthrax. Am J Pathol 1960;36:457-71.

(21.) Jernigan JA, Stephens DS, Ashford DA, Omenaca C, Topiel MS, Galbraith M, et al. Bioterrorism-related inhalational anthrax: the first l0 cases reported in the United States. Emerg Infect Dis 2001;7:933-44.

(22.) Abramova FA, Grinberg LM, Yampolskaya OV, Walker DH. Pathology of inhalational anthrax in 42 cases from the Sverdlovsk outbreak of 1979. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1993;90:2291-4.

(23.) Phonboon K, Ratanasiri P, Peeraprakorn S, Choomkasien P, Chongcharoen P, Sritasoi S. Anthrax outbreak in Udon Thani. Communicable Disease Journal 1984; 10:207-20.

(24.) Davies JCA. A major epidemic of anthrax in Zimbabwe. Cent Afr J Med 1982 ;28:291-8.

(25.) Sirisanthana T, Navachareon N, Tharavichitkul P, Sirisanthana V, Brown AE. Outbreak of oral-pharyngeal anthrax: an unusual manifestation of human infection with Bacillus anthracis. Am J Trop Med Hyg 1984 ;33:144-50.

(26.) Navacharoen N, Sirisanthana T, Navacharoen W, Ruckphaopunt K. Oropharyngeal anthrax. J Laryngol Otol 1985;99:1293-5.

(27.) Sirisanthana T, Nelson KE, Ezzell JW, Abshire TG. Serologic studies of patients with cutaneous and oral-oropharyngeal anthrax from northern Thailand. Am J Trop Med Hyg 1988;39:575-81.

(28.) Doganay M, Almac A, Hanagasi R. Primary throat anthrax. A report of six cases. Scand J Infect Dis 1986;18:415-9.

(29.) Onerci M, Ergin NT. Oropharyngealer Milzbrand (Oropharyngeal anthrax). Laryngorhinootologie 1993;72:350-1.

(30.) Lincoln RE, Hodges DR, Klein F, et al. Role of the lymphatics in the pathogenesis of anthrax. J Infect Dis 1965; 115:481-94.

(31.) Harris S. Japanese biological warfare research on humans: a case study of microbiology and ethics. Ann NY Acad Sci 1992;666:21-49.

(32.) Daley S. In support of apartheid: poison whisky and sterilization. New York Times, June 11, 1998, section A, page 3.

(33.) Torok TJ, Tauxe RV, Wise RP, Livengood JR, Sokolow R, Mauvais S, et al. A large community outbreak of salmoneilosis caused by intentional contamination of restaurant salad bars. JAMA JAMA
abbr.
Journal of the American Medical Association
 1997;278:389-95.

Dr. Sirisanthana is professor of medicine and director of the Research Insitute for Health Sciences, Chiang Mai University Chiang Mai University (Thai: มหาวิทยาลัยเชียงใหม่) was the first provincial university established in Thailand and the first to be named after the city it is in. , Thailand. He received his medical degree from Mahidol University in Bangkok and then trained in internal medicine in infectious disease at Indiana University, the University of Chicago and the Medical College of Wisconsin from 1975 to 1979.

LTC Brown is chief, Department of Retrovirology, at the Armed Forces Research Institute for Medical Sciences in Bangkok. He is a fellow of the Infectious Disease Society of American with training in tropical public health. Dr. Brown's research in tropical infectious diseases has been based largely in Thailand for the past 20 years.

Thira Sirisanthana * and Arthur E. Brown ([dagger])

* Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, Thailand; and ([dagger]) Armed Forces Research Institute of Medical Sciences, Bangkok, Thailand

Address for correspondence: Arthur E. Brown, AFRIMS AFRIMS Armed Forces Research Institute of Medical Sciences (US, HHS & DoD)
AFRIMS Air Force Records Information Management System
AFRIMS Air Force Restoration Information Management System
, APO apo- 1 A prefix indicating a protein component in a conjugated molecule–eg, apoferritin, apolipoprotein, see there 2 Apolipoprotein, see there  AP 96546; fax: 66-02-644-4824; e-mail: brownae@thai.amedd.army.mil
COPYRIGHT 2002 U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Author:Brown, Arthur E.
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Date:Jul 1, 2002
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