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Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1995

Sudanese mucosal leishmaniasis: epidemiology, clinical features, diagnosis, immune responses and treatment

Ahmed M. Elhassan; S.E.O. Meredith; Yagi H; Eltahir Awad Gasim Khalil; H.W. Ghalib; Kamal Abbas; Ed E. Zijlstra; C.C.M. Kroon; Gerard J. Schoone; A. Ismail

The epidemiology, clinical features, pathology, immune responses, diagnosis and treatment of 14 patients with mucosal leishmaniasis in the Sudan are described. The condition occurred mainly in adult males, particularly in certain closely related tribes from the western Sudan. It affected the mucosa of the upper respiratory tract and/or the oral mucosa and sometimes followed treated kala azar. The parasites were sometimes confined to the mucosa, sometimes spread to the lymph nodes, and rarely infected the bone marrow and spleen. One of the 2 patients with both visceral and mucosal leishmaniasis differed from classical kala azar cases; his infection was longer lasting, he was leishmanin positive, and his peripheral mononuclear cells proliferated in response to leishmanial antigens. Mucosal leishmaniasis following treated kala azar is a similar phenomenon to post-kala azar dermal leishmaniasis and post-kala azar uveitis. Post-kala azar mucosal leishmaniasis can therefore be added to the other post-kala azar leishmanial infections. Using the polymerase chain reaction, Southern blot analysis with specific probes, and isoenzyme characterization, the causative parasite was identified as Leishmania donovani in 4 patients and as L. major in one. Unlike American mucocutaneous leishmaniasis, mucosal leishmaniasis in the Sudan was not preceded or accompanied by cutaneous lesions and the response to pentavalent antimony or ketoconazole was good.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2014

The Mycetoma Knowledge Gap: Identification of Research Priorities

Wendy W. J. van de Sande; El Sheikh Maghoub; Ahmed H. Fahal; Michael Goodfellow; Oliverio Welsh; Ed E. Zijlstra

Mycetoma is a tropical disease which is caused by a taxonomically diverse range of actinomycetes (actinomycetoma) and fungi (eumycetoma). The disease was only recently listed by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a neglected tropical disease (NTD). This recognition is the direct result of a meeting held in Geneva on February 1, 2013, in which experts on the disease from around the world met to identify the key research priorities needed to combat mycetoma. The areas that need to be addressed are highlighted here. The initial priority is to establish the incidence and prevalence of the disease in regions where mycetoma is endemic, prior to determining the primary reservoirs of the predominant causal agents and their mode of transmission to susceptible individuals in order to establish novel interventions that will reduce the impact of the disease on individuals, families, and communities. Critically, economical, reliable, and effective methods are required to achieve early diagnosis of infections and consequential improved therapeutic outcomes. Molecular techniques and serological assays were considered the most promising in the development of novel diagnostic tools to be used in endemic settings. Improved strategies for treating eumycetoma and actinomycetoma are also considered.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2014

Merits and Pitfalls of Currently Used Diagnostic Tools in Mycetoma

Wendy W. J. van de Sande; Ahmed H. Fahal; Michael Goodfellow; El Sheikh Mahgoub; Oliverio Welsh; Ed E. Zijlstra

Treatment of mycetoma depends on the causative organism and since many organisms, both actinomycetes (actinomycetoma) and fungi (eumycetoma), are capable of producing mycetoma, an accurate diagnosis is crucial. Currently, multiple diagnostic tools are used to determine the extent of infections and to identify the causative agents of mycetoma. These include various imaging, cytological, histopathological, serological, and culture techniques; phenotypic characterisation; and molecular diagnostics. In this review, we summarize these techniques and identify their merits and pitfalls in the identification of the causative agents of mycetoma and the extent of the disease. We also emphasize the fact that there is no ideal diagnostic tool available to identify the causative agents and that future research should focus on the development of new and reliable diagnostic tools.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2014

Madurella mycetomatis is highly susceptible to ravuconazole

Sarah Abdalla Ahmed; Wendy Kloezen; Frederick Duncanson; Ed E. Zijlstra; G. Sybren de Hoog; Ahmed H. Fahal; Wendy W. J. van de Sande

The current treatment of eumycetoma utilizing ketoconazole is unsatisfactory because of high recurrence rates, which often leads to complications and unnecessary amputations, and its comparatively high cost in endemic areas. Hence, an effective and affordable drug is required to improve therapeutic outcome. E1224 is a potent orally available, broad-spectrum triazole currently being developed for the treatment of Chagas disease. E1224 is a prodrug that is rapidly converted to ravuconazole. Plasma levels of E1224 are low and transient, and its therapeutically active moiety, ravuconazole is therapeutically active. In the present study, the in vitro activity of ravuconazole against Madurella mycetomatis, the most common etiologic agent of eumycetoma, was evaluated and compared to that of ketoconazole and itraconazole. Ravuconazole showed excellent activity with MICs ranging between ≤0.002 and 0.031 µg/ml, which were significantly lower than the MICs reported for ketoconazole and itraconazole. On the basis of our findings, E1224 with its resultant active moiety, ravuconazole, could be an effective and affordable therapeutic option for the treatment of eumycetoma.


Medical Mycology | 2018

Closing the mycetoma knowledge gap

Wendy W. J. van de Sande; Ahmed H. Fahal; Sarah Abdalla Ahmed; Julian Alberto Serrano; Alexandro Bonifaz; Ed E. Zijlstra

On 28th May 2016, mycetoma was recognized as a neglected tropical disease by the World Health Organization. This was the result of a 4-year journey starting in February 2013 with a meeting of global mycetoma experts. Knowledge gaps were identified and included the incidence, prevalence, and mapping of mycetoma; the mode of transmission; the development of methods for early diagnosis; and better treatment. In this review, we review the road to recognition, the ISHAM working group meeting in Argentina, and we address the progress made in closing the knowledge gaps since 2013. Progress included adding another 9000 patients to the literature, which allowed us to update the prevalence map on mycetoma. Furthermore, based on molecular phylogeny, species names were corrected and four novel mycetoma causative agents were identified. By mapping mycetoma causative agents an association with Acacia trees was found. For early diagnosis, three different isothermal amplification techniques were developed, and novel antigens were discovered. To develop better treatment strategies for mycetoma patients, in vitro susceptibility tests for the coelomycete agents of black grain mycetoma were developed, and the first randomized clinical trial for eumycetoma started early 2017.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 1997

Evaluation of PCR for diagnosis of visceral leishmaniasis.

Omran F. Osman; Linda Oskam; Ed E. Zijlstra; Nel C. M. Kroon; Gerard J. Schoone; Eltahir Awad Gasim Khalil; Ahmed M. Elhassan; Piet A. Kager


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 1998

Use of PCR for Diagnosis of Post-Kala-Azar Dermal Leishmaniasis

Omran F. Osman; Linda Oskam; Nel C. M. Kroon; Gerard J. Schoone; Eltahir Awad Gasim Khalil; Ahmed M. Elhassan; Ed E. Zijlstra; Piet A. Kager


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 1998

Unexpected High Prevalence of Secondary Bacterial Infection in Patients with Mycetoma

Abdalla O. A. Ahmed; El Sir A. M. Abugroun; Ahmed H. Fahal; Ed E. Zijlstra; Alex van Belkum; Henri A. Verbrugh


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 1998

Nasal Carriage of Staphylococcus aureus and Epidemiology of Surgical-Site Infections in a Sudanese University Hospital

Abdalla O. A. Ahmed; Alex van Belkum; Ahmed H. Fahal; Abu Elnor; El Sir A. M. Abougroun; Marjolein F. Q. VandenBergh; Ed E. Zijlstra; Henri A. Verbrugh


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2014

Visceral leishmaniasis and HIV coinfection: time for concerted action.

Johan van Griensven; Ed E. Zijlstra; Asrat Hailu

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Henri A. Verbrugh

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Asrat Hailu

Addis Ababa University

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Johan van Griensven

Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

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Linda Oskam

Royal Tropical Institute

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