What Causes Sleeping Sickness?
Sleeping sickness is a disease found mainly in sub-Saharan Africa. It causes many symptoms, the most prominent being drowsiness by day and sleeplessness by night. It comes from very specific types of bacteria from tsetse flies and may be contagious. The symptoms act very fast, so treatment must be immediate. Death usually occurs soon after the illness reaches the brain of the patient.
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Risk Factors
Organisms
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Sleeping disease comes from the organisms Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense and Trypanosoma brucei gambiense. These organisms are transmitted mainly from tsetse flies; however, they can also be harbored by wild and domesticated animals under unhygienic conditions.
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Causes
Symptoms
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There is a painful red swelling at the site of the bite, as well as fever, headache, sweating and swollen nymph nodes--in some cases, there is also inflammation of the heart. These symptoms are displayed before or when the infection reached the central nervous system; when the infection reaches the patient's brain, she may experience fear and mood swings.
Namesake
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The sleeping disease is called such because the patient experiences drowsiness by day and sleeplessness by night, eventually lapsing into a coma. The patient may face death within six months.
References
- Photo Credit www.acdi-cida.gc.ca/, www.dpd.cdc.gov/