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Cryptosporidium in
Drinking Water Wells
What is Cryptosporidiosis?
Cryptosporidiosis (crip-toe-spor-id-I-o-sis) is a disease caused by
cryptosporidium parvum which, as late as 1976, was not known to cause disease
in humans. Cryptosporidium is a single-celled, protozoan parasite found
in the waste of humans and animals (such as cattle, sheep, raccoon, beaver,
muskrat) infected with the organism. It can be found in the environment
in rivers, lakes, streams and reservoirs. Until recently little has been
known about its disease producing capabilities. Cryptosporidium is too
small to be seen with the naked eye.
How is Cryptosporidiosis Spread?
Infection with the disease can occur via ingestion of contaminated
food or water. The disease is easily spread through hand-to-mouth contact.
A person can become infected by drinking contaminated water, eating raw
or undercooked food, direct contact with the droppings of infected animals
or stool of infected humans, or hand-to-mouth transfer of the organism
from surfaces that may have become contaminated with microscopic amounts
of stool from an infected person or animal. The infectious form of the
parasite is called oocyst (o-o-cysts), which is an egg-like form of the
parasite.
What are the Symptoms of Cryptosporidiosis?
The symptoms of cryptosporidiosis are diarrhea, headache, abdominal
cramps, nausea, vomiting and low-grade fever. Onset typically occurs within
2 to 10 days after exposure. At present there is no treatment for cryptosporidiosis.
In an otherwise healthy person, cryptosporidiosis symptoms usually last
1 to 2 weeks by which time the body's immune system is able to overcome
the infection.
In persons with compromised immune systems, such as those persons who
have been receiving chemotherapy treatment for cancer, people with AIDS
or those taking immune suppressant drugs, and the very young or old, the
infection may continue and become life-threatening. See your doctor to
determine if symptoms are caused by cryptosporidium, and what actions to
take.
Presence in Water Supplies
Cryptosporidium can enter water supplies via runoff from the watershed,
cattle feed lots, grazing operations and direct discharge of waste, all
of which represent significant contributors to contamination through runoff.
Cryptosporidium can be transmitted by water and may be present in any unfiltered
surface water. Cryptosporidium could also be present in poorly constructed
wells that allow the direct and immediate entry of raw surface water.
Water Quality Testing
The DES laboratory does not analyze water samples for cryptosporidium.
A partial list of commercial laboratories performing this test is given
on page three of this document. Laboratory testing of water samples for
cryptosporidium is very expensive and time consuming. The collection procedure
consists of filtering approximately 500 gallons of water through a cartridge
type particle filter, a process which takes approximately six hours. When
collection is completed, the cartridge sample must be refrigerated and
delivered to the laboratory within 24 hours. Actual processing of the cartridge
by the laboratory takes additional hours. Commercial laboratory testing
for cryptosporidium typically costs hundreds of dollars per sample.
Well Construction
Cryptosporidium are approximately twice as large as coliform organisms.
Thus if your well can resist the entry of minute organisms like coliform
then it certainly should be able to resist larger organisms like cryptosporidium.
Rather than conduct costly water testing for cryptosporidium, DES recommends
the following more practical approach to determining whether your well
is at risk relative to cryptosporidium.
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Inspect your well for proper construction. Carefully inspect the cover
and exposed sides of your well for a broken casing or leaking cover. Look
for any construction weaknesses where animal waste, insects, or unfiltered
surface water could enter the well. Repair as necessary. If you need further
information concerning good well construction, please request DES fact
sheets concerning "Bedrock Well Design" WD-WSEB-1-2 or "Dug Well Design"
WD-WSEB-1-4.
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Once the well's defects have been repaired, and the well has been disinfected,
take samples for coliform bacteria. These samples should be taken after
a heavy rain and spaced out over weeks or months. We suggest taking 3 or
4 coliform bacteria samples and evaluating the results.
If Bacteria Is Absent
There is no direct relationship between coliform bacteria and cryptosporidium.
If your well is properly constructed and the aquifer provides adequate
filtration, then cryptosporidium should not be present in groundwater.
Where no coliform bacteria are detected after multiple samples, one can
reasonably conclude that the well's construction and the aquifer's filtration
are adequate to prevent the entry of cryptosporidium.
If Bacteria Is Present
Where coliform bacteria are detected, the well must be judged as at
risk to cryptosporidium and other potentially harmful organisms. In such
cases the well's construction or aquifer's filtration must be further evaluated.
Where the well's construction is judged to be sufficient, but bacteria
still continue to be present, other actions should be taken. Options include
drilling another well or installing a continuous disinfection system. Please
note that cryptosporidium is particularly hardy and very resistant to disinfection
by chlorine. In addition, the weakness of disinfection is that on occasions
the concentration of bacteria from the still unknown source may exceed
the capability of the disinfection system, thus leaving the user unprotected.
Laboratories Performing Cryptosporidium Analysis:*
Environmental Associates
24 Oak Brook Drive
Ithaca, NY 14850
1-607-272-8902 |
Marl Associates
PO Box 268
Marshfield, MA 02050
1-781-837-1395 |
CH Diagnostic and Consulting Service
214 SE 19th Street
Loveland, Colorado 80537
1 970-667-9789 fax |
Analytical Services, Inc.
PO Box 515, 130 Allen Brook Lane
Williston, VT 05495
1-802-878-5138 |
| *This is only a partial listing. No DES endorsement is
implied. |
FOR MORE INFORMATION
If you have further questions pertaining to your water supply please
contact the DES' Water Supply Engineering Bureau at (603) 271-3139. If
you have further questions concerning the disease cryptosporidiosis, please
call the Health Risk Assessment Unit of the Department of Public Health
at 271-4664. We would appreciate your comments on this fact sheet. For
a list of all drinking water fact sheets, please request WD-WSEB-15-2.
Drinking water fact sheets are available through the DES web site at: www.des.state.nh.us/ws.htm
then select fact sheets. 4/03
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