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Leptospirosis in "Eco-Challenge" athletes, Malaysian Borneo, 2000. (Research).


Adventure travel is becoming more popular, increasing the likelihood of contact with unusual pathogens. We investigated an outbreak of leptospirosis leptospirosis (lĕp'təspīrō`sĭs), febrile disease caused by bacteria of the genus Leptospirae. The disease occurs in dogs, cattle, pigs, sheep, goats, and horses and is transmissible to humans.  in "Eco-Challenge" multisport mul·ti·sport   also mul·ti·sports
adj.
1. Composed of, involving, or accommodating several sports: a multisport competition; a multisport stadium.

2.
 race athletes to determine illness etiology and implement public health measures. Of 304 athletes, we contacted 189 (62%) from the United States and 26 other countries. Eighty (42%) athletes met our case definition. Twenty-nine (36%) case-patients were hospitalized; none died. Logistic regression showed swimming in the Segama River (relative risk [RR]=2.0; 95% confidence interval confidence interval,
n a statistical device used to determine the range within which an acceptable datum would fall. Confidence intervals are usually expressed in percentages, typically 95% or 99%.
 [CI]=1.3 to 3.1) to be an independent risk factor. Twenty-six (68%) of 38 case-patients tested positive for leptospiral antibodies. Taking doxycycline doxycycline /doxy·cy·cline/ (dok?se-si´klen) a semisynthetic broad-spectrum tetracycline antibiotic, active against a wide range of gram-positive and gram-negative organisms; used also as d. calcium and d. hyclate.  before or during the race was protective (RR=0.4, 95% CI=0.2 to 1.2) for the 20 athletes who reported using it. Increased adventure travel may lead to more frequent exposure to leptospires, and preexposure chemo-prophylaxis for leptospirosis (200 mg oral doxycycline/ week) may decrease illness risk. Efforts are needed to inform adventure travel participants of unique infections such as leptospirosis.

**********

Each year, 60 million Americans travel abroad. Increasingly, these persons are traveling to more remote and exotic destinations. Adventure travel is now the largest growing segment of the leisure travel industry, with a growth rate of 10% per year since 1985 (Adventure Travel Society, pers. comm.). This travel has led to an increasing risk for contact with pathogens uncommon in industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize  
v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example).

2.
 countries, especially for participants in adventure sports and extreme travel. Both of these pursuits may predispose pre·dis·pose
v.
To make susceptible, as to a disease.
 persons to infection with unusual organisms through exposures to lakes, rivers, caves, and canyons, as well as insect vectors. These illnesses may be unfamiliar to practitioners in the travelers' home countries, and symptoms may go unrecognized. Leptospirosis, a bacterial zoonotic Zoonotic
A disease which can be spread from animals to humans.

Mentioned in: Zoonosis
 infection, is more frequently found in developing countries, and its protean pro·te·an
adj.
Readily taking on varied shapes, forms, or meanings.



protean

changing form or assuming different shapes.
 early symptoms may be difficult to diagnose clinically. Prevention of leptospirosis in humans has previously relied on mechanical barriers and avoidance (1), but limited published data suggest that preexposure chemoprophylaxis chemoprophylaxis /che·mo·pro·phy·lax·is/ (-pro?fi-lak´sis) prevention of disease by means of a chemotherapeutic agent.

che·mo·pro·phy·lax·is
n.
Disease prevention by use of chemicals or drugs.
 may be beneficial to some groups (2-4).

From September 7 to September 11, 2000, the Idaho Department of Health, the Los Angeles County Department of Health Services The Los Angeles County Department of Health Services (DHS) in Los Angeles County's department providing public and personal health services to the over 10 million residents in the County. , and the GeoSentinel Network (an international surveillance network of travel clinics) notified the 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.  (CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

CDC - Control Data Corporation
) of at least 20 cases of febrile febrile /feb·rile/ (feb´ril) pertaining to or characterized by fever.

feb·rile
adj.
Of, relating to, or characterized by fever; feverish.
 illness. The illness was characterized by the acute onset of high fever, chills, headache, and myalgias; major laboratory test abnormalities and important pulmonary or central nervous system involvement were absent. All ill persons had participated in the Eco-Challenge-Sabah 2000 multisport endurance race, held in Malaysian Borneo August 21-September 1, 2000. Three hundred four athletes from 26 countries and 29 U.S. states competed in the 10-day endurance event. Segments of the event included jungle trekking, prolonged swimming and kayaking (both in fresh and ocean water), spelunking (caving), climbing, and mountain biking mountain biking Sports medicine A sport in which participants use specialized bicycles to navigate rough, steep trails covered with unforgiving rocks Injury risk Concussions, fractures, death. See Extreme sport, Novelty seeking behavior. . Symptoms and exposure history, as well as initial laboratory testing, suggested that the illness was leptospirosis. We undertook an investigation to determine the etiology of the illness in the athletes and to make public health recommendations. We report on the results of this investigation and discuss recommendations for preventing leptospirosis in adventure travelers.

Methods

Epidemiologic Investigation

Upon identification of the first ill athletes, a complete list of U.S. and international participants in the Eco-Challenge event, including their telephone numbers and email addresses, was obtained from the race organizers. In addition, race organizers and some athletes were interviewed to determine details of the race activities, geography of the course, and possible exposures. Athletes in the United States were contacted by telephone, either by CDC or by representatives of the athletes' state or local health departments, between September 7 and October 30, 2000. International athletes were contacted by representatives from their local ministries of health after notification by local GeoSentinel sites or the World Health Organization.

A standardized telephone questionnaire was administered, directed at determining demographics, symptoms, duration of illness, previous antibiotic use, and various exposures encountered during the event. A clinical case of illness was defined as onset of self-reported fever between August 21 and September 30, 2000, in an Eco-Challenge athlete, along with two or more of the following symptoms: chills, myalgias, headache, diarrhea, or conjunctivitis conjunctivitis (kənjəngtəvī`təs), inflammation or infection of the mucosal membrane that covers the eyeball and lines the eyelid, usually acute, caused by a virus or, less often, by a bacillus, an allergic reaction, or an . We compared clinical case-patients with controls from the cohort of athletes to identify risk factors for illness.

Laboratory Investigations

Thirty-eight serum samples were obtained from a convenience sample of the cohort (who met the clinical case definition) for laboratory testing for various pathogens. All submitted samples were tested for Leptospira-specific immunoglobulin (Ig) M antibodies by dot-enzyme-linked immunosorbent immunosorbent /im·mu·no·sor·bent/ (-sor´bent) an insoluble support for antigen or antibody used to absorb homologous antibodies or antigens, respectively, from a mixture; the antibodies or antigens so removed may then be eluted in pure  assay (ELISA ELISA (e-li´sah) Enzyme-Linked Immuno-Sorbent Assay; any enzyme immunoassay using an enzyme-labeled immunoreactant and an immunosorbent.

ELISA
n.
) dipstick dipstick /dip·stick/ (dip´stik) a strip of cellulose chemically impregnated to render it sensitive to protein, glucose, or other substances in the urine.  (Dip-S-Ticks immunoassay Immunoassay

An assay that quantifies antigen or antibody by immunochemical means. The antigen can be a relatively simple substance such as a drug, or a complex one such as a protein or a virus.
, Integrated Diagnostics, Baltimore, MD) or by microplate IgM-ELISA (PanBio Ltd., Brisbane, Australia), according to the manufacturer's instructions. Laboratory evidence for leptospirosis was defined as a positive result for Leptospira-specific IgM antibodies.

All 38 samples were subsequently tested by microscopic agglutination test agglutination test
n.
Any of various tests in which blood serum causes agglutination of bacteria or blood cells of a foreign type, used to determine infection and to identify pathogens and blood types.
 (MAT) by using a standard method (5), with 23 live antigen suspensions representing 17 serogroups. A titer of [greater than or equal to] 200 against any of the antigens was considered positive evidence for a probable case of leptospirosis.

Given the broad differential diagnosis differential diagnosis
n.
Determination of which one of two or more diseases with similar symptoms is the one from which the patient is suffering. Also called differentiation.
 for febrile illness in the tropics tropics, also called tropical zone or torrid zone, all the land and water of the earth situated between the Tropic of Cancer at lat. 23 1-2°N and the Tropic of Capricorn at lat. 23 1-2°S. , 18 submitted samples were also tested for alternative organisms. Samples with antibody responses to Orientia tsutsugamushi Orientia tsutsugamushi

obligately intracellular bacteria that cause scrub typhus in humans and many small feral mammals, especially rodents and occasionally dogs.
, Rickettsia prowazekii Rickettsia pro·wa·zek·i·i
n.
A bacterium that causes epidemic typhus fever.
, and R. typhi were assayed by using a variation of the standard microimmunofluorescence test for rickettsiae (6). Testing for flaviviruses (dengue dengue
 or breakbone fever or dandy fever

Infectious, disabling mosquito-borne fever. Other symptoms include extreme joint pain and stiffness, intense pain behind the eyes, a return of fever after brief pause, and a characteristic rash.
, Japanese encephalitis, Powassan/ tick-borne encephalitis encephalitis (ĕnsĕf'əlī`təs), general term used to describe a diffuse inflammation of the brain and spinal cord, usually of viral origin, often transmitted by mosquitoes, in contrast to a bacterial infection of the meninges ), alphaviruses (Chikungunya
''This article discusses the disease. See also: Chikungunya Outbreak of 2004-Present.
Chikungunya is a relatively rare form of viral fever caused by an alphavirus that is spread by mosquito bites from Aedes aegypti
), bunyaviruses (Snowshoe Hare virus snow·shoe hare virus
n.
An arbovirus that is most commonly found in North America and that causes fever, headache, and nausea in humans.



snowshoe hare virus
), and hantaviruses (Sin Nombre) was performed with the standard IgM ELISA assay (7).

Statistical Analysis

Results of the telephone survey were entered into EpiInfo v. 6.04b (CDC, Atlanta, GA); the dataset was then imported into SAS (1) (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, www.sas.com) A software company that specializes in data warehousing and decision support software based on the SAS System. Founded in 1976, SAS is one of the world's largest privately held software companies. See SAS System.  v. 6.12 and v. 8.2 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC) for subsequent analysis. Because laboratory testing was only available from a subset of the cohort, athletes were categorized on the basis of the clinical case definition. All variables were examined using PROC (language) PROC - The job control language used in the Pick operating system.

["Exploring the Pick Operating System", J.E. Sisk et al, Hayden 1986].
 GENMOD (SAS). Those factors significant by univariate analysis, as well as known risk factors, were examined in a multivariable logistic regression model. Colinearity and interaction among variables were calculated by using standard statistical techniques.

Results

Epidemiologic Investigation

Of the 304 athletes competing in the Eco-Challenge event, 189 (62%) were contacted, including 129 (92%) of the 140 U.S.-based athletes. The median age of the contacted cohort was 34 years (range 21-50 years); 94% were white, and 74% were men. No significant differences were found between ill athletes who met the case definition and non-ill athletes by age, race, or gender. The most common symptoms athletes reported included fever, chills, muscle aches, headache, and diarrhea (Table 1). Conjunctival con·junc·ti·val
adj.
Relating to the conjunctiva.



conjunctival

pertaining to or emanating from conjunctiva.


congenital conjunctival membrane
 suffusion suffusion /suf·fu·sion/ (su-fu´zhun)
1. the process of overspreading, or diffusion.

2. the condition of being moistened or of being permeated through, as by blood.
, a hallmark finding in persons infected with leptospires, was reported by 40 (21%) athletes. Joint aches and calf/leg pain were also frequently reported. The status of athletes with respect to residence in an area endemic for leptospirosis was unknown.

Of the 189 athletes contacted, 80 (42%) met the clinical case definition. The median interval between the start of the race and onset of fever was 15 days (range 1-24 days), with a peak onset of fever on September 4, 2000 (Figure); no cases were detected after September 13. The median duration of illness was 7 days (range 1-17 days); 29 (36%) of the athletes who met the clinical case definition were hospitalized. No deaths were reported. Jaundice jaundice (jôn`dĭs, jän`–), abnormal condition in which the body fluids and tissues, particularly the skin and eyes, take on a yellowish color as a result of an excess of bilirubin. , pulmonary hemorrhage, meningoencephalitis meningoencephalitis /me·nin·go·en·ceph·a·li·tis/ (me-ning?go-en-sef?ah-li´tis) inflammation of the brain and meninges.

toxoplasmic meningoencephalitis
, or other severe manifestations of leptospirosis were not reported.

On univariate analysis, statistically significant risk factors for illness included kayaking, swimming in the Segama River, swallowing water from the Segama River, and spelunking (Table 2). By multivariate stepwise stepwise

incremental; additional information is added at each step.


stepwise multiple regression
used when a large number of possible explanatory variables are available and there is difficulty interpreting the partial regression
 logistic regression, only swimming in the Segama River was independently associated with illness. Adjusting for the other variables did not alter the relative risk. The attributable risk of river swimming was 36%.

Seventy-six teams, consisting of 4 members per team, competed in Eco-Challenge; at least one member of 62 (82%) of the teams was administered the questionnaire. Of the 51 teams with at least 2 members interviewed, illness and team membership were not significantly associated (data not shown).

Of the 189 athletes contacted, 20 (11%) reported taking doxycycline for prophylaxis of either malaria or leptospirosis. Seventeen of these athletes reported taking a daily dose of doxycycline (100 mg by mouth) throughout the duration of the race; the other three took daily doxycycline, 100 mg by mouth, sporadically throughout the race. Illness developed in 4 (20%) of the 20 athletes who reported taking doxycycline. When the attack rate of those taking doxycycline was compared with the attack rate among those not reporting doxycycline prophylaxis, and adjusted for river swimming, doxycycline usage was protective, although not significantly (relative risk [RR]=0.4, 95% CI=0.1 to 1.1, p=0.1). The preventive efficacy attributable to any doxycycline usage during the race was 55% (95% CI=-0.05% to 95%).

Laboratory Investigation

Clinical symptoms of the athletes and the history of extensive water exposure led to the early consideration of leptospirosis as a diagnosis. In the first few days of the investigation, serum specimens obtained from two of the hospitalized athletes in California were tested at CDC for anti-leptospiral IgM by dot-ELISA dipstick rapid assay; one athlete had a positive test result on a serum specimen obtained 4 days after onset of fever. The second athlete had a negative test result for anti-leptospiral IgM on a serum specimen obtained 4 days after onset of fever but a positive test result on a serum sample obtained 8 days after fever onset. Based on these early results, further diagnostic testing was directed toward leptospirosis.

Of the 80 athletes who met the case definition for illness, serum was collected from 38 (48%). The median duration between onset of fever and the drawing of serum from athletes was 10 days (range 3-34). Of these 38 samples, 26 (68%) tested positive by the dot-ELISA dipstick, the IgM ELISA, or both. No differences in symptoms were found between antibody-positive and antibody-negative patients. Nine additional serum samples were obtained from ill athletes who did not meet the clinical case definition; none of these samples tested positive by rapid assay. Of the 26 samples testing positive by one or both rapid assays, 20 (77%) were subsequently determined to be positive for anti-leptospiral antibodies by MAT. The serogroup associated with the strongest MAT immunoreactivity was Australis.

One culture-confirmed isolate was obtained from an athlete in California. Based on its rrs and secY gene sequences, this isolate was determined to be most closely related to Leptospira weilii, a species found exclusively in Southeast Asia. Serologic se·rol·o·gy  
n. pl. se·rol·o·gies
1. The science that deals with the properties and reactions of serums, especially blood serum.

2.
 analysis showed that the isolate was most likely a new serovar of the Hebdomadis group (8).

Eighteen samples that tested negative for leptospiral antibodies by rapid assay and MAT also tested negative for dengue, typhoid typhoid
 or typhoid fever

Acute infectious disease resembling typhus (and distinguished from it only in the 19th century). Salmonella typhi, usually ingested in food or water, multiplies in the intestinal wall and then enters the bloodstream, causing
, and scrub typhus antibodies, illnesses that are clinically similar to leptospirosis. These samples included 12 from athletes who met the case definition and 6 from athletes who did not meet the definition. These 18 samples also tested negative for antibodies to Chikungunya, Powassan/tick-borne encephalitis, Sin Nombre virus The Sin Nombre virus (literally "unnamed virus" in Spanish) (SNV) is the prototypical etiologic agent of hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome (HCPS). It was first isolated from rodents collected near the home of one of the initial patients with hantavirus pulmonary syndrome , Japanese encephalitis, and Snowshoe Hare virus.

Discussion

This outbreak was the first recognized international leptospirosis outbreak associated with the increasingly popular activity of adventure travel. Data from this outbreak investigation suggest that doxycycline may be effective as prophylaxis for leptospirosis in persons with identifiable, short-term exposure to high-risk activities and environments. Preexposure chemoprophylaxis could be increasingly important as more people engage in adventure travel and eco-tourism. In addition, physicians treating returning travelers should consider diseases such as leptospirosis in patients with a history of water exposures. Newer, rapid diagnostic assays may assist physicians in earlier and more accurate diagnosis and, therefore, earlier treatment.

Leptospirosis is a zoonotic disease of worldwide distribution that causes an acute febrile illness acute febrile illness A nonspecific term for an illness of sudden onset accompanied by fever ; the incubation period is usually 5-14 days but ranges from 2 to 30 days (9). The disease is associated with exposure to water or soil that has been contaminated by a variety of wild and domestic animals, which serve as reservoirs for leptospires and transmit infection by shedding the organisms in their urine (1). The illness is protean. It may be characterized by abrupt onset of fever, chills, myalgias, and headache, and may also include conjunctival suffusion, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, and skin rashes. Severe leptospirosis may include aseptic meningitis, jaundice, renal failure and hemorrhage; the more severe syndrome characterized by fever, meningismus, and renal and hepatic failure is referred to as Well's disease. Mild infections can be treated with oral tetracyclines Tetracyclines Definition

Tetracyclines are medicines that kill certain infection-causing microorganisms.
Purpose

Tetracyclines are called "broad-spectrum" antibiotics, because they can be used to treat a wide variety of
; more severe infections generally require intravenous penicillin (9).

Among the Eco-Challenge athletes, symptoms and exposure history suggested a diagnosis of leptospirosis; this diagnosis was supported early in the investigation by laboratory testing. Our investigation showed a high attack rate in this cohort of athletes (nearly 50% in surveyed athletes). Illness was also severe, with a hospitalization rate of 36% for young, otherwise exceptionally healthy endurance athletes. On September 15, 2000, on the basis of this high attack rate and high proportion of hospitalizations, CDC recommended that all ill athletes be treated with empiric doxycycline and that asymptomatic athletes discuss the possible merits of a single dose of doxycycline with their physicians (10). In addition, asymptomatic athletes were advised to seek medical attention if signs and symptoms consistent with leptospirosis developed.

Although infection or coinfection with other pathogens in ill athletes remains a possibility, testing for antibodies to alternative pathogens commonly causing febrile disease in the tropics was negative in the serum samples tested; most ill athletes were likely infected with leptospires. The known epidemiology of leptospirosis and the epidemiologic data gathered from this investigation suggested a point source for the outbreak associated with exposure to water from the Segama Riven rive  
v. rived, riv·en also rived, riv·ing, rives

v.tr.
1. To rend or tear apart.

2. To break into pieces, as by a blow; cleave or split asunder.

3.
 The attributable risk of swimming in the river was 36%; those athletes whose illness could not be accounted for by swimming in the river were likely exposed to contaminated water or soil during some other race activity, such as kayaking, trekking, or contact with mud along the river banks. While our study did not find a significant association between swallowing river water and infection, a gastrointestinal route of infection after swallowing contaminated water has also been suggested (11).

Although previously reported in Malaysian Borneo, leptospirosis was not recognized as a cause of a substantial level of illness in Borneo at the time of Eco-Challenge. The known epidemiology and pathophysiology pathophysiology /patho·phys·i·ol·o·gy/ (-fiz?e-ol´ah-je) the physiology of disordered function.

path·o·phys·i·ol·o·gy
n.
1.
 of leptospires suggest that the high attack rate among the athletes was multifactorial multifactorial /mul·ti·fac·to·ri·al/ (mul?te-fak-tor´e-al)
1. of or pertaining to, or arising through the action of many factors.

2.
. Contact with water from the Segama River was preceded by prolonged treks through jungle vegetation, and all surveyed athletes reported cuts and abrasions (data not shown) that may have predisposed them to a larger inoculum inoculum /in·oc·u·lum/ (-ok´u-lum) pl. inoc´ula   material used in inoculation.

in·oc·u·lum
n. pl.
 of organisms (12). Another possible factor in the high attack rate may have been rainfall before the race. During Eco-Challenge, rainfall throughout much of the race was heavy, and in the 3 months preceding the event, regional monthly rainfall totals were approximately 250 mm greater than the average for the previous 3 years (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Noun 1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment; provides weather reports and forecasts floods and hurricanes and , pers. comm.). Flooding, which has been associated with previous leptospirosis outbreaks, elevates the water table, saturating the soil with leptospires, preventing evaporation of contaminated animal urine, and potentially promoting the survival of leptospires in surface waters (13-16).

Leptospirosis is a relatively common zoonotic disease in the tropics (9); however, it is frequently underdiagnosed because of the nonspecific nonspecific /non·spe·cif·ic/ (non?spi-sif´ik)
1. not due to any single known cause.

2. not directed against a particular agent, but rather having a general effect.


nonspecific

1.
 symptoms associated with infection and the difficulty confirming a diagnosis. MAT is considered the standard diagnostic criterion, but it is technically difficult, not widely available, and involves the use of live leptospires, which presents a hazard to laboratory personnel. A simple, accurate, rapid, and widely available assay for detecting leptospires is needed. In this study, initial screening for leptospires was performed with the Dip-S-Ticks immunoassay, an enzyme-linked dot immunoassay for detecting IgM antibodies; recent evaluations indicate an overall case sensitivity of 98% and specificity of 91% (17,18). The assay has benefits over previous methods of Leptospira serodiagnosis serodiagnosis /se·ro·di·ag·no·sis/ (-di?ag-no´sis) diagnosis of disease based on serologic tests.serodiagnos´tic

se·ro·di·ag·no·sis
n. pl.
 because of its ease of use and accessibility, as well as the rapidity of diagnosis; the Dip-S-Ticks assay also has greater sensitivity early in infection than other assays. Three Eco-Challenge athletes tested positive by Dip-S-Ticks but negative by IgM ELISA (data not shown). Detection of an early nascent immune response remains difficult; this low early sensitivity may partially explain the 50% seronegativity rate in surveyed athletes, given the 10-day median duration between onset of fever and drawing of serum. The inability to obtain MAT confirmation in all specimens that tested positive by rapid assay may similarly be explained by the relatively short interval between onset of fever and the drawing of serum. While MAT reactivity can be seen several days after infection, peak titers are frequently obtained in 2 to 3 weeks; sometimes, however, antibodies do not appear until 3-4 weeks after infection (1). Alternatively, serovars responsible for infection may not have been included in the testing battery used for the serum. The athletes did engage in activities that may have led to multiple exposure risks, and infection with other organisms might have accounted for a proportion of those who tested seronegative seronegative /se·ro·neg·a·tive/ (-neg´ah-tiv) showing negative results on serological examination; showing a lack of antibody.

se·ro·neg·a·tive
adj.
 for leptospires. We tested some samples for pathogens that also cause acute febrile illness in the tropics; none was detected. However, infection with other organisms remains a possibility.

Due in part to the antigenic heterogeneity among the many different serovars of leptospires, a universally effective leptospirosis vaccine for humans has not been developed; in addition, the duration of immunity with current serovar-specific leptospiral vaccines appears to be short-lived (19). Prevention strategies for leptospirosis have traditionally relied on protective barriers such as wearing rubber boots and gloves and avoiding high-risk areas. However, several studies of persons from areas endemic for leptospirosis and of military recruits with no known prior exposure to leptospires have shown that doxycycline given before or shortly after exposure can reduce illness and death caused by leptospirosis (2-4). In our study, athletes who took doxycycline for malaria prophylaxis were less likely to become ill; although this finding did not reach statistical significance, we may not have had sufficient data to detect significance. Persons who travel to areas where leptospirosis is endemic or epidemic and who participate in high-risk exposure activities involving prolonged water exposure may be at increased risk for leptospirosis (11,14,20,21) and may benefit from chemoprophylaxis. Until additional efficacy data are available, persons at high risk for leptospirosis should consider chemoprophylaxis with doxycycline, 200 mg by mouth per week, beginning 1-2 days before exposure and continuing for the duration of suspected exposure. The role of other antimicrobial agents is not clear. Further randomized ran·dom·ize  
tr.v. ran·dom·ized, ran·dom·iz·ing, ran·dom·iz·es
To make random in arrangement, especially in order to control the variables in an experiment.
, controlled studies assessing the utility and efficacy of doxycycline and other antimicrobial agents for the prophylaxis of leptospirosis are needed.

More people are participating in exotic travel, adventure sports, and eco-tourism, and as a result, the potential for contact with pathogens less common in the temperate, industrialized world, such as Leptospira, is likely to increase. Outbreaks of leptospirosis have previously been documented in athletes participating in such activities as kayaking (14), swimming (20), and triathlons (11). Recently, leptospirosis in endurance athletes has been the subject of several reports (22-24). In addition, previous outbreaks of infectious disease attributable to other unusual pathogens have been documented in adventure travelers (25,26). Since leptospires are a common cause of febrile illness in the tropics, physicians should evaluate travelers with febrile illness returning from these areas for this and other emerging infections.
Table 1. Self-reported clinical symptoms in Eco-Challenge
athletes

Symptom         % (n=189)

Chills             50
Muscle aches       50
Fever              49
Headache           47
Diarrhea           33
Joint aches        30
Calf/leg pain      30
Red eyes           22

Table 2. Risk factors for developing illness, univariate analysis (a)

                          % Ill   % Not ill
Exposure                  (n=80)   (n=109)    RR     95% CI    p value

Swimming in Segama River    57       28      2.0   1.3 to 3.1   0.002
Swallowing river water      45       21      1.8   1.2 to 2.9   0.008
Kayaking                    95       78      3.3   1.2 to 9.0   0.02
Spelunking                  87       68      2.2   1.1 to 4.2   0.02

(a) RR, relative risk; CI, confidence interval.


Acknowledgments

We acknowledge the efforts and contributions of the following persons to this investigation: B. Connor, J. Keystone, C. Easmon, P. Buck, H. Artsob, C. Leber, M. Evans, B. Smyth, T. Coleman, M. Eyeson-Annan, F. Brooke, D. Coleman, G. Tallis, J. Carnie, D. Harvey, J. McAnulty, L. Gonsalez, J. Kool, P. Nuarte, A. Craig, J. Pape, J. Perdue Perdue may refer to:
  • Perdue, Saskatchewan, Canada
  • Perdue Farms, an American chicken-farming corporation
  • Perdue School of Business, in Salisbury University, Salisbury, Maryland
People with the surname Perdue
, K. Hendricks, C. Hahn, L. Tengelson, D. Haake, R. Cader, B. Kubak, R. Hartskeerl, R. Lanciotte, C. Paddock, M. Cetron, M. Traeger, A. Williams, and P. Levett.

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pertaining to or emanating from serology.


serological test
one involving examination of blood serum usually for antibody.
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(7.) Innis B, Nisalak A, Nimmannitya S. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
n.
ELISA.


Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)
A diagnostic blood test used to screen patients for AIDS or other viruses.
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See serovar.

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Address for correspondence: James Sejvar, Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, Mailstop A39, NCID NCID National Center for Infectious Diseases (US CDC)
NCID Non-Cooperative Identification
NCID Net-Centric Implementation Document (US DoD) 
, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road N.E., Atlanta, GA 30333, USA; fax 404-639-3838; email zea3@cdc.gov

James Sejvar, * Elizabeth Bancroft, * ([dagger]) Kevin Winthrop, * ([dagger]) Julie Bettinger, * Mary Bajani, * Sandra Bragg, * Kathleen Shutt, * Robyn Kaiser, * Nina Marano,* Tanja Popovic, * Jordan Tappero, * David Ashford, * Laurene Mascola, ([double dagger]) Duc Vugia, ([dagger]) Bradley Perkins, * Nancy Rosenstein, * and the Eco-Challenge Investigation Team (1)

* Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA; ([dagger]) California Department of Health Services Department of Health Services may refer to:
  • Los Angeles County Department of Health Services
  • California Department of Health Services a California state agency
, Berkeley, California, USA; and ([double dagger]) Los Angeles County Department of Health Services, Los Angeles, California, USA

(1) Presented in part at the 49th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, Houston, Texas, October 29-November 2, 2000.

Dr. Sejvar is a neurologist and medical epidemiologist with the Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. His primary research interests are surveillance and epidemiology of encephalitis, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, and other infectious diseases of the nervous system.
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Author:Rosenstein, Nancy
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Date:Jun 1, 2003
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