Circulatory and Lymphatic Systems Infections
Anatomy of the Circulatory and Lymphatic Systems
- The circulatory system moves blood throughout the body and has no normal microbiota.
- The lymphatic system moves fluids from the interstitial spaces of tissues toward the circulatory system and filters the lymph. It also has no normal microbiota.
- The circulatory and lymphatic systems are home to many components of the host immune defenses.
- Infections of the circulatory system may occur after a break in the skin barrier or they may enter the bloodstream at the site of a localized infection.
- Pathogens or toxins in the bloodstream can spread rapidly throughout the body and can provoke systemic and sometimes fatal inflammatory responses such as SIRS, sepsis, and endocarditis.
- Infections of the lymphatic system can cause lymphangitis and lymphadenitis.
Bacterial Infections of the Circulatory and Lymphatic Systems
- Bacterial infections of the circulatory system are almost universally serious. Left untreated, most have high mortality rates.
- Bacterial pathogens usually require a breach in the immune defenses to colonize the circulatory system. Most often, this involves a wound or the bite of an arthropod vector, but it can also occur in hospital settings and result in nosocomial infections.
- Sepsis from both gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria, puerperal fever, rheumatic fever, endocarditis, gas gangrene, osteomyelitis, and toxic shock syndrome are typically a result of injury or introduction of bacteria by medical or surgical intervention.
- Tularemia, brucellosis, cat-scratch fever, rat-bite fever, and bubonic plague are zoonotic diseases transmitted by biological vectors.
- Ehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis, endemic and murine typhus, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Lyme disease, relapsing fever, and trench fever are transmitted by arthropod vectors.
- Because their symptoms are so similar to those of other diseases, many bacterial infections of the circulatory system are difficult to diagnose.
- Standard antibiotic therapies are effective for the treatment of most bacterial infections of the circulatory system, unless the bacterium is resistant, in which case synergistic treatment may be required.
- The systemic immune response to a bacteremia, which involves the release of excessive amounts of cytokines, can sometimes be more damaging to the host than the infection itself.
Viral Infections of the Circulatory and Lymphatic Systems
- Human herpesviruses such Epstein-Barr virus (HHV-4) and cytomegalovirus (HHV-5) are widely distributed.
- HHV-4 is associated with infectious mononucleosis and Burkitt lymphoma.
- HHV-5 can cause serious congenital infections as well as serious disease in immunocompromised adults.
- Arboviral diseases such as yellow fever, dengue fever, and chikungunya fever are characterized by high fevers and vascular damage that can often be fatal.
- Ebola virus disease is a highly contagious and often fatal infection spread through contact with bodily fluids.
- Although there is a vaccine available for yellow fever, treatments for patients with yellow fever, dengue, chikungunya fever, and Ebola virus disease are limited to supportive therapies.
- Patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) progress through three stages of disease, culminating in AIDS.
- Antiretroviral therapy (ART) uses various drugs to combat HIV.
Parasitic Infections of the Circulatory and Lymphatic Systems
- Malaria is a protozoan parasite that remains an important cause of death primarily in the tropics.
- Several species in the genus Plasmodium are responsible for malaria and all are transmitted by Anopheles mosquitoes.
- Plasmodium infects and destroys human red blood cells, leading to organ damage, anemia, blood vessel necrosis, and death.
- Malaria can be treated with various antimalarial drugs and prevented through vector control.
- Toxoplasmosis is a widespread protozoal infection that can cause serious infections in the immunocompromised and in developing fetuses.
- Domestic cats are the definitive host.
- Babesiosis is a generally asymptomatic infection of red blood cells that can cause malaria like symptoms in elderly, immunocompromised, or asplenic patients.
- Chagas disease is a tropical disease transmitted by triatomine bugs.
- The trypanosome infects heart, neural tissues, monocytes, and phagocytes, often remaining latent for many years before causing serious and sometimes fatal damage to the digestive system and heart.
- Leishmaniasis is caused by the protozoan Leishmania and is transmitted by sand flies.
- Symptoms are generally mild, but serious cases may cause organ damage, anemia, and loss of immune competence.
- Schistosomiasis is caused by a fluke transmitted by snails.
- The fluke moves throughout the body in the blood stream and chronically infects various tissues, leading to organ damage.