Yaws

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Yaws
File:Yaws 01.jpg
Nodules on the elbow resulting from a Treponema pallidum pertenue bacterial infection
Classification and external resources
Specialty Infectious disease
ICD-10 A66
ICD-9-CM 102
MedlinePlus 001341
Patient UK Yaws
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Yaws (also known as frambesia tropica, thymosis, polypapilloma tropicum, parangi, bouba, frambösie,[1] and pian[2]) is a tropical infection of the skin, bones and joints caused by the spirochete bacterium Treponema pallidum pertenue.[3][4] The disease begins with a round, hard swelling of the skin, 2 to 5 centimeters in diameter.[4] The center may break open and form an ulcer.[4] This initial skin lesion typically heals after three to six months.[5] After weeks to years, joints and bones may become painful, fatigue may develop, and new skin lesions may appear.[4] The skin of the palms of the hands and the soles of the feet may become thick and break open.[5] The bones (especially those of the nose) may become misshapen.[5] After five years or more large areas of skin death with subsequent scarring may occur.[4]

Yaws is spread by direct contact with the fluid from a lesion of an infected person.[5] The contact is usually of a non-sexual nature.[5] The disease is most common among children, who spread it by playing together.[4] Other related treponemal diseases are bejel (Treponema pallidum endemicum), pinta (Treponema pallidum carateum), and syphilis (Treponema pallidum pallidum).[5] Yaws is often diagnosed by the appearance of the lesions.[5] Blood antibody tests may be useful but cannot separate previous from current infections.[5] Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is the most accurate method of diagnosis.[5]

Prevention is, in part, by curing those who have the disease thereby decreasing the risk of transmission.[5] Where the disease is common, treating the entire community is effective.[5] Improving cleanliness and sanitation will also decrease spread.[5] Treatment is typically with antibiotics including: azithromycin by mouth or benzathine penicillin by injection.[5] Without treatment, physical deformities occur in 10% of cases.[5]

Yaws is common in at least 14 tropical countries as of 2012.[4][5] The disease infects only humans.[5] In the 1950s and 1960s the World Health Organization (WHO) nearly eradicated yaws.[5] Since then the number of cases has increased and there are renewed efforts to globally eradicate the disease by 2020.[5] The last estimate of the number of people infected was more than 500,000 in 1995.[3] Although one of the first descriptions of the disease was made in 1679 by Willem Piso, archaeological evidence suggests that yaws may have been present among humans as far back as 1.6 million years ago.[4]

Signs and symptoms

File:4150843630 bc699a7fa4 bPian.jpg
Secondary breakout in a Java child age of 12 years. Wax model

Within 90 days (but usually less than a month) of infection a painless but distinctive "mother yaw" nodule appears, which enlarges and becomes warty in appearance. Nearby "daughter yaws" may also appear simultaneously.

This primary stage resolves completely within six months. The secondary stage occurs months to years later, with typically widespread skin lesions that vary in appearance, including "crab yaws" on the palms of the hands and soles of the feet with desquamation. These secondary lesions frequently ulcerate and are then highly infectious, but heal after six months or more. About 10% of people then go on to develop tertiary disease within five to ten years (during which further secondary lesions may come and go), with widespread bone, joint and soft tissue destruction, which may include extensive destruction of the bone and cartilage of the nose (Rhinopharyngitis mutilans or "gangosa").

Cause

The disease is transmitted by skin-to-skin contact with an infective lesion, with the bacterium entering through a pre-existing cut, bite or scratch.

T. pallidum pertenue has been identified in non-human primates (baboons, chimpanzees, and gorillas) and studies show that experimental inoculation of human beings with a simian isolate causes yaws-like disease. However, no evidence exists of crosstransmission between human beings and primates, but more research is needed to discount the possibility of a yaws animal reservoir in non-human primates.[4]

Diagnosis

Most often the diagnosis is made clinically. Dark field microscopy of samples taken from early lesions (particularly ulcerative lesions) may show the responsible organism. Blood tests such as VDRL, Rapid Plasma Reagin (RPR) and TPHA will also be positive, but there are no current blood tests which distinguish among the four treponematoses.[6]

Prevention

European doctor treats an Indonesian woman for yaws.

Yaws is a relatively easy disease to eradicate. Humans are likely the only reservoir of infection.[7] A single injection of long-acting penicillin or other beta lactam antibiotic cures the disease and is widely available;[8] and the disease is highly localised making case tracing relatively easy.

In April 2012, WHO initiated a new global campaign for the eradication of yaws, which has been on the WHO eradication list since 2011. According to the official roadmap, elimination should be achieved by 2020.[9][10] So far, this appears to have met with some success, since no cases have been seen in India since 2004.[8][11]

Certification for disease-free status requires an absence of the disease for at least five years. In India this happened on 19 September 2011. In 1996 there were 3,571 yaws cases in India; in 1997 after a serious elimination effort began the number of cases fell to 735. By 2003 the number of cases were 46. The last clinical case in India was reported in 2003 and the last latent case in 2006.[12] India is a country where yaws has been fully eradicated and no case has been reported after 2003.[13]

In March 2013, WHO convened a new meeting of yaws experts in Geneva to further discuss the strategy of the new eradication campaign. The meeting was significant, and representatives of most countries where yaws is endemic attended and described the epidemiological situation at the national level. The disease is currently known to be present in Indonesia and Timor-Leste in South-East Asia; Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu in the Pacific region; and Benin, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ghana and Togo in Africa. As reported at the meeting, in several such countries, mapping of the disease is still patchy and will need to be completed before any serious eradication effort could be enforced.[14]

Treatment

Treatment is normally by a single intramuscular injection of penicillin, or by a course of penicillin, erythromycin or tetracycline tablets. A single oral dose of azithromycin was shown to be as effective as intramuscular penicillin.[15] Primary and secondary stage lesions may heal completely, but the destructive changes of tertiary yaws are largely irreversible.

Epidemiology

About three quarters of people affected are children under 15 years of age, with the greatest incidence in children 6–10 years old.[16] Therefore, children are the main reservoir of infection. Because T. pallidum pertenue is temperature- and humidity-dependent, yaws is found in humid tropical regions in South America, Africa, Asia and Oceania.

Mass treatment campaigns in the 1950s reduced the worldwide prevalence from 50–150 million to fewer than 2.5 million; however during the 1970s there were outbreaks in South-East Asia and there have been continued sporadic cases in South America. It is unclear how many people worldwide are infected at present.[7]

The global prevalence of this disease and the other endemic treponematoses, bejel and pinta, was reduced by the Global Control of Treponematoses (TCP) programme between 1952 and 1964 from about 50 to 150 million cases to about 2.5 million (a 95 percent reduction). Following the cessation of this program yaws surveillance and treatment became a part of primary health systems of the affected countries. However incomplete eradication led to a resurgence of yaws in the 1970s with the largest number of case found in the Western Africa region.[7][17]

Following the development of orally administered azithromycin as a treatment, the WHO has targeted yaws for eradication by 2020.[18]

History

File:Don't show me Yaws.jpg
Page from Surgeon John O'Neill's illustrated journal of diseases on West Coast of Africa, written during his time on HM Gun Boat Decoy. Colour diagrams showing a "typical case of Framboesia or Yaws". Date: 1874

Examination of remains of Homo erectus from Kenya, that are about 1.6 million years old, has revealed signs typical of yaws. The genetic analysis of the yaws' causative bacteria — Treponema pallidum pertenue — has led to the conclusion that yaws is the most ancient of the four known Treponema diseases. All other Treponema pallidum subspecies probably evolved from Treponema pallidum pertenue. Yaws is believed to have originated in tropical areas of Africa, and spread to other tropical areas of the world via immigration and the slave trade. The latter is likely the way it was introduced to Europe from Africa in the 15th century. The first unambiguous description of yaws was made by the Dutch physician Willem Piso. Yaws was clearly described in 1679 among African slaves by Thomas Sydenham in his epistle on venereal diseases, although he thought that it was the same disease as syphilis. The causative agent of yaws was discovered in 1905 by Aldo Castellani in ulcers of patients from Ceylon.[4]

The current name is believed to be of Carib origin, "yaya" meaning sore.[6]

References

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  11. WHO South-East Asia report of an intercountry workshop on Yaws eradication, 2006
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  14. Drug and a syphilis test offer hope of yaws eradication, 2013
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External links

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