| Literature DB >> 34066563 |
Maria Mavrouli1, Spyridon Mavroulis2, Efthymios Lekkas2, Athanassios Tsakris1.
Abstract
Earthquake-induced tsunamis have the potential to cause extensive damage to natural and built environments and are often associated with fatalities, injuries, and infectious disease outbreaks. This review aims to examine the occurrence of respiratory infections (RIs) and to elucidate the risk factors of RI transmission following tsunamis which were induced by earthquakes in the last 20 years. Forty-seven articles were included in this review and referred to the RIs emergence following the 2004 Sumatra-Andaman, the 2009 Samoa, and the 2011 Japan earthquakes. Polymicrobial RIs were commonly detected among near-drowned tsunami survivors. Influenza outbreaks were commonly detected during the influenza transmission period. Overcrowded conditions in evacuation centers contributed to increased acute RI incidence rate, measles transmission, and tuberculosis detection. Destruction of health care infrastructures, overcrowded evacuation shelters, exposure to high pathogen densities, aggravating weather conditions, regional disease endemicity, and low vaccination coverage were the major triggering factors of RI occurrence in post-tsunami disaster settings. Knowledge of risk factors underlying RIs emergence following earthquake-induced tsunami can contribute to the implementation of appropriate disaster prevention and preparedness plans characterized by sufficient environmental planning, resistant infrastructures, resilient health care facilities, and well-established evacuation centers. Global and local disease surveillance is a key prerequisite for early warning and protection against RIs' emergence and transmission in tsunami-prone areas.Entities:
Keywords: disaster risk management; emergency shelters; evacuation centers; influenza; pneumonia; polymicrobial infection; transmission risk factors; tsunami; tsunami lung
Year: 2021 PMID: 34066563 PMCID: PMC8125353 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18094952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The study selection diagram showing the flow of documents through the literature review.
Figure 2Epicenters of the earthquakes that caused the most devastating tsunami in recent history. More specifically, the Mw = 9.2, 26 December 2004 Sumatra—Andaman earthquake triggered the Indian Ocean tsunami, the Mw = 8.1, 29 September 2009 Samoa earthquake triggered the Samoa tsunami and the Mw = 9.0, 11 March 2011 Tōhoku (Japan) earthquake generated the Great East Japan tsunami.
Included studies referring to the occurrence of tsunami lung clustered by event and disease/pathogen reported. 1: the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, 2: the 2009 Samoa tsunami, 3: the 2011 Great East Japan tsunami.
| Source | Tsunami | Patients | Clinical Presentation—Causative Pathogens |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 1 | 37 patients | Aspiration pneumonia ( |
| [ | 1 | Epidemic peak of admitted pneumonia, tsunami lung was present in many survivors from the Asian tsunami | |
| [ | 1 |
325/1021 patients (32%) 394/1162 patients (39%) | Upper respiratory tract infections (mild cough, sore throat), some due to aspiration of sea water |
| [ | 1 | 17-year-old female | Pneumonia and hemiparesis |
| [ | 1 | 26 tsunami victims | Pneumothorax/pneumomediastinum ( |
| [ | 1 |
22-year-old Thai male 29-year-old Thai female 30-year-old Thai female |
Dyspnea from aspiration pneumonia Dyspnea from aspiration pneumonia Bilateral infiltration in both lower lung fields (gram negative microorganisms) |
| [ | 1 | 6 patients | Melioidosis, |
| [ | 1 | 47 year old Finnish male | Melioidosis, |
| [ | 1 | 17 German patients (10 females, 7 males) | Severe large-scale soft-tissue damage: highly resistant bacterial species, fungi and moulds |
| [ | 1 | 72-year-old Italian female | Melioidosis, |
| [ | 1 |
59-year-old Swiss male 51-year-old Swiss female |
Aspiration pneumonia ( Soft-tissue wounds ( |
| [ | 1 | 35-year-old male | Tsunami sinusitis ( |
| [ | 1 | 4 patients | Melioidosis, |
| [ | 1 |
62-year-old female 6–10 patients |
Persistent cough, dyspnea and weakness, fever, necrotizing pneumonia Fluctuating fever, chronic, non-productive cough, bilateral, asymmetric, necrotizing pneumonia with cavitation ( |
| [ | 1 | 3 patients | Tsunami lung, |
| [ | 2 | 29 patients | Aspiration pneumonia ( |
| [ | 3 | 74-year-old male | Aspiration pneumonia and pleural empyema ( |
| [ | 3 | 31-year-old female | Tsunami sinusitis ( |
| [ | 3 | 3 female patients | Severe lung disorders ( |
| [ | 3 | 59-year-old Japanese female | Lung and brain abscesses, |
| [ | 3 | 45-year-old male | Tsunami lung, vertebral osteomyelitis ( |
| [ | 3 | 73-year-old female | Pneumonia ( |
| [ | 3 | 68-year-old Japanese female | Tsunami lung, |
| [ | 3 | 68-year-old female | Pneumonia ( |
Included studies referring to the occurrence of acute respiratory infections clustered by event and disease/pathogen reported. 1: the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, 3: the 2011 Great East Japan tsunami.
| Source | Tsunami | Patients | Clinical Presentation—Causative Pathogens |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 1 | 37,492 ARIs cases (WHO) during first five months after the tsunami | The highest percentage of ARI cases occurred within 2 months after the 2004 tsunami. |
| [ | 1 | 4710 patients in southern Sri Lanka | 1374 (29.2%) patients: trauma-related illnesses |
| [ | 1 | 324 internally displaced persons in 3 different tsunami disaster evacuation camps of Sri Lanka | ARIs caused by various types of |
| [ | 1 | 101 measles cases | Measles virus circulated in Cuddalore district following the tsunami, although there was no association between the two events. |
| [ | 1 | 35 measles cases | The cluster occurred in a susceptible community living in unplanned and crowded camps in Aceh Utara district, Indonesia |
| [ | 1 | 2 patients | Multiple infection (tuberculosis and melioidosis) |
| [ | 3 | 1167 patients, 6 shelters | Outbreaks of ARI and acute gastroenteritis occurred in evacuation shelters. |
| [ | 3 | 7439 patients from 44 shelters | Increased ARI incidence rate in crowded shelters |
| [ | 3 | 322 patients with respiratory diseases (11 March–9 May 2011), 99 and 105 patients (corresponding periods in 2009 and 2010) | Increase in the absolute numbers of admissions was highest for pneumonia, followed by acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AE-COPD) and asthma attacks |
| [ | 3 | 17 individuals | Pneumonia in older refugees (possible causes: impaired oral hygiene, frequent aspiration, undernutrition, cold temperatures under unfavorable circumstances) |
| [ | 3 | 1577 patients | Pneumonia comprised 43% of cases ( |
| [ | 3 | inpatients in respiratory medicine departments of regional core hospitals in Miyagi Prefecture | The number of patients diagnosed with CAP was 2.2 times greater in 2011 than in 2010 |
| [ | 3 | A total of 550 pneumonia hospitalizations were identified, including 325 during the pre-disaster period and 225 cases during the post-disaster period. | A marked increase in the incidence of pneumonia was observed during the 3-month period following the disaster. Leading causative pathogens: |
| [ | 3 | 6603 participants died of pneumonia during 1 year after the earthquake. | An earthquake increased the risk of pneumonia death and tsunami additionally increased the risk. |
| [ | 3 | 49 adults with pneumonia (controls): within 6 weeks before the earthquake | The number of patients with pneumonia peaked in the first 3 weeks after the earthquake, followed by a gradual decrease starting from 4 weeks after the earthquake. |
| [ | 3 | 75-year-old female | Pulmonary co-infection with Legionella and multiple antibiotic-resistant |
| [ | 3 |
33-year-old female 2-year-old female | Severe pneumonia potentially caused by |
| [ | 3 |
105 confirmed influenza cases in five ECs | An outbreak of influenza A (H3N2) occurred in the ECs after the Great East Japan Earthquake of 2011 |
| [ | 3 |
25 patients diagnosed with influenza (Kesennuma City Gymnasium, Kesennuma) 20 individuals diagnosed with influenza (Tatekoshi Elementary School, Natori) | Two post-tsunami outbreaks of influenza A in evacuation centers in Miyagi Prefecture, Japan |
| [ | 3 | 277 samples tested for influenza virus from Sendai City and evacuation centers in Miyagi Prefecture | Influenza A (H3N2) ( |
| [ | 3 | 15 individuals found positive for Influenza A in the Kesennuma City General Gymnasium (K-Wave) | The design of the K-wave gymnasium and the separation of evacuees from the patients prevented any further spreading of the influenza epidemic |
| [ | 3 | 93 pulmonary TB patients (tsunami-affected areas 25, non-tsunami areas 68) | Risk factors for prognosis of TB after the earthquake: advanced age, low serum albumin level, functional status at admission, and oxygen requirement. |
| [ | 3 | Monitoring of TB and LTBI patients in coastal and inland shelters of Northern Miyagi Prefecture, Japan | The numbers of TB patients and of patients with LTBI significantly increased in the post-disaster period, especially among evacuees staying in crowded shelters in coastal regions of Northern Miyagi Prefecture |