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'''Wilderness diarrhea''' (WD), also called '''wilderness-acquired diarrhea''' (WAD) or '''backcountry diarrhea''', is a variety of ] (TD) in which backpackers, hikers, campers and other outdoor recreationalists are infected during temporary visits to relatively remote natural areas.<ref>Zell, Steven C. (1992), , '']'' 3, 241-249.</ref>{{Fact|date=July 2008 | Is this the correct definition for "wilderness diarrhea"? Other ref does not discuss "wilderness diarrhea", only discusses "wilderness-acquired diarrhea". See Discussion. }} Risk factors include drinking untreated surface water and failure by the individual and his or her companions to maintain personal hygiene practices and clean cookware.<ref>“Diarrhea is a common illness of wilderness travelers, occurring in about one third of expedition participants and participants on wilderness recreation courses. The incidence of diarrhea may be as high as 74% on adventure trips. …Wilderness diarrhea is not caused solely by waterborne pathogens, … poor hygiene, with fecal-oral transmission, is also a contributing factor.” Hargreaves, Joanna S. (2006), , ''Wilderness and Environmental Medicine'', Vol. 17, No. 2, pp. 94–102.</ref> Most cases are self-limited and the cause is most often never known.
| synonym = '''wilderness diarrhea''', or '''backcountry diarrhea'''
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'''Wilderness-acquired diarrhea''' is a variety of ] in which backpackers and other outdoor enthusiasts are affected. Potential sources are contaminated food or water, or "hand-to-mouth", directly from another person who is infected.<ref name="Hargreaves2006">{{cite journal |author=Hargreaves JS |title=Laboratory evaluation of the 3-bowl system used for washing-up eating utensils in the field |journal=Wilderness Environ Med |volume=17 |issue=2 |pages=94–102 |year=2006 |pmid=16805145 |doi=10.1580/PR17-05.1 |quote=Diarrhea is a common illness of wilderness travelers, occurring in about one third of expedition participants and participants on wilderness recreation courses. The incidence of diarrhea may be as high as 74% on adventure trips. ...Wilderness diarrhea is not caused solely by waterborne pathogens, ... poor hygiene, with fecal-oral transmission, is also a contributing factor |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name=Boulware2004 /> Cases generally resolve spontaneously, with or without treatment, and the cause is typically unknown. The ] has recorded about one incident per 5,000 person-field days by following strict protocols on hygiene and water treatment.<ref>{{Cite journal |title=Medical Incidents and Evacuations on Wilderness Expeditions |url=http://rendezvous.nols.edu/files/Curriculum/research_projects/Risk%20Management%20Reports/Medical%20Incidents%20and%20Evacuations%20on%20Wilderness%20Expeditions.pdf |journal=Wilderness and Environmental Medicine |volume=18 |issue=4 |year=2007 |pages=298–304 |pmid=18076301 |doi=10.1580/07-WEME-OR-093R1.1 |vauthors=McIntosh SE, Leemon D, Visitacion J, Schimelpfenig T, Fosnocht D |s2cid=1401977 }}{{Dead link|date=March 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> More limited, separate studies have presented highly varied estimated rates of affliction that range from 3 percent to 74 percent of wilderness visitors.<ref name="Hargreaves2006"/><ref name="Zell1992">{{cite journal
|author=Zell SC
|title=Epidemiology of Wilderness-acquired Diarrhea: Implications for Prevention and Treatment
|journal=J Wilderness Med
|volume=3 |issue=3 |pages=241–9
|year=1992
|url=http://www.journals.elsevierhealth.com/periodicals/jwm/article/S0953-9859(92)71235-2/abstract
|doi= 10.1580/0953-9859-3.3.241|s2cid=73001096
}}</ref> One survey found that long-distance ] hikers reported ] as their most common illness.<ref>{{cite journal | pmid = 12681456 | doi=10.1016/S0002-9343(02)01494-8 | volume=114 | issue=4 | title=Medical risks of wilderness hiking | date=March 2003 |vauthors=Boulware DR, Forgey WW, Martin WJ | pages=288–93 | journal=The American Journal of Medicine}}</ref> Based on reviews of epidemiologic data and literature, some researchers believe that the risks have been over-stated and are poorly understood by the public.<ref name="Zell1992"/><ref name="Welch2000">{{cite journal |author=Welch TP |title=Risk of giardiasis from consumption of wilderness water in North America: a systematic review of epidemiologic data |journal=International Journal of Infectious Diseases |volume=4 |issue=2 |pages=100–3|url=http://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(00)90102-4/abstract |year=2000 |pmid=10737847 |doi=10.1016/S1201-9712(00)90102-4|doi-access=free }} </ref><ref name="Backer editorial 1992"/><ref name="Derlet2004">{{cite web
|url=http://yosemite.org/naturenotes/DerletWater.htm
|title=High Sierra Water: What is in the H<sub>2</sub>O?
|author=Derlet, Robert W.
|publisher=Yosemite Association
|date=April 2004 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071012194856/http://yosemite.org/naturenotes/DerletWater.htm |archive-date = 2007-10-12}}</ref>


==Symptoms and signs==
Some ] and ] researchers believe that the risks of WD have been over-stated and are poorly understood by the public (see Controversy section below).
The average ]s for ] and ] are each 7 days.<ref name="CDCgiardia2004">{{cite web |url=https://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dpd/parasites/giardiasis/factsht_giardia.htm#symptoms_begin |title=CDC Fact sheet: Giardiasis |access-date=2008-10-13 |last=CDC Division of Parasitic Diseases |year=2004 |publisher=Centers for Disease Control }}</ref><ref name="CDCcrypto2008">{{cite web|url=https://www.cdc.gov/crypto/disease.html |title="Crypto" - Cryptosporiodosis |access-date=2008-10-13 |last= National Center for Zoonotic, Vector-Borne, and Enteric Diseases |date=2008-04-16 |publisher=Centers for Disease Control }}</ref> Certain other bacterial and viral agents have shorter incubation periods, although hepatitis may take weeks to manifest itself. The onset usually occurs within the first week of return from the field, but may also occur at any time while hiking.{{citation needed|date=May 2022}}


Most cases begin abruptly and usually result in increased frequency, volume, and weight of stool. Typically, a hiker experiences at least four to five loose or watery bowel movements each day. Other commonly associated symptoms are nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramping, bloating, low fever, urgency, and malaise, and usually the appetite is affected. The condition is much more serious if there is blood or ] in stools, abdominal pain, or high fever. ] is a possibility. Life-threatening illness resulting from WAD is extremely rare but can occur in people with weakened immune systems.{{citation needed|date=May 2022}}
==Names and definitions==
As a variety of travelers' diarrhea, "wilderness diarrhea" is a form of ], itself classified as a type of ]. These are all considered forms of ].


Some people may be carriers and not exhibit symptoms.{{citation needed|date=December 2022}}
The concept of "wilderness diarrhea" has emerged in the context of North American recreationalists visiting ]s or ], and may be extended to similar areas in other non-tropical developed countries (western Europe, parts of Australia, etc.). It is less applicable, however, to remote areas of developing countries, because of very different ] likely to be encountered there, relative to North American wilderness areas.

The term "backpacker’s diarrhea" might be an appropriate synonym for "Wilderness Diarrhea," but medical literature has traditionally reserved that term, with fair consistency, for ]&nbsp;— a specific cause of "wilderness diarrhea." {{Fact|date=August 2008}}

==Degree of risk==
A survey of long-distance hikers on the ] (AT)<ref name="Boulware2003">{{cite journal |author=Boulware DR, Forgey WW, Martin WJ 2nd |title=Medical Risks of Wilderness Hiking |journal=Am J Med |volume=114 |issue=4 |pages=288-93 |year=2003 |pmid=12681456 |doi= }}</ref> by D.R Boulware of the University of Minnesota, found that 45 percent of participants who consistently treated water later suffered from diarrhea, compared with 69% of those who inconsistently treated water. Boulware associated "good hygiene" with a decreased risk and a second Boulware survey, also on the AT<ref name="Boulware2004">{{cite journal |author=Boulware DR |title=Influence of Hygiene on Gastrointestinal Illness Among Wilderness Backpackers |journal=J Travel Med |volume=11 |issue=1 |pages=27-33 |year=2004 |pmid=14769284 |doi= }}</ref>, found similar results. Both surveys relied solely on self-diagnosis and self-reporting by participants, and implied that all cases of reported illnesses were caused by infection.

An lower infection rate among backpackers of about 3% to 4% was inferred by two other studies that each included follow-up work with participants, according to a review by Steven Zell of the University of Nevada Medial School . Zell reviewed a third study involving one large group of student hikers that suggested an infection rate of 14% within that group.

'']'', a common cause of WD, does not tolerate freezing and can remain viable for nearly three months in river water when the temperature is 10°C and for about one month at 15–20°C in lake water. '']'', another important WD pathogen, has been shown to survive in cold waters (4°C) for up to 18 months, and can even withstand freezing, although its viability is thereby greatly reduced..

Many other varieties of diarrhea-causing organisms, including '']'' and '']'', and hepatitis A virus, can survive freezing for weeks to months.<ref>Dickens DL, DuPont HL, Johnson PC (1985), "Survival of Bacterial Enteropathogens in the Ice of Popular Drinks", '']''; 253:3141–3.</ref>
Virologists believe that all surface water in the United States and Canada has the potential to contain human ]es, a cause of diarrheal disease.<ref>Backer, Howard (2000), "In Search of the Perfect Water Treatment Method", '']'', 11:1-4.</ref><ref>Gerba, C and J Rose (1990), "Viruses in Source and Drinking Water", In: McFeters G, ed., ''Drinking Water Microbiology'', ]: ], pp 380-399</ref><ref>White, G (1992), ''Handbook of Chlorination'', 3rd edition, New York, New York: ].</ref>


==Causes== ==Causes==
By far the most common causes of WD are ''Giardia'' and ''Cryptosporidium'' according to <ref>Backer, Howard D. (2007), “Field Water Disinfection”, In: Auerbach, Paul S. (editor), ''Wilderness Medicine'', 5th edition, ]: ], pg 1369.</ref> Howard Backer in the textbook ''Wilderness Medicine,'' although several other organisms may play a larger role than generally believed. Other infectious agents include '']'', ], ], enterotoxogenic '']'', ''e. coli'' 0157:H7, '']'', and various ]. More rarely, '']'', '']'', and '']'' may also cause disease. Infectious diarrhea acquired in the wilderness is caused by various ], ], and parasites (]). The most commonly reported are the protozoa ''Giardia'' and ''Cryptosporidium''.<ref>{{Harvard citation no brackets|Backer|2007|p=1371}}</ref> Other infectious agents may play a larger role than generally believed<ref name="Zell1992" /> and include '']'', ], ], enterotoxogenic '']'', ''E. coli'' O157:H7, '']'', and various other viruses. More rarely, '']'', '']'', and '']'' may also cause disease.<ref>{{Harvard citation no brackets|Backer|2007|p=1369}}</ref>


'']'' cysts usually do not tolerate freezing although some cysts can survive a single freeze–thaw cycle.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://water.epa.gov/action/advisories/drinking/upload/2009_02_03_criteria_humanhealth_microbial_giardiafs.pdf|title=Water Resources|first=US|last=EPA, OEI, OIAA, IAD|date=8 November 2016}}</ref> Cysts can remain viable for nearly three months in river water when the temperature is 10&nbsp;°C and about one month at 15–20&nbsp;°C in lake water. '']'' may survive in cold waters (4&nbsp;°C) for up to 18 months, and can even withstand freezing, although its viability is thereby greatly reduced.<ref name="Health Canada 2004">{{Cite book| last=Prepared by Federal-Provincial-Territorial Committee on Drinking Water of the Federal-Provincial-Territorial Committee on Health and the Environment (2004)| contribution=Protozoa: Giardia and Cryptosporidium| title=Guidelines for Canadian Drinking Water Quality: Supporting Documentation| publisher=Health Canada| year=2004| contribution-url=http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/ewh-semt/alt_formats/hecs-sesc/pdf/pubs/water-eau/protozoa/protozoa.pdf| access-date=2008-08-07 }}</ref> Many other varieties of diarrhea-causing organisms, including '']'' and '']'', and hepatitis A virus, can survive freezing for weeks to months.<ref name="Dickens1985">{{cite journal |vauthors=Dickens DL, DuPont HL, Johnson PC |title=Survival of bacterial enteropathogens in the ice of popular drinks |journal=JAMA |volume=253 |issue=21 |pages=3141–3 |date=June 1985 |pmid=3889393 |doi= 10.1001/jama.253.21.3141}}</ref> Virologists believe all surface water in the United States and Canada has the potential to contain human viruses, which cause a wide range of illnesses including diarrhea, polio and meningitis.<ref name=Backer2000>{{cite journal |author=Backer H |title=In search of the perfect water treatment method |journal=Wilderness Environ Med |volume=11 |issue=1 |pages=1–4 |year=2000 |pmid=10731899 |doi= 10.1580/1080-6032(2000)0112.3.co;2|url=http://www.wemjournal.org/pdfserv/i1080-6032-011-01-0001.pdf|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name="isbn0-387-97162-9">{{cite book |vauthors=Gerba C, Rose J |chapter=Viruses in Source and Drinking Water |editor=McFeters, Gordon A.|title=Drinking water microbiology: progress and recent developments |publisher=Springer-Verlag |location=Berlin |year=1990 |pages=380–99 |isbn=0-387-97162-9 }}</ref><ref name="isbn0-442-00693-4">{{cite book |author=White, George W. |title=The handbook of chlorination and alternative disinfectants |publisher=Van Nostrand Reinhold |location=New York |year=1992 |edition=3rd |isbn=0-442-00693-4 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/handbookofchlori00whit }}</ref> Modes of acquiring infection from these causes are limited to fecal-oral transmission, and contaminated water and food. The major factor governing pathogen content of surface water is human and animal activity in the watershed.<ref>{{Harvard citation no brackets|Backer|2007|p=1374}}</ref>
There are three vectors for human infection by ''Giardia'' and other infectious diarrhea: contaminated food, water, and fecal-oral transmission. It may be difficult to causally associate a particular case of diarrhea with a recent visit to the wilderness, because incubation of the disease caused by infection can vary widely, up to several weeks or more, while sources of infection outside the wilderness can include public water supplies, swimming pools, contaminated food and hand-to-mouth fecal transmission in many different potential circumstances that are commonly encountered.


==Diagnosis==
Giardia is ubiquitous outside of wilderness settings, and may affect 7.5 million Americans at any one time, according to a report in the New York Times
It may be difficult to associate a particular case of diarrhea with a recent wilderness trip of a few days because incubation of the disease may outlast the trip. Studies of trips<ref name=Boulware2004 /><ref name=Boulware2003 /> that are much longer than the average incubation period, e.g. a week for ''Cryptosporidium'' and ''Giardia'',<ref name=CDCgiardia2004 /><ref name=CDCcrypto2008 /> are less susceptible to these errors since there is enough time for the diarrhea to occur during the trip. Other bacterial and viral agents have shorter incubation periods, although hepatitis may require weeks.{{citation needed|date=May 2022}}
According to a different estimate, about 7% of Americans may carry the disease, although as few as 5% of an infected population may develop symptoms. More than 34,000 cases were reported to state health departments in 1991, of which 19 outbreaks were waterborne, and two affected backpackers or campers. .


A suspected case of wilderness-acquired diarrhea may be assessed within the general context of intestinal complaints. During any given four-week period, as many as 7.2% of Americans may experience some form of infectious or non-infectious diarrhea.<ref name="Scallon2002">{{cite web|url=https://www.cdc.gov/enterics/publications/240-scallan_2004.pdf |title=Prevalence of Diarrhea in the Community in Australia, Canada, Ireland and the United States |access-date=2008-10-15 |last=Scallan |first=E. J. |author2=A. Banerjee |author3=S. E. Majowicz |year=2002 |publisher=CDC |display-authors=etal}}</ref> There are an estimated 99 million annual cases of intestinal infectious disease in the United States,<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Garthright WE, Archer DL, Kvenberg JE |title=Estimates of incidence and costs of intestinal infectious diseases in the United States |journal=Public Health Rep |volume=103 |issue=2 |pages=107–15 |year=1988 |pmid=3128825 |pmc=1477958 }}</ref> most commonly from viruses, followed by bacteria and parasites, including Giardia and Cryptosporidium. There are an estimated 1.2 million U.S. cases of symptomatic giardiasis annually.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ss6105a2.htm#Box1|title=Giardiasis Surveillance — United States, 2009–2010|website=www.cdc.gov}}</ref> However, only about 40% of cases are symptomatic.<ref>{{Cite journal |year=1992 |title=Wilderness acquired diarrhea |journal=Journal of Wilderness Medicine |volume=3|issue=3|pages=237–240|url=http://www.wemjournal.org/article/S0953-9859(92)71234-0/pdf|doi=10.1580/0953-9859-3.3.237|author=Howard Backer|s2cid=71955543 }}</ref>
==Symptoms==
The ] for giardiasis averages about 14 days and that of cryptosporidiosis about seven days. Certain other bacterial and viral agents have shorter incubation periods, although hepatitis may take weeks to manifest itself. The onset usually occurs within the first week of return from the field, but may also occur at any time while hiking.

Most cases begin abruptly and usually result in increased frequency, volume, and weight of stool. Typically, a hiker experiences at least four to five loose or watery bowel movements each day. Other commonly associated symptoms are nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramping, bloating, low fever, urgency, and malaise, and usually the appetite is affected. The condition is much more serious if there is blood or ] in stools, abdominal pain, or high fever. ] is a possibility. Life-threatening illness in the contect of WD is extremely rare.

==Treatment==
WD is typically self-limited, generally resolving without specific treatment. ] with rehydration salts is often beneficial to replace lost fluids and ]. Clear, disinfected water or other liquids are routinely recommended.

Hikers who develop three or more loose stools in a 24-hour period&nbsp;— especially if associated with ], ], ] ], ], or ]s&nbsp;— should be treated by a doctor and may benefit from antibiotics, usually given for 3–5 days. Alternately, a single dose ] or ] may be prescribed.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Azithromycin and Loperamide are Comparable to Levofloxacin and Loperamide for the Treatment of Traveler's Diarrhea in United States Military Personnel in Turkey|author=Sanders JW, Frenck RW, Putnam SD, ''et al.''|journal=Clin Infect Dis|year=2007|volume=45|pages=294–301|url=http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/CID/journal/issues/v45n3/50169/brief/50169.abstract.html|doi=10.1086/519264}}</ref> If diarrhea persists despite therapy, travelers should be evaluated and treated for possible parasitic infection.

There is no effective antibiotic against ''Cryptosporidium'', which can be quite dangerous to patients with compromised immune systems.


==Prevention== ==Prevention==
Since wilderness acquired diarrhea can be caused by insufficient hygiene, contaminated water, and (possibly) increased susceptibility from vitamin deficiency, prevention methods should address these causes.{{citation needed|date=May 2022}}


===Hygiene===
Authoritative guidelines caution that safety judgments cannot reliably be made based on the mere appearances of a water source. One key to prevention is therefore various filters and chemical treatments. (see ]). The choice depends upon the number of people involved, space and weight considerations, the quality of available water, personal taste and preferences, and fuel availability. Careful attention to personal hygiene can also help prevent the spread of infection.<ref name=Boulware2004 />.
The risk of fecal-oral transmission of pathogens that cause diarrhea can be significantly reduced by good hygiene, including washing hands with soap and water after urination and defecation, and washing eating utensils with warm soapy water.<ref name=Boulware2004 /> Additionally a ] can be used for washing eating utensils.<ref name="Hargreaves2006"/>


===Treating water===
For long-distance backpacking, water filters may be preferred over chemical disinfectants, because they are more likely to be persistently and correctly used. Inconsistent use of iodine or chlorine may be due to disagreeable taste, impatience with extended treatment time or excessive complexity due to water temperature and turbidity. {{Fact|date=August 2008}}
{{Main|Portable water purification}}
Water can be treated in the wilderness through filtering, chemical disinfectants, a portable ultraviolet light device, ] or boiling.<ref name="Backer2007">{{Harvard citation no brackets|Backer|2007|pp=1368–417}}</ref><ref name=Johnson2003>{{cite book
|author=Johnson, Mark
|title=The Ultimate Desert Handbook : A Manual for Desert Hikers, Campers and Travelers
|publisher=International Marine/Ragged Mountain Press
|year=2003
|isbn=0-07-139303-X
|page=46
}}</ref> Factors in choice may include the number of people involved, space and weight considerations, the quality of available water, personal taste and preferences, and fuel availability.{{citation needed|date=May 2022}}


In a study of long-distance backpacking, it was found that water filters were used more consistently than chemical disinfectants. Inconsistent use of iodine or chlorine may be due to disagreeable taste, extended treatment time or treatment complexity due to water temperature and turbidity.<ref name=Boulware2003 />
Because methods based on ] do not kill ''Cryptosporidium'', and because filtration misses some viruses, the best protection may require a two-step process of either filtration or ], followed by halogenation. Boiling is effective in all situations, but won't improve the water's taste.


Because methods based on ], such as iodine and chlorine, do not kill ''Cryptosporidium'', and because filtration misses some viruses, the best protection may require a two-step process of either filtration or coagulation-], followed by ]. Boiling is effective in all situations.{{citation needed|date=May 2022}}
Iodine resins, if combined with microfiltration to remove resistant cysts, are also a viable single-step process, but may not be effective under all conditions. New one-step techniques using chlorine dioxide, ozone, and UV radiation may prove effective, but still require validation.<ref> Backer, Howard (2002), "Water Disinfection for International and Wilderness Travelers", ''Clinical Infectious Diseases''; 34:355–64.</ref>


Iodine resins, if combined with microfiltration to remove resistant cysts, are also a viable single-step process, but may not be effective under all conditions. New one-step techniques using ], ozone, and UV radiation may prove effective, but still require validation.<ref name="Backer2002">{{cite journal |author=Backer H |title=Water disinfection for international and wilderness travelers |journal=Clin. Infect. Dis. |volume=34 |issue=3 |pages=355–64 |date=February 2002 |pmid=11774083 |doi= 10.1086/324747|doi-access=free }}</ref>
==Controversy==
=====Researcher: 3% Infection Rate Creates 'Hydrophobia'=====


Ultraviolet (UV) light for water disinfection is well established and widely used for large applications, like municipal water systems. Some hikers use small portable UV devices which meet the U.S. EPA Guide Standard and Protocol for Testing Microbiological Water Purifiers, for example, the SteriPEN.<ref>{{Harvard citation no brackets|Backer|2007|Ref=none |p=1411}}</ref><ref name="SteripenProveTech2008">{{cite web|url=http://www.steripen.com/proven_in_lab.html |title=Steripen - Proven Technology |access-date=2008-10-14 |year=2008 |publisher=Hydro-Photon, Inc. }}</ref><ref name="SteripenMicrobioTest2008">{{cite web|url=http://www.steripen.com/testing.html |title=Steripen - Microbiological Testing |access-date=2008-10-14 |year=2008 |publisher=Hydro-Photon, Inc. }}</ref> Another approach to portable UV water purification is ] (also called ]). Clear water is sterilized by putting it in a clear polyethylene (]) bottle and leaving it in direct sunlight for 6 hours.<ref name="CDC_SODIS2008">{{cite web | url = https://www.cdc.gov/safewater/publications_pages/options-sodis.pdf | title = Household Water Treatment Options in Developing Countries: Solar Disinfection (SODIS) | access-date = 2010-07-31 | date = January 2008 | publisher = ] (CDC)}}</ref>
Steven C. Zell of the University of Nevada School of Medicine offers an estimate based on his review of several studies, that diarrhea is acquired by wilderness travelers in North America at a rate of between 3 and 4.5 percent , although he notes that information on the subject is limited "because most studies rely upon observation and fail to adhere to the principles of basic epidemiological research."


===Water risk avoidance===
Zell says water disinfection is recommended, but calls this decision "an individual matter" and suggests that more research is needed. "If ''Giardia lamblia'' is an uncommon isolate and WAD (wilderness-acquired diarrhea) is infrequent, then it may not be cost effective to recommend filtering for recreationalists involved in short-duration trips," Zell says, adding that current warnings by the U.S. Park and Forest services have created "hydrophobia" among backcountry travelers, and "misplaced concern" about the safety of wilderness water has "led to anecdotes about dehydration in recreationalists at high altitude requiring emergent evacuation."
Different types of water sources may have different levels of contamination:<ref name="Backer2007 1373-4">{{Harvard citation no brackets|Backer|2007|pp=1373–4}}</ref>
* More contamination may be in water that
# likely could have passed through an area subject to heavy human or animal use
# is cloudy, has surface foam, or has some other suspicious appearance.
* Less contamination may be in water from
# springs (provided the true source is not surface water a short distance above)
# large streams (those entering from the side may have less contamination than those paralleling the trail)
# fast-flowing streams
# higher elevations
# lakes with undisturbed sediments (10 days undisturbed water storage can result in 75–99% removal of ] by settling to the bottom{{Citation needed|date=May 2019}})
# freshly melted snow
# deep wells (provided they aren't subject to contamination from ])
# regions where there was a heavy snow year when streams run full and long compared to dry years.
Rain storms can either improve or worsen water quality. They can wash contaminants into water and stir up contaminated sediments with increasing flow, but can also dilute contaminants by adding large amounts of water.<ref name="Backer2007 1373-4"/>


Unfortunately, there have not been any epidemiological studies to validate the above, except possibly for the case of spring water.<ref name= Boulware2004 />
=====Tulane Scientist Screens 104 Articles=====


===Vitamins===
Timothy P. Welch of Tulane Medical School, <ref>Welch TP (2000), , ''Int J Infect Dis''; 4(2):100-3.</ref> performed a ], with an initial screening of 104 articles, in which nine met inclusion criteria for epidemiological analysis. Separately (with Thomas R. Welch) he surveyed state health departments in the United States. Based on these projects, T.R. Welch, of the Children's Hospital of Cincinnati, concluded that "no studies suggest that North American wilderness waters are a source of bacterial enteritis," and that water disinfection is generally unnecessary. <ref> Welch, Thomas R. (2004), , ''Wilderness and Environmental Medicine''; 15, 235 237</ref>
One study suggests that on very long trips in the wilderness, taking ]s may reduce the incidence of diarrhea.<ref name=Boulware2004 />


==Treatment==
Of the nine articles that T.P Welch analyzed in-depth, neither of two case reports (report of the diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up of an individual patient) met the criteria of the ] for waterborne disease outbreak. Two "prospective" studies (data on subjects who were followed forward in time) showed no significant association of backcountry water with infection. Of four studies that included control groups, none showed a significant relationship between backcountry water and infection.
WAD is typically self-limited, generally resolving without specific treatment. ] with rehydration salts is often beneficial to replace lost fluids and ]. Clear, disinfected water or other liquids are routinely recommended.{{citation needed|date=December 2022}}


Hikers who develop three or more loose stools in a 24-hour period&nbsp;– especially if associated with ], ], ] ], ], or ]s&nbsp;– should be treated by a doctor and may benefit from antibiotics, usually given for 3–5 days. Alternatively, a single dose ] or ] may be prescribed.<ref name="Sanders2007">{{cite journal |vauthors=Sanders JW, Frenck RW, Putnam SD, etal |title=Azithromycin and loperamide are comparable to levofloxacin and loperamide for the treatment of traveler's diarrhea in United States military personnel in Turkey |journal=Clin. Infect. Dis. |volume=45 |issue=3 |pages=294–301 |date=August 2007 |pmid=18688944 |doi= 10.1086/519264|doi-access=free }}</ref> If diarrhea persists despite therapy, travelers should be evaluated and treated for possible parasitic infection.{{citation needed|date=December 2022}}
=====34,348 Cases; 2 Among Campers=====
In a separate project, 48 of the 50 state health departments in the United States responded to a questionnaire about giardiasis. The survey found 34,348 cases reported during 1991. Nineteen were attributed to contaminated drinking water; two were reported among campers and backpackers.


''Cryptosporidium'' can be quite dangerous to patients with compromised immune systems. Alinia (nitazoxanide) is approved by the FDA for treatment of ''Cryptosporidium''.
T.R. Welch says education aimed at stopping hand-to-mouth spread is the key to preventing infection. "Diluting this message with unfounded concerns about wilderness water quality or the relative merits of various water-treatment methods serves no useful purpose," Welch writes.


==Epidemiology==
=====U.C. Scientist Tests 1,000 Samples=====
The risk of acquiring infectious diarrhea in the wilderness arises from inadvertent ingestion of pathogens. Various studies have sought to estimate diarrhea ]s among wilderness travelers, and results have ranged widely. The variation of diarrhea rate between studies may depend on the time of year, the location of the study, the length of time the hikers were in the wilderness,<ref name=Boulware2004 /><ref name="Gardner2002">{{cite journal
Robert W. Derlet of the University of California-Davis School of Medicine and affiliate faculty member of the school's ], estimates that he has tested about 1,000 water samples from the ] to date in what he expects will become a 20-year study. "I, along with other scientists believe that the risk of ''Giardia'' has been well overstated," says Deret, adding that "If one wants to be entirely safe, one could purify water, but my suspicion is that perhaps less than 1% of streams in the Sierra would have ''Giardia'' significant enough to cause infection in humans."
|vauthors=Gardner TB, Hill DR |title=Illness and injury among long-distance hikers on the Long Trail, Vermont
|journal=Wilderness & Environmental Medicine
|volume=13
|issue=2
|pages=131–4
|year=2002
|pmid=12092966
|doi=10.1580/1080-6032(2002)0132.0.co;2
|url=http://www.wemjournal.org/article/S1080-6032(02)70610-8/fulltext
|doi-access=free
}}</ref>
the prevention methods used, and the study methodology.


<!-- LIKELIHOOD of getting diarrhea -->
Derlet says water in remote, less-traveled regions of the Sierra is usually free of waterborne pathogens (giardia lamblia, cryptosporidium parvum, et al.). He and various associates routinely drink untreated water in remote regions. Derlet adds that areas affected by cattle and livestock do present risk, and water there should be disinfected. In high-elevation regions of the Sierra, however, "I'd say there is less than a one in 100 chance that a person would get sick drinking untreated water" from side streams, Derlet says.
The ] (NOLS), which emphasizes strict hand-washing techniques, water disinfection and washing of common cooking utensils in their programs, reports that gastrointestinal illnesses occurred at a rate of only 0.26 per 1000 program days.<ref name="McIntosh2007">{{cite journal|title=Medical incidents and evacuations on wilderness expeditions|journal=Wilderness and Environmental Medicine|year=2007|first=Scott E.|last=McIntosh|author2=Drew Leemon |author3=Joshua Visitacion |volume=18|issue=4|pages=298–304|pmid=18076301 |url=http://www.nols.edu/resources/research/pdfs/medical_incidents_evacs.pdf|doi=10.1580/07-WEME-OR-093R1.1 |s2cid=1401977|display-authors=etal}}</ref> In contrast, a survey of long-distance ] hikers found more than half the respondents reported at least one episode of diarrhea that lasted an average of two days. (Infectious diarrhea may last longer than an average of two days; certain forms of non-infectious diarrhea, caused by diet change etc., can be of very brief duration). Analysis of this survey found occurrence of diarrhea was positively associated with the duration of exposure in the wilderness. During any given four-week period, as many as 7.2% of Americans may experience some form of infectious or non-infectious diarrhea.<ref name="Scallon2002"/> A number of behaviors each individually reduced the incidence of diarrhea: treating water; routinely washing hands with soap and water after defecation and urination; cleaning cooking utensils with soap and warm water; and taking multi-vitamins.<ref name="Boulware2004">{{cite journal |author=Boulware DR |title=Influence of Hygiene on Gastrointestinal Illness Among Wilderness Backpackers |journal=J Travel Med |volume=11 |issue=1 |pages=27–33 |year=2004 |pmid=14769284 |doi= 10.2310/7060.2004.13621|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name="Boulware2003">{{cite journal |vauthors=Boulware DR, Forgey WW, Martin WJ 2nd |title=Medical Risks of Wilderness Hiking |journal=Am J Med |volume=114 |issue=4 |pages=288–93 |year=2003 |pmid=12681456 |doi=10.1016/S0002-9343(02)01494-8 }}</ref>


<!-- WHICH PATHOGEN for diarrhea if you get it -->
=====Wilderness Giardia with particular attention to the Sierra Nevada=====
A variety of pathogens can cause infectious diarrhea, and most cases among backpackers appear to be caused by bacteria from ]. A study at Grand Teton National Park found 69% of diarrhea affected visitors had no identifiable cause, that 23% had diarrhea due to '']'' and 8% of patients with diarrhea had ]. Campylobacter enteritis occurred most frequently in young adults who had hiked in wilderness areas and drunk untreated surface water in the week prior.<ref name="Taylor1983">{{cite journal|title=Campylobacter enteritis from untreated water in the Rocky Mountains|journal=Ann Intern Med|year=1983|first=D. N.|last=Taylor |author2=K. T. McDermott |author3=J. R. Little|volume=99|issue=1|pages=38–40|pmid=6859722 |url=http://www.medscape.com/medline/abstract/6859722?src=emed_ckb_ref_0|access-date=2008-10-16|doi=10.7326/0003-4819-99-1-38|display-authors=etal}}</ref> Another study tested 35 individuals before and after a trip to the Desolation Wilderness of California. Giardia cysts were found in fecal samples from two people after the trip, but they were asymptomatic. A third person was empirically treated for symptoms of giardiasis.<ref name="Zell1993">{{cite journal |vauthors=Zell SC, Sorenson SK |title=Cyst acquisition rate for Giardia lamblia in backcountry travelers to Desolation Wilderness, Lake Tahoe |journal=Journal of Wilderness Medicine |year=1993 |volume=4 |issue=2 |pages=147–54 |url=http://www.wemjournal.org/pdfserv/i0953-9859-004-02-0147.pdf |doi=10.1580/0953-9859-4.2.147}}</ref>
About 7 percent of Americans are infected with giardiasis (mostly asymptomatic) and ''Giardia'' and other intestinal bugs are mainly spread by fecal-oral or food-borne transmission. <ref name=Rockwell2003June> by Robert L. Rockwell, June 4, 2003, Loma Prieta Chapter of the Sierra Club website. Accessed Nov 6, 2006.</ref>


<!-- which ROUTE of infection -->
A survey of 64 sites completed in 1984 found between 0.108 and 0.003 giardia cysts per liter. Another survey completed in 1990 of three sites on 10 different dates, found concentrations between 0.0 and 0.062 cysts per liter. In comparison, the San Francisco public water supply has, on occassion, contained 0.12 cysts per liter, and that the Los Angeles Aqueduct averages 0.03 cysts per liter. The city of Fairfield, 45 miles northeast of San Francisco, reported that ''Giardia'' cysts were detected three times in 2001 at levels of 0.19, 0.21 and 0.50 cysts per liter, and at these levels, the source water is considered an insignificant risk for giardiasis. Drinking 89 liters of water with 10 cysts per liter would result in a 50 percent chance of contracting giardiasis, with a high probability that any resulting disease would be asymptomatic.<ref name=Rockwell2003June />
Fecal-oral transmission may be the most common vector for wilderness acquired diarrhea. There are differing opinions regarding the importance of routine disinfection of water during relatively brief backcountry visits.<ref name="Welch2000" /><ref name="Zell1992" /><ref name="Backer editorial 1992">{{cite journal
|author=Backer, Howard
|title=Wilderness acquired diarrhea (editorial)
|journal=Journal of Wilderness Medicine
|year=1992
|volume=3
|pages=237–240
|doi=10.1580/0953-9859-3.3.237|s2cid=71955543
}} <!-- This is just an editorial, not a proper paper. We need a better source --></ref>


===Backcountry water quality surveys===
----
Infection by fecal coliform bacteria, which indicate fecal pollution, are more common than giardiasis.<ref name="Derlet2003">{{cite web|url=http://sierranevadawild.gov/features/water-is-it-safe-to-drink |title=Sierra Nevada Water: Is it safe to drink? - Analysis of Yosemite National Park Wilderness water for Coliform and Pathologic Bacteria |access-date=2008-10-15 |last=Derlet |first=Robert W. |author2=James Carlson |date=2003 |work=SierraNevadaWild.gov |publisher=Sierra Wilderness Education Project|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080513152920/http://sierranevadawild.gov/features/water-is-it-safe-to-drink|archive-date= May 13, 2008}}</ref> Risks are highest in surface water near trails used by ]s and cattle pastures.<ref name="Derlet2008">{{cite journal
|author=Derlet RW
|title=Backpacking in Yosemite and Kings Canyon National Parks and neighboring wilderness areas: how safe is the water to drink?
|journal=Journal of Travel Medicine
|volume=15
|issue=4
|pages=209–15
|year=2008
|pmid=18666919
|doi=10.1111/j.1708-8305.2008.00201.x
|doi-access=free
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.yosemite.org/naturenotes/DerletWater.htm
|title=High Sierra Water: What is in the H<sub>2</sub>O?
|author=Derlet, Robert W.
|publisher=Yosemite Association
|date=April 2004}}</ref>


Most samples of backcountry water in the Desolation Wilderness in California have found very low or no ''Giardia'' cysts.<ref name="Zell1993" /> The infectious dose of giardia, however, is very low, with about 2% chance of infection from a single cyst.<ref>{{cite journal | pmc=1405147 | pmid=2029038 | volume=81 |issue = 6| title=Risk assessment and control of waterborne giardiasis | year=1991 | journal=Am J Public Health | pages=709–13 |vauthors=Rose JB, Haas CN, Regli S | doi=10.2105/ajph.81.6.709}}</ref> Also, very few studies have addressed the issue of transient contamination. According to one researcher, the likely model for the risk of ''Giardia'' from wilderness water is pulse contamination, that is, a brief period of high cyst concentration from fecal contamination.<ref name="Backer editorial 1992" /><ref>{{Harvard citation no brackets|Backer|2007|p=1372}}</ref>
=====Medical Texts Stand Pat On Disinfection=====
Despite this research, two standard textbooks on backcountry medical issues continue to promote water disinfection as a key means of preventing infection. ''Wilderness Medicine'', edited by Paul S. Auerbach, describes various commercial water treatment devices in detail, and says that most infectious diarrhea acquired in the U.S. wilderness is from water-borne pathogens, and that effective prevention therefore requires treatment of drinking water as well as proper sanitiation.<ref>Adachi, Javier A., Howard D. Backer, and Herbert L. Dupont (2007), “Infectious Diarrhea from Wilderness and Foreign Travel”, In: Auerbach, Paul S. (editor), ''Wilderness Medicine'', 5th edition, ]: ], pg 1418.</ref> .


==Terminology==
In a 2008 , Auerbach likened drinking untreated water to Russian roulette, adding that while research has shown ''Giardia'' in wilderness water sources is "probably not as prevalent as once believed, as researchers like Derlet have shown, but it's still present". The author of the book's relevant chapter, Howard Backer, told the same publication that if a wilderness visitor is confident of untainted alpine water, "you're probably safe to drink it untreated," but that in areas with significant human or animal activity, treatment is critical in prevention..
Diarrhea acquired in the wilderness or other remote areas is typically a form of ], itself classified as a type of ]. These are all considered forms of ]. The term may be applied in various remote areas of non-tropical developed countries (U.S., Canada, western Europe, etc.), but is less applicable in developing countries, and in the tropics, because of the different ] that are most likely to cause infection.<ref name="Backer editorial 1992"/>

The text ''Medicine for Mountaineering and Other Wilderness Activities'' <ref>Seattle, Washington: The Mountaineers Books, 5th edition, 2001</ref>, maintains that contamination of U.S. backcountry water sources is widespread and that disinfection is necessary, although elsewhere the same work notes that "exaggerated concern" has been raised about the issue: "Government agencies...have filtered hundreds of gallons of water from wilderness streams, found one or two organisms (far less than enough to be infective), and erected garish signs proclaiming the water hazardous".

----


==See also== ==See also==
* ] * ]
* ]

==Footnotes==
{{Reflist|2}}


==References== ==References==
* {{cite book |last=Backer |first=Howard D. |editor=Auerbach, Paul S.|title=Wilderness Medicine |chapter=Chapter 61: Field Water Disinfection |edition=5 |year=2007 |publisher=Mosby Elsevier |location=Philadelphia, PA |pages=1368–417 |isbn= 978-0-323-03228-5 }}
{{reflist}}

==External links==
* from the US ]

{{Digestive system diseases}}


]
] ]
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Latest revision as of 00:48, 26 October 2023

Medical condition
Wilderness-acquired diarrhea
Other nameswilderness diarrhea, or backcountry diarrhea

Wilderness-acquired diarrhea is a variety of traveler's diarrhea in which backpackers and other outdoor enthusiasts are affected. Potential sources are contaminated food or water, or "hand-to-mouth", directly from another person who is infected. Cases generally resolve spontaneously, with or without treatment, and the cause is typically unknown. The National Outdoor Leadership School has recorded about one incident per 5,000 person-field days by following strict protocols on hygiene and water treatment. More limited, separate studies have presented highly varied estimated rates of affliction that range from 3 percent to 74 percent of wilderness visitors. One survey found that long-distance Appalachian Trail hikers reported diarrhea as their most common illness. Based on reviews of epidemiologic data and literature, some researchers believe that the risks have been over-stated and are poorly understood by the public.

Symptoms and signs

The average incubation periods for giardiasis and cryptosporidiosis are each 7 days. Certain other bacterial and viral agents have shorter incubation periods, although hepatitis may take weeks to manifest itself. The onset usually occurs within the first week of return from the field, but may also occur at any time while hiking.

Most cases begin abruptly and usually result in increased frequency, volume, and weight of stool. Typically, a hiker experiences at least four to five loose or watery bowel movements each day. Other commonly associated symptoms are nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramping, bloating, low fever, urgency, and malaise, and usually the appetite is affected. The condition is much more serious if there is blood or mucus in stools, abdominal pain, or high fever. Dehydration is a possibility. Life-threatening illness resulting from WAD is extremely rare but can occur in people with weakened immune systems.

Some people may be carriers and not exhibit symptoms.

Causes

Infectious diarrhea acquired in the wilderness is caused by various bacteria, viruses, and parasites (protozoa). The most commonly reported are the protozoa Giardia and Cryptosporidium. Other infectious agents may play a larger role than generally believed and include Campylobacter, hepatitis A virus, hepatitis E virus, enterotoxogenic E. coli, E. coli O157:H7, Shigella, and various other viruses. More rarely, Yersinia enterocolitica, Aeromonas hydrophila, and Cyanobacterium may also cause disease.

Giardia lamblia cysts usually do not tolerate freezing although some cysts can survive a single freeze–thaw cycle. Cysts can remain viable for nearly three months in river water when the temperature is 10 °C and about one month at 15–20 °C in lake water. Cryptosporidium may survive in cold waters (4 °C) for up to 18 months, and can even withstand freezing, although its viability is thereby greatly reduced. Many other varieties of diarrhea-causing organisms, including Shigella and Salmonella typhi, and hepatitis A virus, can survive freezing for weeks to months. Virologists believe all surface water in the United States and Canada has the potential to contain human viruses, which cause a wide range of illnesses including diarrhea, polio and meningitis. Modes of acquiring infection from these causes are limited to fecal-oral transmission, and contaminated water and food. The major factor governing pathogen content of surface water is human and animal activity in the watershed.

Diagnosis

It may be difficult to associate a particular case of diarrhea with a recent wilderness trip of a few days because incubation of the disease may outlast the trip. Studies of trips that are much longer than the average incubation period, e.g. a week for Cryptosporidium and Giardia, are less susceptible to these errors since there is enough time for the diarrhea to occur during the trip. Other bacterial and viral agents have shorter incubation periods, although hepatitis may require weeks.

A suspected case of wilderness-acquired diarrhea may be assessed within the general context of intestinal complaints. During any given four-week period, as many as 7.2% of Americans may experience some form of infectious or non-infectious diarrhea. There are an estimated 99 million annual cases of intestinal infectious disease in the United States, most commonly from viruses, followed by bacteria and parasites, including Giardia and Cryptosporidium. There are an estimated 1.2 million U.S. cases of symptomatic giardiasis annually. However, only about 40% of cases are symptomatic.

Prevention

Since wilderness acquired diarrhea can be caused by insufficient hygiene, contaminated water, and (possibly) increased susceptibility from vitamin deficiency, prevention methods should address these causes.

Hygiene

The risk of fecal-oral transmission of pathogens that cause diarrhea can be significantly reduced by good hygiene, including washing hands with soap and water after urination and defecation, and washing eating utensils with warm soapy water. Additionally a three-bowl system can be used for washing eating utensils.

Treating water

Main article: Portable water purification

Water can be treated in the wilderness through filtering, chemical disinfectants, a portable ultraviolet light device, pasteurizing or boiling. Factors in choice may include the number of people involved, space and weight considerations, the quality of available water, personal taste and preferences, and fuel availability.

In a study of long-distance backpacking, it was found that water filters were used more consistently than chemical disinfectants. Inconsistent use of iodine or chlorine may be due to disagreeable taste, extended treatment time or treatment complexity due to water temperature and turbidity.

Because methods based on halogens, such as iodine and chlorine, do not kill Cryptosporidium, and because filtration misses some viruses, the best protection may require a two-step process of either filtration or coagulation-flocculation, followed by halogenation. Boiling is effective in all situations.

Iodine resins, if combined with microfiltration to remove resistant cysts, are also a viable single-step process, but may not be effective under all conditions. New one-step techniques using chlorine dioxide, ozone, and UV radiation may prove effective, but still require validation.

Ultraviolet (UV) light for water disinfection is well established and widely used for large applications, like municipal water systems. Some hikers use small portable UV devices which meet the U.S. EPA Guide Standard and Protocol for Testing Microbiological Water Purifiers, for example, the SteriPEN. Another approach to portable UV water purification is solar disinfection (also called sodis). Clear water is sterilized by putting it in a clear polyethylene (PET) bottle and leaving it in direct sunlight for 6 hours.

Water risk avoidance

Different types of water sources may have different levels of contamination:

  • More contamination may be in water that
  1. likely could have passed through an area subject to heavy human or animal use
  2. is cloudy, has surface foam, or has some other suspicious appearance.
  • Less contamination may be in water from
  1. springs (provided the true source is not surface water a short distance above)
  2. large streams (those entering from the side may have less contamination than those paralleling the trail)
  3. fast-flowing streams
  4. higher elevations
  5. lakes with undisturbed sediments (10 days undisturbed water storage can result in 75–99% removal of coliform bacteria by settling to the bottom)
  6. freshly melted snow
  7. deep wells (provided they aren't subject to contamination from surface runoff)
  8. regions where there was a heavy snow year when streams run full and long compared to dry years.

Rain storms can either improve or worsen water quality. They can wash contaminants into water and stir up contaminated sediments with increasing flow, but can also dilute contaminants by adding large amounts of water.

Unfortunately, there have not been any epidemiological studies to validate the above, except possibly for the case of spring water.

Vitamins

One study suggests that on very long trips in the wilderness, taking multivitamins may reduce the incidence of diarrhea.

Treatment

WAD is typically self-limited, generally resolving without specific treatment. Oral rehydration therapy with rehydration salts is often beneficial to replace lost fluids and electrolytes. Clear, disinfected water or other liquids are routinely recommended.

Hikers who develop three or more loose stools in a 24-hour period – especially if associated with nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps, fever, or blood in stools – should be treated by a doctor and may benefit from antibiotics, usually given for 3–5 days. Alternatively, a single dose azithromycin or levofloxacin may be prescribed. If diarrhea persists despite therapy, travelers should be evaluated and treated for possible parasitic infection.

Cryptosporidium can be quite dangerous to patients with compromised immune systems. Alinia (nitazoxanide) is approved by the FDA for treatment of Cryptosporidium.

Epidemiology

The risk of acquiring infectious diarrhea in the wilderness arises from inadvertent ingestion of pathogens. Various studies have sought to estimate diarrhea attack rates among wilderness travelers, and results have ranged widely. The variation of diarrhea rate between studies may depend on the time of year, the location of the study, the length of time the hikers were in the wilderness, the prevention methods used, and the study methodology.

The National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS), which emphasizes strict hand-washing techniques, water disinfection and washing of common cooking utensils in their programs, reports that gastrointestinal illnesses occurred at a rate of only 0.26 per 1000 program days. In contrast, a survey of long-distance Appalachian Trail hikers found more than half the respondents reported at least one episode of diarrhea that lasted an average of two days. (Infectious diarrhea may last longer than an average of two days; certain forms of non-infectious diarrhea, caused by diet change etc., can be of very brief duration). Analysis of this survey found occurrence of diarrhea was positively associated with the duration of exposure in the wilderness. During any given four-week period, as many as 7.2% of Americans may experience some form of infectious or non-infectious diarrhea. A number of behaviors each individually reduced the incidence of diarrhea: treating water; routinely washing hands with soap and water after defecation and urination; cleaning cooking utensils with soap and warm water; and taking multi-vitamins.

A variety of pathogens can cause infectious diarrhea, and most cases among backpackers appear to be caused by bacteria from feces. A study at Grand Teton National Park found 69% of diarrhea affected visitors had no identifiable cause, that 23% had diarrhea due to Campylobacter and 8% of patients with diarrhea had giardiasis. Campylobacter enteritis occurred most frequently in young adults who had hiked in wilderness areas and drunk untreated surface water in the week prior. Another study tested 35 individuals before and after a trip to the Desolation Wilderness of California. Giardia cysts were found in fecal samples from two people after the trip, but they were asymptomatic. A third person was empirically treated for symptoms of giardiasis.

Fecal-oral transmission may be the most common vector for wilderness acquired diarrhea. There are differing opinions regarding the importance of routine disinfection of water during relatively brief backcountry visits.

Backcountry water quality surveys

Infection by fecal coliform bacteria, which indicate fecal pollution, are more common than giardiasis. Risks are highest in surface water near trails used by pack animals and cattle pastures.

Most samples of backcountry water in the Desolation Wilderness in California have found very low or no Giardia cysts. The infectious dose of giardia, however, is very low, with about 2% chance of infection from a single cyst. Also, very few studies have addressed the issue of transient contamination. According to one researcher, the likely model for the risk of Giardia from wilderness water is pulse contamination, that is, a brief period of high cyst concentration from fecal contamination.

Terminology

Diarrhea acquired in the wilderness or other remote areas is typically a form of infectious diarrhea, itself classified as a type of secretory diarrhea. These are all considered forms of gastroenteritis. The term may be applied in various remote areas of non-tropical developed countries (U.S., Canada, western Europe, etc.), but is less applicable in developing countries, and in the tropics, because of the different pathogens that are most likely to cause infection.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Hargreaves JS (2006). "Laboratory evaluation of the 3-bowl system used for washing-up eating utensils in the field". Wilderness Environ Med. 17 (2): 94–102. doi:10.1580/PR17-05.1. PMID 16805145. Diarrhea is a common illness of wilderness travelers, occurring in about one third of expedition participants and participants on wilderness recreation courses. The incidence of diarrhea may be as high as 74% on adventure trips. ...Wilderness diarrhea is not caused solely by waterborne pathogens, ... poor hygiene, with fecal-oral transmission, is also a contributing factor
  2. ^ Boulware DR (2004). "Influence of Hygiene on Gastrointestinal Illness Among Wilderness Backpackers". J Travel Med. 11 (1): 27–33. doi:10.2310/7060.2004.13621. PMID 14769284.
  3. McIntosh SE, Leemon D, Visitacion J, Schimelpfenig T, Fosnocht D (2007). "Medical Incidents and Evacuations on Wilderness Expeditions" (PDF). Wilderness and Environmental Medicine. 18 (4): 298–304. doi:10.1580/07-WEME-OR-093R1.1. PMID 18076301. S2CID 1401977.
  4. ^ Zell SC (1992). "Epidemiology of Wilderness-acquired Diarrhea: Implications for Prevention and Treatment". J Wilderness Med. 3 (3): 241–9. doi:10.1580/0953-9859-3.3.241. S2CID 73001096.
  5. Boulware DR, Forgey WW, Martin WJ (March 2003). "Medical risks of wilderness hiking". The American Journal of Medicine. 114 (4): 288–93. doi:10.1016/S0002-9343(02)01494-8. PMID 12681456.
  6. ^ Welch TP (2000). "Risk of giardiasis from consumption of wilderness water in North America: a systematic review of epidemiologic data". International Journal of Infectious Diseases. 4 (2): 100–3. doi:10.1016/S1201-9712(00)90102-4. PMID 10737847. Archived version April 20, 2010
  7. ^ Backer, Howard (1992). "Wilderness acquired diarrhea (editorial)". Journal of Wilderness Medicine. 3: 237–240. doi:10.1580/0953-9859-3.3.237. S2CID 71955543.
  8. Derlet, Robert W. (April 2004). "High Sierra Water: What is in the H2O?". Yosemite Association. Archived from the original on 2007-10-12.
  9. ^ CDC Division of Parasitic Diseases (2004). "CDC Fact sheet: Giardiasis". Centers for Disease Control. Retrieved 2008-10-13.
  10. ^ National Center for Zoonotic, Vector-Borne, and Enteric Diseases (2008-04-16). ""Crypto" - Cryptosporiodosis". Centers for Disease Control. Retrieved 2008-10-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. Backer 2007, p. 1371
  12. Backer 2007, p. 1369
  13. EPA, OEI, OIAA, IAD, US (8 November 2016). "Water Resources" (PDF).{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. Prepared by Federal-Provincial-Territorial Committee on Drinking Water of the Federal-Provincial-Territorial Committee on Health and the Environment (2004) (2004). "Protozoa: Giardia and Cryptosporidium" (PDF). Guidelines for Canadian Drinking Water Quality: Supporting Documentation. Health Canada. Retrieved 2008-08-07.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  15. Dickens DL, DuPont HL, Johnson PC (June 1985). "Survival of bacterial enteropathogens in the ice of popular drinks". JAMA. 253 (21): 3141–3. doi:10.1001/jama.253.21.3141. PMID 3889393.
  16. Backer H (2000). "In search of the perfect water treatment method" (PDF). Wilderness Environ Med. 11 (1): 1–4. doi:10.1580/1080-6032(2000)011[0001:isotpw]2.3.co;2. PMID 10731899.
  17. Gerba C, Rose J (1990). "Viruses in Source and Drinking Water". In McFeters, Gordon A. (ed.). Drinking water microbiology: progress and recent developments. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. pp. 380–99. ISBN 0-387-97162-9.
  18. White, George W. (1992). The handbook of chlorination and alternative disinfectants (3rd ed.). New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold. ISBN 0-442-00693-4.
  19. Backer 2007, p. 1374
  20. ^ Boulware DR, Forgey WW, Martin WJ 2nd (2003). "Medical Risks of Wilderness Hiking". Am J Med. 114 (4): 288–93. doi:10.1016/S0002-9343(02)01494-8. PMID 12681456.
  21. ^ Scallan, E. J.; A. Banerjee; S. E. Majowicz; et al. (2002). "Prevalence of Diarrhea in the Community in Australia, Canada, Ireland and the United States" (PDF). CDC. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
  22. Garthright WE, Archer DL, Kvenberg JE (1988). "Estimates of incidence and costs of intestinal infectious diseases in the United States". Public Health Rep. 103 (2): 107–15. PMC 1477958. PMID 3128825.
  23. "Giardiasis Surveillance — United States, 2009–2010". www.cdc.gov.
  24. Howard Backer (1992). "Wilderness acquired diarrhea". Journal of Wilderness Medicine. 3 (3): 237–240. doi:10.1580/0953-9859-3.3.237. S2CID 71955543.
  25. Backer 2007, pp. 1368–417
  26. Johnson, Mark (2003). The Ultimate Desert Handbook : A Manual for Desert Hikers, Campers and Travelers. International Marine/Ragged Mountain Press. p. 46. ISBN 0-07-139303-X.
  27. Backer H (February 2002). "Water disinfection for international and wilderness travelers". Clin. Infect. Dis. 34 (3): 355–64. doi:10.1086/324747. PMID 11774083.
  28. Backer 2007, p. 1411
  29. "Steripen - Proven Technology". Hydro-Photon, Inc. 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-14.
  30. "Steripen - Microbiological Testing". Hydro-Photon, Inc. 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-14.
  31. "Household Water Treatment Options in Developing Countries: Solar Disinfection (SODIS)" (PDF). Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). January 2008. Retrieved 2010-07-31.
  32. ^ Backer 2007, pp. 1373–4
  33. Sanders JW, Frenck RW, Putnam SD, et al. (August 2007). "Azithromycin and loperamide are comparable to levofloxacin and loperamide for the treatment of traveler's diarrhea in United States military personnel in Turkey". Clin. Infect. Dis. 45 (3): 294–301. doi:10.1086/519264. PMID 18688944.
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References

  • Backer, Howard D. (2007). "Chapter 61: Field Water Disinfection". In Auerbach, Paul S. (ed.). Wilderness Medicine (5 ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Mosby Elsevier. pp. 1368–417. ISBN 978-0-323-03228-5.

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