Strategies and tools for the control/elimination of lymphatic filariasis.
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- review article
- Vol. 75 (6) , 491-503
Abstract
Lymphatic filariasis infects 120 million people in 73 countries worldwide and continues to be a worsening problem, especially in Africa and the Indian subcontinent. Elephantiasis, lymphoedema, and genital pathology afflict 44 million men, women and children; another 76 million have parasites in their blood and hidden internal damage to their lymphatic and renal systems. In the past, tools and strategies for the control of the condition were inadequate, but over the last 10 years dramatic research advances have led to new understanding about the severity and impact of the disease, new diagnostic and monitoring tools, and, most importantly, new treatment tools and control strategies. The new strategy aims both at transmission control through community-wide (mass) treatment programmes and at disease control through individual patient management. Annual single-dose co-administration of two drugs (ivermectin + diethylcarbamazine (DEC) or albendazole) reduces blood microfilariae by 99% for a full year; even a single dose of one drug (ivermectin or DEC) administered annually can result in 90% reductions; field studies confirm that such reduction of microfilarial loads and prevalence can interrupt transmission. New approaches to disease control, based on preventing bacterial superinfection, can now halt or even reverse the lymphoedema and elephantiasis sequelae of filarial infection. Recognizing these remarkable technical advances, the successes of recent control programmes, and the biological factors favouring elimination of this infection, the Fiftieth World Health Assembly recently called on WHO and its Member States to establish as a priority the global elimination of lymphatic filariasis as a public health problem.This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ivermectin for the chemotherapy of bancroftian filariasis: a meta‐analysis of the effect of single treatmentTropical Medicine & International Health, 1997
- Epidemiology of acute filarial episodes caused by Wuchereria bancrofti infection in two rural villages in Tamil Nadu, south IndiaTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1996
- Impact of lymphatic filariasis on the productivity of male weavers in a south Indian villageTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1996
- Ultrasonographic assessment of the adulticidal efficacy of repeat high‐dose ivermectin in bancroftian filariasisTropical Medicine & International Health, 1996
- Re-assessing the global prevalence and distribution of lymphatic filariasisParasitology, 1996
- Rapid community diagnosis of lymphatic filariasisActa Tropica, 1996
- Lymphoscintigraphic Analysis Of Lymphatic Abnormalities In Symptomatic And Asymptomatic Human FilariasisThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1994
- "Filarial" adenolymphangitis without filarial infectionThe Lancet, 1994
- A Monoclonal Antibody-Based Enzyme Immunoassay for Detecting Parasite Antigenemia in Bancroftian FilariasisThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1987
- Efficacy of Diethylcarbamazine in Eradicating Infection with Lymphatic-Dwelling Filariae in HumansClinical Infectious Diseases, 1985