Acute diseases: An epidemiologic perspective
Abdel-Hady El-Gilany1, Hala Abou-ElWafa2
1 Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Public Health and Community Medicine Department, Faculty of Medicine, Mansoura University, Mansoura, Egypt
2 Industrial Medicine and Occupational Health, Public Health & Community Medicine Department, Faculty of Medicine, Mansoura University, Mansoura, Egypt
Correspondence Address:
Hala Abou-ElWafa
Industrial Medicine and Occupational Health, Public Health & Community Medicine Department, Faculty of Medicine, Mansoura University, Mansoura
Egypt
Source of Support: None, Conflict of Interest: None
DOI: 10.4103/2221-6189.369072
Many underdeveloped countries still struggle with the public health issue of acute illnesses, especially with the emergence of injuries as a major category of acute diseases. Control of the acute disease is challenging particularly when it occurs as an outbreak, either in isolation or as part of a wider epidemic. This narrative review summarizes the definition, epidemiologic transition, pattern and modes of spread, classification, epidemiologic measures, community burden, prevention, control, and future challenges of acute disease. This review is to provide a reference for epidemiologists, clinicians, researchers, and policymakers.
Keywords: Acute disease; Spread; Transition; Classification; Burden
Acute (relatively severe disorder with an abrupt onset and brief symptom duration) and chronic (less severe but lasts for long periods even a lifetime) diseases are the two main categories of illnesses. Acute disease ends in complete recovery or passes into a chronic phase or death[1],[5],[6].
Acute diseases are still a public health problem in many developing nations, especially with emergence of acute injuries and re-emerging of old infectious diseases. Acute diseases gained more interest, especially after the emergence of acute COVID-19 pandemic[7]. The control of acute diseases is challenging particularly when it occurs as an outbreak, either in isolation or as part of a wider pandemic. Although acute diseases are not a specific goal or target of Millennium Development Goals, most of the Goal 3 Targets contribute to prevention and control of these diseases, e.g. by 2030, eliminate all preventable infant and young child deaths, as well as AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria epidemics; combat hepatitis, water-borne illnesses, and other communicable diseases; and reduce by half the number of global traffic-related fatalities and injuries as well as the number of illnesses and fatalities brought on by hazardous chemicals and air pollution[8],[9],[10].
2. MethodsIn this narrative literature review, we searched PubMed and Google Scholar for complete texts of papers published in English. The keywords used included acute disease and acute illness in combination with definition, epidemiologic transition, pattern of spread, modes of spread, classification, epidemiologic measures, community burden, prevention, control, and future challenges. All retrieved literature was screened for inclusion in the review. Also, standard textbooks of epidemiology were screened for the relevant heading of the review. We included the most relevant and recent publications. It is not necessary to include all articles in the narrative review on a topic[11].
3. DefinitionThere is currently no universally applicable definition of acute illness. There is a lot of variety in how the phrase “acute sickness” is used among professional communities (such as those in medicine, public health, academia, and policy). When a disease’s course lasts three months or less, the term “acute” is frequently used, particularly in the context of acute discomfort. According to some academics, acute illness is a short-term condition that usually goes away within six months. Acute diseases differ in severity e.g. acute flu does not compare with rabies[12],[13],[14],[15].
Hypothetically, acute and chronic are the opposites of a spectrum[2]. In reality, there may be one or more of the following events that contribute to the relationship between acute and chronic illnesses: 1) a patient is admitted with an acute exacerbation of a chronic illness, such as pneumonia in a patient with chronic renal failure[16]; 2) a patient is admitted with acute disease and one or more unrelated chronic illnesses; and 3) a combination of acute and chronic illnesses, such as mild acute and chronic diseases, severe acute and mild chronic diseases, severe chronic and mild acute diseases, and severe acute and chronic diseases[17]. [Table 1] summarizes the differences between acute and chronic diseases[18],[19],[20].
Table 1: Differences between acute and chronic diseases (modified after [18-20]).There are some related terms to be mentioned:
Subacute disease is a vaguely defined term that is not acute, the symptoms of which are midway between acute and chronic disease, they are less severe yet last longer than those of an acute condition. It is slow but persistent e.g. subacute bacterial endocarditis, or subacute sclerosing panencephalitis[21],[22],[23].
Peracute disease: Very acute, very severe, fulminant, or violent disease. Peracute disease has a very short duration, is quickly fatal, or results in sudden death, e.g. sudden infant death syndrome. Peracute is not to be confused with preacute (before)[24].
Acute medicine is a branch of internal medicine and emergency care that deals with the prompt and early therapy of emergency cases by specialists[25].
Acute care is the early and specialized management of patients with a variety of medical disorders requiring emergency care often within 48 hours[26].
Acute hospitals or acute medical units are concerned with short-term medical and/or surgical treatment and care. Long-term conditions are increasingly being addressed mostly in community settings[26].
4. Epidemiological transitionIn the late 19th and early 20th centuries, epidemiology focused on lethal acute infectious diseases as the main causes of morbidity and death. Chronic diseases replaced acute ones in the second part of the 20th century. This is known as the epidemiologic transition[27],[28].
Since recent years, the predominant types of sickness seen in primary care have moved from mostly acute illness to chronic progressive illness, frequently with comorbidity. With chronic disorders like mental illness becoming more common in a wealthy societies, their significance in developing countries is rising. Hamilton[29] & Omran[30] described three phases of the epidemiologic transition: 1) The age of pestilence and famine (very high morbidity and mortality rates with very low life expectancy due to hunger, wars, epidemics of infectious diseases); 2) The age of receding pandemics (progressive decline in morbidity and mortality rates with an increase in life expectancy due to sanitation, urbanization, and scientific and medical advances); 3) The age of degenerative and man-made diseases (morbidity and mortality rates continue to decline and life expectancy rises even more)[31]. The majority of appointments in general practice nowadays are for exacerbations of chronic diseases, with acute infectious illness making up a relatively minor part of such consultations[32]. However, the success of control of infectious diseases was not maintained even in the developed world. Due to emerging or new diseases (e.g. HIV, hepatitis C, COVID-19, monkeypox) and re-emerging diseases (e.g. tuberculosis, malaria)[33],[34]. There is a double burden of chronic diseases that are emerging and ancient acute infectious diseases in many low- and middle-income nations[35].
5. Epidemiological pattern of spreadAcute diseases have different epidemiologic patterns of spread:
5.1. Individual cases
Acute diseases attack human beings individually (single patient) here and there with different types of symptoms due to exposure to some causes e.g. micro-organisms, extremes of temperature, and chemical leakage[36]. Local surveillance relies on notification of individual cases of disease. In some rare diseases, one case is sufficient to justify an epidemiologic inquiry (e.g., rabies, plague, polio)[37].
5.2. Sporadic cases
Due to climatic effects and harmful substances, acute disease arises seldom and erratically and occasionally attacks multiple people at once (non-epidemiologically related)[36],[37].
5.3. Diseases clustering
The term “cluster” refers to an extremely high occurrence of a relatively uncommon disease (either infectious or non-infectious) or event within a specific geographic area or time frame, which is frequently thought to be caused by exposure to environmental factors[37],[38],[39].
5.4. Endemic diseases
These diseases are always present in society and attack a large number of people. These diseases are usually infectious[36]. The quantity of a particular disease that is regularly present in a location is known as the baseline or endemic level of the disease. Hyperendemic refers to persistent, high levels of disease[37].
5.5. Epidemic disease
Epidemic disease describes a spike, frequently abrupt, in the number of instances of a disease above what is typically anticipated in that population and that area[5],[37]. The cause is usually infectious due to mass gatherings with poor sanitation and natural disasters like earthquakes and famines[36]. When an agent and susceptible hosts are both present in sufficient numbers and the agent can successfully spread from a source to the susceptible hosts, epidemics will ensue[37].
5.6. Outbreak
The terms “outbreak” and “epidemic” are interchangeable; however, an outbreak is frequently used to refer to a smaller geographic region or closed community. Surveillance data that show an increase in reported cases or an unusual clustering of cases by time and location can be regularly and promptly analyzed to identify outbreaks[5],[37].
5.7. Pandemic
Pandemic is an epidemic that has spread across numerous continents or countries and typically affects a lot of people[5],[37],[40].
5.8. Syndemic
A syndemic is the accumulation of two or more concurrent or succeeding epidemics or disease clusters in a defined population with biological interactions that worsen the prognosis and burden of disease and are triggered by changes in socioeconomic, environmental, cultural, and/or political factors over time[41],[42]. A recent example is COVID-19 syndemic. COVID-19 pandemic is combined with the non-communicable diseases epidemic as both inter-acting on backgrounds of inequality and poverty[43].
6. Modes of spread of acute diseasesAll non-communicable acute diseases are non-transmissible (not spread from source to susceptible host). Not all infectious diseases are communicable, even though all acute communicable diseases are infectious e.g. tetanus[5]. Acute infectious diseases have several modes of transmission: 1) direct contact through kissing, skin-to-skin contact, sexual contact, contact with soil or droplet spread through inhalation of aerosols during talking, coughing, or sneezing; and 2) indirect transmission including air-borne occurs when infectious organisms are carried by droplet nuclei or dust suspended in air; vehicle-borne such as water, food, blood, and fomites; and vector-borne like fleas, mosquitoes, and ticks transmit an infectious agent through mechanical methods or encourage growth or alterations in the agent (biologic transmission)[5],[37].
7. CausesResponsible agents for acute diseases can be identified because of their acute onset and simple cause-effect relationship(s)[27]. They are mostly infectious agents and sometimes non-infectious. Infectious causes can be viral, bacterial, or parasitic. Non-infectious acute illnesses can be due to physical agents (e.g. electric shock, radiation, injuries), chemical agents (e.g. heavy metals, poisons, drug intoxication), allergic (e.g. anaphylaxis, insect bites), metabolic (e.g. hypoglycemic coma), organ dysfunction (e.g. acute renal failure, acute myocardial infarction, cerebral stroke) and acute exacerbation of chronic infectious diseases[5].
8. ClassificationsThere is no standard classification of acute diseases. Acute disease or illness can be infectious and communicable e.g. cholera and measles; infectious and non-communicable e.g. tetanus or non-infectious (non-communicable) e.g. stroke, myocardial infarction, acute toxic exposures, and injury[5].
Acute infectious illnesses are caused by certain pathogenic microorganisms or parasites. They consist of those in the International Classification of Diseases chapter, certain infectious and parasitic diseases, some diseases of the respiratory system (e.g. influenza, pneumonia), and a few local infections listed elsewhere (e.g. urinary tract infections)[44],[45].
Acute illness may be minor (e.g. upper respiratory tract infections) or serious (e.g. stroke, myocardial infarction, seizure). The report of The King’s Fund Organization divided acute illness into four categories: 1) acute minor or self-limiting illness (e.g. upper respiratory tract infections, dyspepsia, infective diarrhea, aches, backache, headaches, itching); 2) acute major illness that could be self-limiting or require treatment (e.g. myocardial infarction, stroke, hemorrhages); 3) acute exacerbation of existing major illness (exacerbations of asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, left ventricular failure, inflammatory bowel disease, diabetic coma); and 4) acute presentation of a new chronic illness (e.g. stroke, intestinal obstruction)[46].
9. Epidemiologic measures9.1. Measures of occurrence
Measures of occurrence include morbidity and mortality rates. These can be crude, specific, or adjusted rates. Incidence and prevalence rates are used to measure morbidity pattern of acute diseases. The number of new cases of a disease in a given population over a predetermined time is referred to as the incidence. There are two ways to compute it: either as cumulative incidence or as incidence rate (incidence density) (incidence proportion). The incidence rate is calculated using the numerator-the number of new cases that happen over a certain time-and the denominator-the total time that each member of the population is exposed to risk (total person-time follow-up). It takes into account the various periods that cohort members have been disease-free. The numerator of cumulative incidence is the number of new cases over a given time divided by the number of individuals who were disease-free at the start of the period. It represents a certain person’s risk of contracting the illness. It is a proportion rather than a rate and presumes a constant cohort. On the other hand, the prevalence is the number of persons with a disease at a specified point in time. It may be point prevalence or period prevalence[5],[37],[47],[48],[49].
Mortality rates such as proportional mortality rate (the proportion of deaths in a certain population over some time attributable to different reasons); case-fatality ratio (the number of deaths caused by disease during a certain time divided by the number of new cases of that disease identified during the same time); and cause-specific mortality rate (the number of deaths due to a specific cause divided by the total population at the midpoint of the time)[5],[37],[47].
9.2. Measures of association or risk
Odds ratio is the ratio of the odds of exposure in cases to the odds of exposure in control and relative risk that is the ratio of incidence among exposed and incidence among unexposed; both indicate the presence or absence of association between the factor under study and the disease[5],[37],[47],[49],[50].
9.3. Measures ofpotential impact (effect on population)
The most important is the attributable fraction in the population (quantifies the anticipated decline in new cases in the population that would happen if the risk factor was eliminated), and the attributable fraction in the exposed (the probability that an exposed case developed the disease as a result of the risk factor in question) [5],[37],[47],[49].
10. Community burdenThe term “burden of disease” refers to the overall, cumulative effects of diseases concerning the number of people with impairments in a community. Burden of disease analysis is useful for assessing performance, setting priorities, allocating resources, and creating knowledge. In practice, this analysis involves many disease specialists, epidemiologists, and policymakers. In the 1990s, World Health Organization established a methodological concept to measure the global burden of disease based on the disability-adjusted life year (DALY) computed as the sum of the years lost due to specific premature death and years lost due to disability for incident cases of the health condition[51],[52],[53],[54].
Worldwide the major reasons for global burden of disease and death are infectious diseases (HIV/AIDs, malaria, measles, diarrheal diseases, lower respiratory tract infections, and perinatal conditions) and injuries (road traffic accidents, falls, and violence)[53],[55],[56],[57]. A hospital-based study described a high burden of acute disease at a large referral center in northern Madagascar with trauma being the most frequent pathology observed, though infectious diseases were largely responsible for adult mortality[58].
The incidence of communicable diseases has declined over the last century in high-income countries, however recent global epidemics of emerging and re-emerging diseases e.g. severe acute respiratory syndrome, Middle East respiratory syndrome, measles, avian influenza, Ebola virus, Zika virus, and COVID-19 disease, have resulted in a renewed focus on infectious diseases[59],[60],[61],[62]. A recent systematic review in 2019 noticed that six infectious diseases were among the top ten reasons for DALYs in children vs. lower respiratory infections (ranked 2nd), diarrheal diseases (3rd), malaria (5th), meningitis (6th), whooping cough (9th), and sexually transmitted infections (10th). In adolescents aged 10-24 years, injuries were among the top reasons for DALYs: road injuries (ranked 1st) and interpersonal violence (5th). The five causes that were in the top ten for the ages 10-49-year age group were road accidents (1st), HIV/AIDS (2nd), low back pain (4th), headache disorders (5th), and depressive disorders (6th). In 2019, ischemic heart disease and stroke were the top-ranked reasons for DALYs in the 50 years and older age groups[63].
11. High-risk groups of acute illnessImmunocompromised patients e.g. HIV/AIDS, leukemia, steroid therapy, immune suppressive therapy, chemotherapy, radiation, immunotherapy, targeted anti-cancer therapy, and bone marrow transplant[64] are all susceptible to infection by common pathogens and opportunistic organisms that do not cause disease in immune-competent people. Infection may result from organisms that are universally present e.g. Pneumocystis carinii, or from reactivation of previous viral or mycobacterial infection[65].
Infants and children are susceptible to acute infectious diseases, especially with low vaccination coverage for vaccine-preventable diseases. Historically infections encompassed the major reasons for children’s morbidity and mortality, and many preventable and treatable acute infections are still the main killers of young children, especially in developing countries. Pneumonia, diarrhea, and malaria caused about 30% of global deaths among children below 5 years of age in 2019[66],[67]. Also, children are at high risk of injuries. The most frequent reasons for child injuries are falls, road accidents, road traffic injuries, poisonings, drowning, burns, and scalds[68],[69].
Geriatrics: Acute diseases are associated with severe complications and fatality in the elderly. They are frailer and have a high burden of chronic illnesses[70]. Many elderly people are living with long-term morbidities and frequently require episodic admissions to acute hospital facilities, to treat either exacerbation of their long-term diseases or an acute unrelated condition[71].
12. PreventionPrevention refers to measures taken to prevent diseases with ultimate goal of eliminating, eradicating, or reducing the impact of disease and disability. There are five important and complementary levels of prevention of acute diseases depending on the natural course of illness that is primordial and primary prevention in the pre-pathogenesis or health phase; and secondary, tertiary, and quaternary prevention during the pathogeneses or disease stage[72],[73].
12.1. Primordial (preprimary) prevention
Primordial prevention, a relatively new concept, is a set of activities planned to prevent the emergence of the predisposing economic, social, and cultural patterns associated with an enhanced risk of diseases through health promotion of general population to prevent exposure to risk factors. Many adult diseases have their early origins in childhood[74],[75],[76],[77],[78],[79]. It is mainly applied to chronic diseases and indirectly contributes to preventing their acute exacerbation e.g. preventing risk factors of hypertension. Childhood blood pressure is positively related to adult blood pressure and this relation can be tracked from childhood through to maturity[80],[81].
12.2. Primary prevention
Primary prevention includes activities taken before the onset of the disease to prevent its occurrence. It is targeted to susceptible people to prevent the occurrence of disease. It could be specific e.g. vaccination and chemoprophylaxis or non-specific e.g. environmental, food, drink, and water sanitation, health education, accident prevention, personal hygiene, and vector control[73],[82].
12.3. Secondary prevention
Secondary prevention includes activities targeted to patients to stop the progress of the disease and prevent complications e.g. screening before the onset of signs and symptoms, early diagnosis after the appearance of signs and symptoms, and treatment[73],[82], Many acute diseases are self-limited or treated with a simple course of antibiotics or other medications. Some life-threatening acute diseases e.g. cardiac attack, exacerbation of bronchial asthma, pneumonia, appendicitis, and acute organ failure, require urgent medical care to prevent further complications[83].
12.4. Tertiary prevention
Tertiary prevention includes activities targeted to patients to reduce or limit impairments, and disabilities, minimize suffering and rehabilitate handicapped people e.g. palliative care, disability limitation, and rehabilitation[73],[82].
12.5. Quaternary prevention
Quaternary prevention is collective health action applied when the patient is complaining of illness but there is no identified disease. It aims to prevent over-diagnosis and over-medicalization with unneeded medical procedures that could potentially hurt more than benefit such as unnecessary check-ups and screening without evidence, use of antibiotics in upper respiratory tract infections, and correct application of rehabilitation techniques[84],[85],[86].
13. Future challengesLabeling a disease as acute or chronic cannot explain its nature, nor predict its outcomes. The duration of acute, subacute, and chronic diseases is a challenging task. There is a need for a standard definition of these terms at a specific time and onset together with adherence to specific lists of diseases to facilitate comparisons over time and between different localities. This lack of specificity in definitions has an impact on researchers as well as healthcare professionals and patients who are looking for clear ways to assess the progression of an illness. Thresholds are routinely altered, going from six months to three months or even increased to a year or more, which just serves to further confuse the situation.
A nationwide electronic health record is challenging for surveillance and comprehensive assessment of the leading reasons for acute diseases and injury burden in the population, particularly those causing premature death. Many healthcare systems are slow to adapt to focus on acute conditions. Quantification of the community burden of acute diseases is another challenge for many countries.
The necessity of acute care hospitals needs to be adequately assessed. Calculating a patient’s early warning score is a mean of highlighting deteriorating patients. Early warning scores are now routinely applied throughout the whole acute hospital. Infectious diseases are still a threat to public health with a need to redirect resources where needed and mitigate the risks posed by these diseases.
14. ConclusionAcute diseases both emerging and reemerging, whether infectious or non-infectious, are still a public health problem in both developing and developed countries. Control of these diseases is challenging particularly when they occur as epidemics. It is the task of epidemiologists, clinicians, researchers, and policymakers to formulate and implement a policy for their prevention and control.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors report no conflict of interest.
Funding
This study received no extramural funding.
Authors’ contributions
AE: conception of the research idea, drafting of the manuscript, and revising it for intellectual content; HSA: writing, drafting, and revising the manuscript.
References
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