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Giardia is an infection of the small intestine caused by a protozoa, Giardia lamblia.
Giardia outbreaks can occur in communities in both developed and developing countries where water supplies become contaminated with raw sewage. It can be contracted by drinking water from lakes or streams, where water-dwelling animals such as beavers and muskrats, or domestic animals such as sheep, have caused contamination. It is also spread by direct person-to-person contact, which has caused outbreaks in institutions such as daycare centers.
Travelers are at risk for giardiasis throughout the world. Campers and hikers are at risk if they drink untreated water from streams and lakes. Other risk factors include unprotected anal sex, exposure to a family member with giardiasis, and institutional (daycare or nursing home) exposure.
The time between being infected and developing symptoms is 7 - 14 days. The acute phase lasts 2 - 4 weeks.
Tests that may be done include:
This disease may also alter the results of the following tests:
Some infections go away on their own. Anti-infective medicines may be used. Cure rates are generally greater than 80%. Drug resistance may be a factor in treatment failures, sometimes requiring a change in antibiotic therapy.
In pregnant women, treatment should wait until after delivery, because some of the drugs used to treat the infection can be harmful to the fetus.
For severe symptoms, paromycin can be used with caution..
Spontaneous resolution is common, but persistent infections have been reported and require further antibiotic treatment. Some people who have had Giardia infections for a long time are slow to resolve their symptoms even after the infection has gone.
Call your health care provider if diarrhea or other symptoms persist beyond 14 days, or if blood in the stool or dehydration occur.
Water purification methods such as boiling, filtration, and iodine treatment should be used when surface water is used. Hikers or others using surface water should consider all sources as potentially contaminated.
Workers in daycare centers or institutions should use good handwashing and hygiene techniques when going from child to child or patient to patient.
Safer sexual practices, especially regarding anal sex, may decrease the risk of contracting or spreading giardiasis.
Review Date:7/25/2007
Reviewed By:Kenneth M. Wener, MD, Department of Infectious Diseases. Lahey Clinic, Burlington, MA. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.
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