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Posted: 2017-05-16T09:45:09Z | Updated: 2019-11-29T14:11:47Z How A Disease With No Cure Has Nearly Been Wiped From The Earth | HuffPost

How A Disease With No Cure Has Nearly Been Wiped From The Earth

There were 3.5 million Guinea worm cases in 1986. Today there are 25.
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This article is part of HuffPost’s Project Zero  campaign, a yearlong series on neglected tropical diseases and efforts to fight them.

JUBA, South Sudan It took days for Maker Achuil and others to slowly pull the arm-length, spaghetti-like worm out of his thigh. After a year with the white parasite inside him, Achuil screamed in pain as the grown Guinea worm emerged.

A former soldier in South Sudan, which fought for decades before gaining its independence from Sudan in 2011, Achuil still shudders at the memory of the agony he felt as the worm was gradually wound around a stick.

It was like putting a cigarette out on your leg for days,” said Achuil, rolling up his trouser to show the scars from the burning fluids the worm excreted as it burrowed out to breed. It made you exhausted, but you were in too much pain to sleep. All you wanted to do was swim in the lake to cool the pain.”

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A Guinea worm emerges from a patient's foot.
The Carter Center

The worms, which resemble stretched chewing gum, lay their microscopic young in stagnant water. People drink the water and ingest the worms, which grow and mate inside the host for about a year. The male dies and the female starts to dig its way out through the human host’s flesh. When that person submerges the affected area in water, say, to bathe or to dull the burning pain, the worm spews out its young.

Guinea worm disease was once common across Africa and Asia , with an estimated 3.5 million cases in 1986. But in the mid-1980s, the global health community launched a campaign to eliminate the disease, and today it’s limited to pockets of Africa. 

Last year only a handful of cases were reported in three countries Chad, Ethiopia and South Sudan and health experts are confident they can finally slay the worm for good. The fight in South Sudan, once a stronghold of the crippling parasite, could be won soon, despite a brutal civil war that has engulfed that country since 2013.

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Two children, whose feet were bandaged after being treated for Guinea worm, look at an illustrated book about the disease.
The Carter Center/L Gubb

We are on the very edge of breaking transmission in South Sudan,” said  Makoy Samuel Yibi, who heads the worm eradication program at the nation’s ministry of health. We are in sight of the end.”

Scientifically, the worms that infect humans are known as Dracunculus medinensis. Historians believe it has been around since ancient times and is mentioned in the Bible’s Old Testament as the “fiery serpent .”

If the Guinea worm is made extinct, it would represent the very first parasitic disease ever to be eradicated, and only the second human disease to be wiped out (after smallpox).

Yibi, a soft-spoken man, has dedicated his life to ending this parasitic disease. The health official remembers how in his home village of a few hundred people, at least 50 individuals every year were so debilitated by the pain of the worms that they could not farm their fields.

It tormented people, deformed them, but they did not talk about it,” he said. 

Now across South Sudan, the local efforts led by Yibi have driven down the number of cases by over 90 percent in the past three years. Just six cases were reported  in 2016, compared to 70 cases in 2014.

Ethiopia saw only three cases last year, and Chad was hit with just 16.

The progress we have seen in restricting Guinea worm disease to these few cases in only three countries is a testament to the dedication of people in endemic areas to caring for their health and that of their communities,” said Dr. Dean Sienko, vice president of health programs at the Carter Center.

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A health worker in South Sudan uses a picture book to teach children and adults how to avoid contracting Guinea worm disease.
The Carter Center/L Gubb

The Atlanta-based center which was founded by former President Jimmy Carter and his wife, Rosalynn has helped coordinate the decades-long global campaign to finally wipe the disease from the world map , including brokering a legendary three-month ceasefire in 1995 in what is now South Sudan to make sure the Guinea worm eradication program would survive. 

People have lived with this for generations,” Yibi said. We are hoping that in 2017, we will probably get to zero.”

While there is no direct medication for the disease, the worm’s breeding cycle can be broken by ensuring that infected people do not enter bodies of water especially those used for drinking water  while the worm is working its way out of the skin.

The cycle can also be broken by giving people access to cleaner water sources or by cleaning the water before they drink it. In South Sudan, people have been encouraged to use water filters to avoid swallowing the worm’s eggs.

It has been a long, hard process, said Yibi, but “now when I go back to a village where Guinea worm was once common and ask if there are cases, the people shout, ‘No! We don’t want to even hear its name. That is dead and gone to us.’”

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The Carter Center's Dr. Donald Hopkins shows South Sudanese children how to use plastic water filtration pipes.
The Carter Center/L Gubb

Ironically, even as so many other species face extinction due to humankind’s excesses, this human-reliant species is finding new ways to survive. In Mali, which last year reported no Guinea worm cases for the first time in 25 years , health workers have found dogs infected with the parasite. The worms have also been boring their way into dogs in Chad.

Still, health experts remain optimistic. 

Dr. Donald Hopkins is the architect of the Guinea worm eradication campaign that started in the 1980s. He serves as the Carter Center’s special adviser on Guinea worm and also worked on the campaign to end smallpox. Those infections in animals are just “another puzzle to be solved,” he said.

“We’ve navigated plenty of challenges, including wars, over the 30 years we’ve been working to eradicate Guinea worm,” Hopkins said.

The worm’s centuries of agonizing pain may soon be consigned to history.

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Girls who previously suffered from Guinea worm filter their drinking water to prevent the disease.
The Carter Center/L Gubb

The Carter Center is the recipient of grants from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which also supports this HuffPost series. All content is editorially independent, with no influence or input from the foundation.

If you’d like to contribute a post to the series, send an email to ProjectZero@huffingtonpost.com. And follow the conversation on social media by using the hashtag #ProjectZero.

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Before You Go

Neglected Tropical Diseases
Lymphatic Filariasis(01 of18)
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Lymphatic filariasis, more commonly known as elephantiasis, is a leading cause of disability worldwide , according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It affects over 120 million people globally and can cause severe swelling of body parts, including the legs and scrotum. While people are usually infected in childhood, the painful, disfiguring symptoms of the disease only show up later in life . (credit:Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative)
Onchocerciasis(02 of18)
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Onchocerciasis, commonly known as river blindness, is an eye and skin disease that can cause severe itching and visual impairment including blindness. Around 18 million people are infected . Of those, over 6.5 million suffer from severe itching, and 270,000 are blind. The disease is caused by a parasitic worm, transmitted through bites from infected blackflies. The worm can live for up to 14 years in the human body, and each adult female worm can be more than 1.5 feet long. (credit:ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP/Getty Images)
Chagas(03 of18)
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Chagas disease is a potentially life-threatening illness . In the first months after infection, symptoms are mild, including skin lesions and fever. But in its second, chronic phase, up to 1 in 3 patients develop cardiac disorders, which can lead to heart failure and sudden death. The disease is transmitted to humans by kissing bugs, which live in the walls or roof cracks of poorly constructed homes in rural areas, according to the World Health Organization. Of the estimated 6 million to 7 million people affected worldwide, most live in Latin America, but the disease has also spread to the United States. Around 300,000 people in the U.S. have Chagas disease, according to the Dallas Morning News . (credit:Nature Picture Library/Getty Images)
Dengue(04 of18)
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Dengue is a flu-like illness that can sometimes be lethal . In 2015, more than 2 million cases of dengue were reported in the Americas. In some Asian and Latin American countries, severe dengue is a leading cause of serious illness and death among children. Dengue is spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, the same type of insect that transmits Zika. To reduce the risk of bites, WHO recommends covering water containers, using insecticide, having window screens and wearing long sleeves. (credit:Fachrul Reza/NurPhoto/Getty Images)
Human African Trypanosomiasis(05 of18)
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Human African trypanosomiasis, commonly known as sleeping sickness , is a chronic infection that affects the central nervous system. People can be infected for years without signs, but in the second stage, patients can suffer behavior changes, hallucinations and even slip into a coma and die . Many people affected live in remote, rural areas that dont have easy access to quality health services. This makes diagnosis and treatment more difficult. WHO has identified sleeping sickness as a disease that could be eliminated worldwide by 2020 if the right resources are dedicated to it. (credit:MARIZILDA CRUPPE / DNDi)
Leishmaniasis(06 of18)
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There are several forms of leishmaniasis , including visceral, which can be fatal, with symptoms including fever and weight loss; and cutaneous, the most common form, which causes skin lesions, leaving lifelong scars and disability. The disease, spread by sandflies, affects some of the poorest people on earth, according to WHO, and is associated with malnutrition and poor housing. Around 1 million new cases occur annually, causing 20,000 to 30,000 deaths. Leishmaniasis is climate-sensitive, affected by changes in rainfall, temperature and humidity which means it could be exacerbated by global warming. (credit:Corbis Documentary/Getty Images)
Trachoma(07 of18)
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Trachoma is an eye disease, which if untreated, can cause irreversible blindness . It causes visual impairment or blindness in 1.9 million people, per WHO. The disease is present in poor, rural areas of 42 countries in Africa, Latin America, Asia and the Middle East but Africa is the most affected. (credit:STR via Getty Images)
Rabies(08 of18)
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Rabies is almost always fatal once symptoms show up. Initial symptoms are fever and tingling around the wound. As the virus spreads, people with furious rabies become hyperactive and die by cardiac arrest; people with paralytic rabies become paralyzed, fall into a coma and die. Transmitted by pet dogs, rabies causes tens of thousands of deaths every year. The disease is present on all continents except Antarctica but more than 95 percent of human deaths due to it occur in Asia and Africa. It is a neglected disease primarily affecting poor populations, where vaccines are not readily available. (credit:NOAH SEELAM/AFP/Getty Images)
Leprosy(09 of18)
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Leprosy is a chronic disease, which when untreated can cause permanent damage to the skin , nerves, limbs and eyes. There were 176,176 cases at the end of 2015, according to WHO. While the stigma associated with the disease means people are less likely to seek treatment, leprosy is curable, and treatment early on can avoid disability. Leprosy was eliminated as a public health problem in 2000 meaning there is now less than one case for every 10,000 people worldwide. (credit:Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images)
Schistosomiasis(10 of18)
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Schistosomiasis is a chronic disease that causes gradual damage to internal organs. Symptoms include blood in urine , and in severe cases, kidney or liver failure, and even bladder cancer. Around 20,000 people die from it each year. Transmitted by parasites in infested water, the disease largely affects poor, rural communities in Africa that lack access to safe drinking water and sanitation. [People] get it as kids bathing in water, Sandrine Martin, a staff member for the nonprofit Malaria Consortium in Mozambique, told HuffPost. But the symptoms, like blood in the urine, only develop later and then people tend to hide it because its in the genital area. (credit:Malaria Consortium)
Chikungunya(11 of18)
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Chikungunya is a disease that causes fever and severe joint pain , according to WHO. While it is rarely fatal, it can be debilitating. Since 2004, it has infected more than 2 million people in Asia and Africa. There is no cure for the disease, which is transmitted to humans by infected mosquitoes. The name comes from a word in the Kimakonde language , spoken in some areas of Mozambique and Tanzania, that means to become contorted a nod to the hunched-over position of people who are affected with joint pain. (credit:Universal Images Group/Getty Images)
Echinoccosis(12 of18)
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Echinoccosis is a parasitic disease that leads to cysts in the liver and lungs. While it can be life-threatening if untreated, even people who receive treatment often have a reduced quality of life, according to WHO. Found in every continent except Antarctica, the disease is acquired by consuming food or water contaminated with tapeworm eggs, or through direct contact with animals who carry it, such as domestic dogs or sheep. (credit:Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images)
Foodborne Trematodiases(13 of18)
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Foodborne trematodiases can cause severe liver and lung disease , and on rare occasions death. Most prevalent in East Asia and South America, the disease is caused by worms that people get by eating raw fish, shellfish or vegetables that have been infected with larvae. While early, light infections can be asymptomatic, chronic infections are severe.More than 56 million people were infected with foodborne trematodes, and over 7,000 people died in 2005, the year of WHOs most recent global estimate. (credit:Alexandre Tremblot de La Croix via Getty Images)
Buruli Ulcer(14 of18)
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Buruli ulcer is a skin infection caused by bacteria that often starts as a painless swelling, but without treatment, it can lead to permanent disfigurement and disability. In 2014, 2,200 new cases were reported, with most patients under age 15. The exact mode of transmission is still unknown. The majority of cases, if detected early enough, can be cured with antibiotics. (credit:ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP/Getty Images)
Yaws(15 of18)
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Yaws is a chronic, disfiguring childhood infectious disease . Affecting skin, bone and cartilage, the symptoms show up weeks to months after infection and include yellow lesions and bone swelling. More than 250,000 cases of yaws were reported from 2010 to 2013, WHO told HuffPost. A lack of clean water and soap for bathing contributes to its spread. Only 13 countries are known to still have cases of yaws, including Ghana, Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands . (credit:BIOPHOTO ASSOCIATES via Getty Images)
Soil-Transmitted Helminth(16 of18)
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Soil-transmitted helminth infections are among the most common infections worldwide and affect the poorest communities. People are infected by worms transmitted by human feces contaminating soil in areas with poor sanitation. People with light infections usually have no symptoms. Heavier infections can cause diarrhea, abdominal pain, general weakness and impaired cognitive development. Depending on the number of worms, it can lead to death. Up to 2 billion people are infected worldwide, according to WHO. But because infections can be light, not all patients suffer, WHOs Ashok Moo told HuffPost. (credit:Malaria Consortium)
Taeniasis(17 of18)
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Taeniasis is an intestinal infection caused by tapeworms , which mostly causes mild symptoms, such as abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhea or constipation. But if larvae infect the brain, causing neurocysticercosis, the disease can cause epileptic seizures and can be fatal. People get it by eating raw or undercooked infected pork. The ingested tapeworm eggs develop into larvae and migrate through the body. Taeniasis is underreported worldwide because it is hard to diagnose in areas with little access to health services, according to the CDC. (credit:Science Source/Getty Images)
Guinea Worm(18 of18)
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Guinea worm is a crippling disease that it is close to being eradicated. There were only 22 human cases reported in 2015, according to WHO down from around 3.5 million cases in 21 countries in the mid-1980s. The disease is usually transmitted when people with limited access to quality drinking water swallow stagnant water contaminated with parasites. About a year after infection, a painful blister forms most of the time on the lower leg and one or more worms emerge, along with a burning sensation. It is rarely fatal, but can debilitate infected people for weeks. The Carter Center, founded by former President Jimmy Carter and his wife, has been instrumental in efforts to eradicate the disease. (credit:PETER MARTELL/AFP/Getty Images)