Leishmaniasis — MD Pediatrics Note (Based on Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics)
Introduction
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Leishmaniasis is a spectrum of protozoal diseases caused by Leishmania species, transmitted by the bite of infected female phlebotomine sandflies.
cutaneous leishmaniasis -
Disease manifestations depend on the species involved and the host immune response.
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Major clinical forms:
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Visceral leishmaniasis (VL / kala-azar)
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Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL)
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Mucocutaneous leishmaniasis (MCL)
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Etiology and Classification
| Form | Causative Species | Geographic Distribution |
|---|---|---|
| Visceral | L. donovani, L. infantum (chagasi) | South Asia, East Africa, Latin America |
| Cutaneous | L. tropica, L. major, L. mexicana, L. braziliensis | Middle East, Africa, Americas |
| Mucocutaneous | L. braziliensis complex | Central & South America |
Epidemiology
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Endemic in >80 countries; affects poor, rural populations.
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Vectors: Phlebotomus (Old World), Lutzomyia (New World).
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Reservoirs: Humans (L. donovani), dogs, rodents.
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Transmission: Sandfly bite, rarely congenital or via transfusion.
Pathogenesis
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Inoculation of promastigotes → engulfed by macrophages → transform into amastigotes → intracellular multiplication → spread to RES (liver, spleen, bone marrow).
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Disease severity depends on cell-mediated immunity (CMI).
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Strong CMI → localized CL.
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Poor CMI → disseminated VL.
Clinical Features
A. Visceral Leishmaniasis (Kala-azar)
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Incubation: 2 weeks–18 months.
Visceral Leishmaniasis (Kala-azar) -
Onset: Insidious.
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Major triad:
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Fever: Remittent, double-quotidian, or irregular.
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Hepatosplenomegaly: Marked splenomegaly, moderate hepatomegaly.
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Pancytopenia: due to hypersplenism and marrow infiltration.
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Other features:
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Weight loss, wasting, darkening of skin (“kala-azar” = black fever)
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Lymphadenopathy (esp. African form)
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Anemia, bleeding, infections (esp. bacterial superinfection)
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Growth retardation and cachexia in chronic disease.
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Post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis (PKDL):
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Occurs months–years after VL cure.
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Hypopigmented macules, papules, nodules (face, arms, trunk).
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Serves as a reservoir in endemic areas (notably India).
B. Cutaneous Leishmaniasis
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Lesion: Painless papule → ulcer with indurated margin (“oriental sore”).
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Usually heals spontaneously in 3–6 months but leaves scar.
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Chronic forms may resemble lupus vulgaris.
C. Mucocutaneous Leishmaniasis
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Extension from cutaneous lesion (nasal/oral mucosa).
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Causes destructive ulcerations → severe disfigurement.
Laboratory Diagnosis
1. Direct demonstration
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Amastigotes (Leishman–Donovan bodies) in:
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Splenic aspirate (most sensitive, but risky)
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Bone marrow aspirate (safe, moderately sensitive)
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Lymph node or buffy coat smear
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Giemsa-stained smears show:
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Oval amastigotes (2–5 μm) with nucleus and kinetoplast inside macrophages.
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2. Culture
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Novy–MacNeal–Nicolle (NNN) medium → promastigote growth.
3. Serologic tests
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rK39 dipstick test: Highly sensitive & specific for VL (field use).
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Direct agglutination test (DAT), IFA, ELISA also available.
4. Molecular tests
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PCR: Highly sensitive, species-specific; used in reference labs.
5. Hematology
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Pancytopenia, hypergammaglobulinemia, elevated ESR.
Treatment
First-line (Visceral Leishmaniasis)
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Liposomal Amphotericin B (preferred):
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Total dose 10–21 mg/kg (varies by region/protocol)
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Short-course regimens effective.
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Alternative:
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Amphotericin B deoxycholate: 1 mg/kg/day × 15–20 doses (toxic, nephrotoxic)
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Miltefosine: 2.5 mg/kg/day (max 150 mg/day) × 28 days (oral)
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Paromomycin (IM): 11 mg/kg/day × 21 days
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Combination regimens (to prevent resistance):
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Single-dose liposomal amphotericin B + short-course miltefosine or paromomycin.
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Cutaneous Leishmaniasis
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Local therapy (cryotherapy, intralesional antimony) for small lesions.
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Systemic therapy for multiple, mucosal, or immunocompromised cases:
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Miltefosine, liposomal amphotericin B, or pentavalent antimonials.
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Mucocutaneous Leishmaniasis
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Liposomal amphotericin B or pentavalent antimonials for ≥28 days.
Prevention and Control
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Vector control: Insecticide spraying, bed nets.
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Reservoir control: Treat dogs, cull infected reservoirs.
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Personal protection: Repellents, protective clothing.
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Early diagnosis and treatment reduce transmission.
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Vaccine: None yet in routine use; trials ongoing.
Complications
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Secondary bacterial infections
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Severe anemia, hemorrhage
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Disseminated infection in HIV patients
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PKDL (in endemic regions like India/Nepal)
Prognosis
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Excellent with prompt diagnosis and treatment.
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Mortality >90% if untreated (mainly from secondary infections, cachexia).
Key Points from Nelson
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Visceral leishmaniasis should be suspected in any febrile child with splenomegaly and pancytopenia in an endemic area.
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rK39 test is the diagnostic test of choice in field settings.
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Liposomal amphotericin B is the preferred therapy in both immunocompetent and immunocompromised children.
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PKDL represents an important reservoir for ongoing transmission.
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HIV co-infection complicates disease course and increases relapse risk.
