What is
cholera?
Cholera is an acute, diarrhea illness caused by infection of the intestine with
the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. The infection is often mild or without
symptoms, but sometimes it can be severe. Approximately one in 20 infected
persons has severe disease characterized by profuse watery diarrhea, vomiting,
and leg cramps. In these persons, rapid loss of body fluids leads to dehydration
and shock. Without treatment, death can occur within hours.
How
does a person get cholera?
A person may get cholera by drinking water or eating food contaminated with the
cholera bacterium. In an epidemic, the source of the contamination is usually
the feces of an infected person. The disease can spread rapidly in areas with
inadequate treatment of sewage and drinking water.
The cholera bacterium may also live in the environment in brackish rivers and
coastal waters. Shellfish eaten raw have been a source of cholera, and a few
persons in the United States
have contracted cholera after eating raw or undercooked shellfish from the Gulf
of Mexico. The disease is not likely to spread directly from one
person to another; therefore, casual contact with an infected person is not a
risk for becoming ill.
What is the risk for cholera in the United States?
In the United States,
cholera was prevalent in the 1800s but has been virtually eliminated by modern
sewage and water treatment systems. However, as a result of improved
transportation, more persons from the United
States travel to parts of Latin
America, Africa, or Asia
where epidemic cholera is occurring. U.S.
travelers to areas with epidemic cholera may be exposed to the cholera
bacterium. In addition, travelers may bring contaminated seafood back to the United
States; food borne outbreaks have been
caused by contaminated seafood brought into this country by travelers.
What should travelers do to avoid getting cholera?
The risk for cholera is very low for U.S.
travelers visiting areas with epidemic cholera. When simple precautions are
observed, contracting the disease is unlikely.
All travelers to areas where cholera has occured should observe the following recommendations:
- Drink only water that you
have boiled or treated with chlorine or iodine. Other safe beverages
include tea and coffee made with boiled
water and carbonated, bottled beverages with no
ice.
- Eat only foods that have been
thoroughly cooked and are still hot, or fruit that you have peeled yourself.
- Avoid undercooked or raw fish
or shellfish, including ceviche.
- Make sure all vegetables are cooked;
avoid salads.
- Avoid foods and beverages
from street vendors.
- Do not bring perishable
seafood back to the United States.
A simple rule of thumb is "Boil it, cook it, peel it, or forget it. "
Is a vaccine available to prevent cholera?
At the present time, the manufacture and sale of the only licensed cholera
vaccine in the United States
(Wyeth-Ayerst) has been discontinued. It has not been recommended for travelers
because of the brief and incomplete immunity if offers. No cholera vaccination
requirements exist for entry or exit in any country.
Two recently developed vaccines for cholera are licensed and available in
other countries (DukoralŪ, Biotec AB
and MutacolŪ, Berna). Both vaccines appear to provide a somewhat better
immunity and fewer side-effects than the previously available vaccine. However,
neither of these two vaccines is recommended for travelers nor are they
available in the United States.
Can
cholera be treated?
Cholera can be simply and successfully treated by immediate replacement of the
fluid and salts lost through diarrhea. Patients can be treated with oral
rehydration solution, a prepackaged mixture of sugar and salts to be mixed with
water and drunk in large amounts. This solution is used throughout the world to
treat diarrhea. Severe cases also require intravenous fluid replacement. With
prompt rehydration, fewer than 1% of cholera patients
die.
Antibiotics shorten the course and diminish the severity of the illness, but
they are not as important as rehydration. Persons who develop severe diarrhea
and vomiting in countries where cholera occurs should seek medical attention
promptly.
How long will the current epidemic last?
Predicting how long the epidemic in Latin America will
last is difficult. The cholera epidemic in Africa has
lasted more than 20 years. In areas with inadequate sanitation, a cholera
epidemic cannot be stopped immediately, and there are no signs that the
epidemic in the Americas
will end soon. Latin American countries that have not yet reported cases are
still at risk for cholera in the coming months and years. Major improvements in
sewage and water treatment systems are needed in many of these countries to
prevent future epidemic cholera.