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This fact sheet is for information only and is not meant to be used
for self-diagnosis or as a substitute for consultation with a health care provider. If you
have any questions about the disease described below or think that you may have a
parasitic infection, consult a health care provider.
What is giardiasis?
Giardiasis (pronounced GEE-are-DYE-uh-sis) is an illness caused Giardia lamblia, a
one-celled, microscopic parasite that lives in the intestines of people and animals.
During the past 15 years, Giardia lamblia has become recognized as one of the most
common causes of waterborne disease in humans in the United States. This parasite is found
in every region of the United States and throughout the world.
What are the symptoms of giardiasis?
Diarrhea, abdominal cramps, and nausea are the most common symptoms
of giardiasis. These symptoms may lead to weight loss and dehydration. However, not
everyone infected has symptoms.
How long after being infected do symptoms appear?
Symptoms usually appear 1-2 weeks after infection with the parasite.
How long will I have symptoms?
In otherwise healthy persons, symptoms may last 4-6 weeks.
Occasionally, symptoms last longer.
How can I get giardiasis?
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By putting anything into your mouth that has touched the stool of a
person or animal with giardiasis.
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By swallowing water contaminated with Giardia. A person can
swallow a Giardia cyst, the infectious stage of the parasite, by consuming water
from swimming pools, lakes, rivers, springs, ponds, or streams contaminated with sewage or
feces from humans or animals.
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By eating uncooked food contaminated with Giardia cysts.
Thoroughly wash with safe water all vegetables and fruits you plan to eat raw.
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By touching and bringing to your mouth cysts picked up from surfaces
(i.e., toys, bathroom fixtures, changing tables, diaper pails) contaminated with stool
from an infected person.
Who is at risk?
Persons at increased risk for giardiasis include child care workers;
diaper-aged children who attend day
care centers; international travelers; hikers; campers; and others who drink untreated
water from contaminated sources. Several community-wide outbreaks of giardiasis have been
linked to drinking municipal water contaminated with Giardia.
What should I do if I think I have giardiasis?
See your health care provider who will ask you to submit stool
samples to see if you are harboring the parasite. Because Giardia can be difficult
to diagnose, your health care provider may ask you to submit several stool specimens over
several days.
What is the treatment for giardiasis?
Several prescription drugs are available to treat Giardia.
How can I prevent giardiasis?
- Wash hands with soap and water after using the toilet and before handling food.
- Avoid water or food that may be contaminated.
- Wash and peel all raw vegetables and fruits before eating.
- Avoid drinking water from lakes, rivers, springs, ponds, or streams
unless it has been filtered or chemically treated.
- During community-wide outbreaks caused by contaminated drinking
water, boil drinking water for 1 minute to kill the Giardia parasite and make the
water safe to drink.
- When traveling in countries where the water supply may be unsafe,
avoid drinking unboiled tap water and avoid uncooked foods washed with unboiled tap water.
Bottled or canned carbonated beverages, seltzers, or pasteurized fruit drinks, and
steaming hot coffee and tea are safe to drink. You should check the label on bottled water
to make sure it has been properly filtered before drinking.
- If you work in a child care center where you change diapers, be sure
to wash your hands thoroughly with plenty of soap and warm water after every diaper
change, even if you wear gloves.
- Avoid swimming in pools if you or your child has Giardia. Giardia
cysts are fairly chlorine resistant and are passed in the stools of infected people for
several weeks after they no longer have symptoms.
My water comes from a well; should I have my well water tested?
Consider having your well water tested if you answer yes to
the following questions:
- Are other members of your family or users of your well water ill?
If yes, your well may be the source of infection.
- Is your well located at the bottom of a hill or is it considered
shallow?
If so, runoff from rain or flood water may be draining directly into your well causing
contamination.
- Is your well in a rural area where animals graze?
Well water can become fecally contaminated if animal waste seepage contaminates the ground
water. This can occur if your well has cracked casings, is poorly constructed or is too
shallow.
Tests specifically for Giardia are expensive, difficult, and
usually require hundreds of gallons of water to be pumped through a filter. If you
answered yes to the above questions, consider testing your well for fecal coliforms
instead of Giardia. Although fecal coliform tests do not specifically test for Giardia,
testing will show if your well has fecal contamination. If it does, the water is likely to
be contaminated with Giardia, as well as other harmful bacteria and viruses. Look
in your local telephone directory for a laboratory or cooperative extension that offers
water testing.
My child was recently diagnosed as having giardiasis, but does
not have any diarrhea. My health care provider says treatment is not necessary. Is this
true?
In general, the answer supported by the American Academy of
Pediatrics is that treatment is not necessary. However, there are a few exceptions. If
your child does not have diarrhea, but is having nausea, or is fatigued, losing weight, or
has a poor appetite, you and your health care provider may wish to consider treatment. If
your child attends a day care center where an outbreak is continuing to occur despite
efforts to control it, screening and treatment of children without obvious symptoms may be
a good idea. The same is true if several family members are ill, or if a family member is
pregnant and therefore not able to take the most effective anti-Giardia
medications.
For more information:
- Addiss DG, Juranek DD, Spencer HC. Treatment of children with
asymptomatic and nondiarrheal Giardia infection. Pediatr Infect Dis J
1991;10:843-6.
- Addiss DG, Davis JP, Roberts JM, Mast EE. Epidemiology of giardiasis
in Wisconsin. Increasing incidence of reported cases and unexplained seasonal trends. Am J
Trop Med Hyg 1992;47:13-9.
- Bartlett AV, Englander SJ, Jarvis BA, Ludwig L, Carlson JF, Topping
JP. Controlled trial of Giardia lamblia: Control strategies in day care centers. Am
J Public Health 1991;81:1001-6.
- Kreuter AK, Del Bene VE, Amstey MS. Giardiasis in pregnancy. Am J
Obstet Gynecol 1981;40:895-901.
- Lengerich EJ, Addiss DG, Juranek DD. Severe giardiasis in the United
States. Clin Infect Dis 1994; 18:760-3.
- Steketee RW, Reid S, Cheng T, et al. Recurrent outbreaks of
giardiasis in a child day care center, Wisconsin. Am J Public Health 1989;79:485-90.
Division of Parasitic Diseases
National Center for Infectious Diseases
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
For more information
National Center for Infectious Diseases (NCID)
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