Leptospirosis & Weil’s Disease
What it is
Leptospirosis is a bacterial infection carried in rat’s
urine which may contaminate water in lakes, rivers, etc. The bacteria does not
survive long in dry conditions or salt water. The risk of infection is greater
in stagnant or slow-moving water but cases have occurred in swift moving streams
and lowland rivers. There is an enhanced risk where flash floods have washed out
rat runs.
The infection is caught by direct contact with the urine or
polluted environment. Bacteria enter through skin abrasions or via eyes, nose or
mouth.
The usual incubation is 2 to 12 days. Usually a ‘flu’
like illness occurs which resolves in 2-3 weeks. There may be fever, severe
headache, pains in the back and calf and prostration. A few cases develop
Jaundice, when the condition is known as Weil’s disease.
The Level of Risk
Each year an average of 3 canoeists contract Leptospirosis.
It is very rare and it’s deterioration into Weil’s disease even more rare.
Weil’s disease is however, a serious ilness and must be swiftly diagnosed and
treated. Death may occur in about 15% of Weil’s disease cases (i.e. jaundiced
patients) but death without jaundice is virtually unknown. Antibiotics during
the first few days help in limiting infection. Many cases recover without
specific treatment.
How to prevent It
What to do if you think you may be infected
If you think you may have the infection go to your doctor and
explain that their may be a risk of leptospirosis. The diagnosis is by clinical
suspicion. Blood tests can rarely confirm the illness in time to affect
treatment but are needed to subsequently confirm it.
Further information is available from The Leptospirosis
Reference Unit, Public Health Laboratory, County Hospital, Hereford, HR1 2ER