Overview
Anthrax is a serious infectious disease caused by the gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis. It primarily affects herbivorous animals but can also infect humans through contact with infected animals or contaminated animal products.
Bioterrorism Agent: Anthrax is classified as a Category A bioterrorism agent due to its ease of dissemination and high mortality rate, particularly in inhalational form.
Microbiology
Organism: Bacillus anthracis
- Gram-positive, aerobic, spore-forming bacillus
- Forms long chains ("boxcar" appearance)
- Spores are highly resistant and can survive in soil for decades
- Produces anthrax toxin (protective antigen, edema factor, lethal factor)
- Polypeptide capsule (poly-D-glutamic acid) inhibits phagocytosis
Epidemiology
Global Distribution:
- Endemic in agricultural regions: Africa, Central and South Asia, Middle East, parts of South America
- Rare in developed countries with veterinary vaccination programs
- Indonesia: sporadic cases reported, particularly in livestock farming areas
Risk Factors:
- Occupational exposure: veterinarians, livestock handlers, butchers, wool workers
- Contact with infected animals or animal products (hides, wool, bone meal)
- Laboratory workers
- Bioterrorism exposure
Transmission
Routes:
- Cutaneous (95% of natural cases): Direct contact with spores through broken skin
- Inhalational: Inhalation of aerosolized spores
- Gastrointestinal: Ingestion of contaminated meat
- Injection: Contaminated drugs (heroin) - emerging route
Not person-to-person transmissible: Anthrax does not spread from human to human.
Pathophysiology
Anthrax Toxin
Three-component exotoxin:
- Protective Antigen (PA): Binds to cell receptors and facilitates entry
- Edema Factor (EF): Adenylate cyclase → ↑ cAMP → edema
- Lethal Factor (LF): Zinc metalloprotease → disrupts cell signaling → cell death
Disease Process
- Spores enter body through skin, lungs, or GI tract
- Phagocytosed by macrophages and germinate
- Bacteria multiply and produce toxins
- Toxins cause hemorrhage, edema, and necrosis
- Systemic spread → septicemia → shock → death
Clinical Manifestations
1. Cutaneous Anthrax (Most Common)
Timeline: Incubation 1-7 days
Clinical Features:
- Initial: Painless, pruritic papule at inoculation site
- Vesiculation: Papule → vesicle with serosanguinous fluid
- Black eschar: Vesicle ruptures → central black necrotic ulcer ("malignant pustule")
- Surrounding edema: Extensive, non-pitting, painless edema
- Regional lymphadenopathy
- Systemic symptoms: Fever, malaise (if untreated)
Prognosis:
- Mortality <1% with treatment
- 10-20% without treatment
2. Inhalational Anthrax ("Woolsorters' Disease")
Timeline: Incubation 1-7 days (up to 60 days possible)
Biphasic Presentation:
Phase 1 (Prodromal - 1-4 days):
- Non-specific flu-like symptoms
- Fever, myalgia, malaise, non-productive cough
- May have brief improvement
Phase 2 (Fulminant - 24-48 hours):
- Acute respiratory distress
- High fever, dyspnea, cyanosis, stridor
- Hemorrhagic mediastinitis (characteristic)
- Massive pleural effusions
- Septic shock, meningitis
Prognosis:
- Mortality 45-85% even with treatment
- Nearly 100% without early treatment
3. Gastrointestinal Anthrax
Timeline: Incubation 1-7 days
Clinical Features:
- Oropharyngeal: Oral/esophageal ulcers, neck edema, lymphadenopathy, dysphagia
- Intestinal: Severe abdominal pain, bloody diarrhea, ascites, hematemesis
- Fever, nausea, vomiting
- Bowel perforation, peritonitis
Prognosis: Mortality 25-75%
4. Injection Anthrax
Clinical Features:
- Differs from cutaneous: more severe soft tissue infection
- No classic eschar formation
- Extensive edema, cellulitis, abscess formation
- Systemic toxicity common
Complications
- Anthrax meningitis: Hemorrhagic meningoencephalitis (50% of inhalational cases)
- Septic shock
- ARDS (Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome)
- DIC (Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation)
- Death
Diagnosis
Clinical Suspicion
Consider anthrax if:
- Black eschar with painless edema
- Widened mediastinum on CXR
- Hemorrhagic pleural effusions
- Exposure history (animals, bioterrorism)
Laboratory Investigations
Specimens:
- Blood cultures (before antibiotics!)
- Vesicular fluid, eschar swab (cutaneous)
- Pleural fluid, CSF (if indicated)
- Stool (gastrointestinal)
Microscopy:
- Gram stain: Large gram-positive bacilli in chains
- McFadyean reaction: Polychromatic staining of capsule
Culture:
- Blood agar: Large, gray-white, non-hemolytic colonies
- "Ground glass" or "Medusa head" appearance
Molecular:
- PCR for B. anthracis DNA
- Rapid and specific
Serology:
- Anti-protective antigen IgG (retrospective diagnosis)
Imaging
Chest X-ray/CT (inhalational):
- Widened mediastinum (key finding)
- Mediastinal lymphadenopathy
- Pleural effusions (often hemorrhagic)
- Infiltrates
- No consolidation
Classic Triad (Inhalational Anthrax):
- Widened mediastinum
- Pleural effusions
- Absence of lobar consolidation
Treatment
Antibiotics
First-Line (IV for systemic disease):
- Ciprofloxacin 400 mg IV q12h OR Levofloxacin 750 mg IV q24h
- PLUS
- Protein synthesis inhibitor: Clindamycin 900 mg IV q8h OR Linezolid 600 mg IV q12h
- PLUS (for severe cases)
- Bactericidal agent: Meropenem 2g IV q8h OR Imipenem 1g IV q6h
Cutaneous (Uncomplicated):
- Ciprofloxacin 500 mg PO BID × 7-10 days OR
- Doxycycline 100 mg PO BID × 7-10 days
Duration:
- Cutaneous: 7-10 days
- Inhalational/systemic: 60 days (switch to oral after clinical improvement)
- Meningitis: ≥ 2-3 weeks IV, consider intrathecal therapy
Adjunctive Therapy
Antitoxin:
- Raxibacumab or Obiltoxaximab (monoclonal antibodies against PA)
- For systemic anthrax, consider in conjunction with antibiotics
- Must be given early
Supportive Care:
- Aggressive fluid resuscitation
- Vasopressors for shock
- Mechanical ventilation for respiratory failure
- Drainage of pleural effusions (if needed)
Indonesia Treatment Notes: Ciprofloxacin and doxycycline are available through public health programs. Early notification to health authorities is mandatory.
Contraindications
- Avoid: Cephalosporins (intrinsic resistance), Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole
- Penicillin previously used but fluoroquinolones now preferred
Prophylaxis
Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP)
Indications:
- Confirmed or suspected exposure to B. anthracis spores
Regimen:
- Ciprofloxacin 500 mg PO BID × 60 days OR
- Doxycycline 100 mg PO BID × 60 days
- PLUS
- Anthrax vaccine (if available): 3 doses at 0, 2, 4 weeks
Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis
Vaccination:
- Anthrax Vaccine Adsorbed (AVA): For high-risk groups
- Schedule: 5 doses at 0, 1, 6, 12, 18 months, then annual boosters
- Not routinely available in Indonesia
Animal Vaccination:
- Veterinary vaccines for livestock in endemic areas
- Key prevention strategy
Prevention
General Measures
Occupational:
- Proper handling of animal products
- Protective equipment for high-risk workers
- Sterilization of animal products (hides, wool)
Animal Control:
- Vaccination of livestock in endemic areas
- Proper disposal of infected carcasses (burn, do not bury)
- Quarantine of infected herds
Public Health:
- Surveillance and reporting
- Education of at-risk populations
- Rapid response to outbreaks
Decontamination
- Spores resistant to many disinfectants
- Effective: Chlorine dioxide, formaldehyde, ethylene oxide, autoclaving
- Environmental decontamination requires specialized teams
Prognosis
Overall Mortality:
- Cutaneous: <1% (treated), 10-20% (untreated)
- Inhalational: 45-85% (even with treatment)
- Gastrointestinal: 25-75%
- Meningitis: >90%
Prognostic Factors:
- Early diagnosis and treatment
- Form of disease
- Delay in antibiotic initiation
- Development of meningitis or septic shock
Key Points for Exams
✓ Bacillus anthracis: Gram-positive, spore-forming, "boxcar" bacilli
✓ Cutaneous anthrax: Black eschar with painless edema (most common form)
✓ Inhalational anthrax: Widened mediastinum + hemorrhagic mediastinitis (high mortality)
✓ Treatment: Fluoroquinolone + protein synthesis inhibitor (severe cases)
✓ PEP: 60 days of antibiotics after exposure
✓ Bioterrorism agent: Category A (easily weaponized)
✓ Not person-to-person transmissible
✓ Diagnosis: Blood culture, PCR; avoid opening vesicles unnecessarily
Last updated: January 2026