Letters
to the Editor Severe
Eosinophilia in a Case of Giardiasis
Rifat Nadeem Ahmad1,
Ahmed Sherjil2, Asad Mahmood3 and Shahid Rafi4 1Department of
Pathology and 2Department of Pediatrics, Heavy
Industries Taxila Hospital, Taxila, Pakistan.
3Department of
Pathology, Armed Forces Institute of Cardiology,Rawalpindi, Pakistan."
4Department of
Pathology, Shifa College of Medicine, Islamabad, Pakistan
Correspondence
to: Dr.
Rifat Nadeem Ahmad, Assistant Professor
of Pathology. Shifa College of Medicine, Pitras Bukhari Road, H-8/4,
Islamabad,
Pakistan. Telephone: 92-51-4603761, Cell; 92-333513-6602, Email: rifatnahmad@yahoo.com
Published: March 16, 2011 Received: November 11, 2010 Accepted: January 29, 2011 Medit J Hemat Infect Dis 2011, 3: e2011009, DOI 10.4084/MJHID.2011.009 This article is available from: http://www.mjhid.org/article/view/7077 This is an Open Access article
distributed under the terms of
the
Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Dear Editor,
Giardia
lamblia is a common intestinal parasite with worldwide
distribution. Although primarily presenting with gastrointestinal
complaints,
the clinical manifestations of giardiasis can be varied. A number of
patients
are asymptomatic and fever is an uncommon finding.[1]
The
infection is
generally not associated with haematological abnormalities and the
presence of
eosinophilia is most unusual.[1,2] An
atypical presentation
of
giardiasis, when associated with rare findings such as eosinophilia can
lead to
diagnostic predicament or raise false alarms as happened in the case of
a
previously healthy nine years old boy, who presented in a secondary
care
hospital at Taxila in Northern Pakistan in April 2009. He had a
four-day
history of high grade fever and vague abdominal discomfort. There was
no
history of diarrhoea, constipation, vomiting or any drug intake.
Systemic
examination was unremarkable. He was admitted to the hospital and given
symptomatic treatment pending results of investigations, which included
complete blood counts and stool examination. Blood picture showed a
total
leucocyte count (TLC) of 86.6x109/l with an absolute
eosinophil
count of 78.2x109/l, while stool examination revealed
semi-formed
stools containing cysts of Giardia
lamblia. The high TLC raised concerns about a myeloproliferative
disorder.
However, as no immature cells were seen on peripheral blood smear
microscopy,
it was decided to first treat giardiasis before considering bone marrow
examination. The patient was administered oral metronidazole 15
mg/kg/day in
three divided doses for seven days. Stool samples were examined on
three
consecutive days to exclude helminthic infestations. No antihelminthic
preparations were given. The patient became afebrile on second day of
hospitalization
and his eosinophil count dropped to 39.8x109/l on fifth day,
when he
was discharged with instructions to report back after seven days. On
follow-up,
he was symptom-free with an absolute eosinophil count of 16.8x109/l
on seventh day after discharge and 0.3x109/l three weeks
later. Eosinophilia
is defined as an absolute eosinophil count of >0.35x109/l
in peripheral blood and is considered severe if the count is >5x109/l.[3]
Severe eosinophilia is associated with a number of conditions including
helminthic
infections, precursor B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, precursor
T-cell
lymphoblastic lymphoma and various hypereosinophilic syndromes usually
characterized by end-organ involvement.[4] A few cases
of
giardiasis
associated with eosinophilia have been reported[5-7]
but the
extremely
high eosinophil count seen in our patient is virtually unknown. The
unusual
presentation of giardiasis in this case could have posed a diagnostic
dilemma.
Fortunately, the positive stool examination for Giardia
lamblia kept us on the right track. The prompt resolution
of eosinophilia following treatment of giardiasis with metronidazole
appears to
confirm a causal relationship with the parasite. A similar reduction of
blood
eosinophilia following metronidazole therapy in a case of Churg-Strauss
syndrome with giardiasis in Italy supports this association.[6]
However,
the pathogenesis of eosinophilia in these cases is not known. The
rarity of
this finding implies that infection with Giardia
lamblia alone is not enough to trigger an eosinophilic response and
there
must be other factors involved. Dos Santos and Vituri, who reported an
association of eosinophilia with giardiasis in a Brazilian study, have
suggested the possible role of Giardia
lamblia allergens in provoking eosinophilia,[7]
while
Ferrante et
al have attributed this finding to an interaction between different
eosinophilopoietic stimuli.[6] However,
these are conjectures
and the
exact mechanism remains unexplained. Contrary to the general perception
that Giardia lamblia only causes
gastrointestinal disease and that giardiasis does not lead to
haematological
changes; it not only presents in a variety of ways without diarrhoea
but can
also cause reactive eosinophilia in patients with sub-clinical
infection. The
possibility of giardiasis should be kept in mind while diagnosing a
case of
unexplained eosinophilia. References
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