Masuda Gohta, Ajisawa Atsushi, Imamura Akifumi, Negishi Masayoshi, Iseki Motohiro
Department of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo Metropolitan Komagome Hospital.
Kansenshogaku Zasshi. 2002 Jun;76(6):416-24. doi: 10.11150/kansenshogakuzasshi1970.76.416.
Four patients infected with Cyclospora cayetanensis who sought medical care at the Tokyo Metropolitan Komagome Hospital are herein presented. All were Japanese males, and their ages ranged from 22 to 50 years of age. One patient, who was HIV-positive with a CD4+ lymphocyte count of 141/microliter, demonstrated no AIDS-defining illness. This patient acquired HIV in some Southeast Asian country/countries through heterosexual contact. This patient presented with watery diarrhea with a frequency of up to 18 times a day for more than two months. The other three cases were not considered to be debilitated hosts. Diarrhea occurring from one to ten times a day continued for 6 to 26 days in all of these three patients. The presumed origin of the infection was considered to be Southeast Asian countries and the season of onset of diarrhea was March to July in all four cases. Treatment with a sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim compound was performed for both the HIV-infected patient and the other non-debilitated patient. Both symptomatic and parasitologic improvements were quickly observed in these patients. A prospective study was performed using fecal specimens from the diarrheal patients to identify the presence of C. cayetanensis during the period from 1996 to 2001. Protozoa-positive specimens were found in 3 of 410 (0.7%) specimens from patients who had traveled overseas, is one of 148 (0.7%) for HIV-infected (the C. cayetanensis-positive patient also acquired the protozoa in Southeast Asia), and in none of 513 (0%) patients who developed diarrhea in Japan. In summary, C. cayetanensis infection is rare in Japan and most patients infected with this pathogen tend to be overseas travelers and HIV-infected individuals at present.