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Fever in the returning traveller . Viviana Elliott Consultant Acute Medicine. Aims. To provide a practical initial approach to the diagnosis and management of febrile adult returning from abroad. Objectives. To be able to understand the importance of the topic
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Fever in the returning traveller Viviana Elliott Consultant Acute Medicine
Aims To provide a practical initial approach to the diagnosis and management of febrile adult returning from abroad.
Objectives • To be able to understand the importance of the topic • To be able to take a direct related history • To be able to correlate incubation period with most likely diagnosis • To be able to identify diagnosis that you can’t miss • To be able to “call a friend” if you are not sure
Objectives • To be able to understand the importance
World travel • Students • 2 universities • Coventry college • Lecturers • Elective students: medics, vets • Visiting family and relatives • Holiday
Objectives • To be able to understand the importance • To be able to take a direct related history
History • Brief • Directed • Workout timescales • Then you can calculate incubation periods and group likely causes • Bonus points if you find something on examination
“5 W questions” • Who? • What? • Where? • When? • Why?
“5 W questions” • Who? • What? • Where? • When? • Why?
Who? – risk factors • Travellers • Sub-Saharan • TB • HIV • Homosexual • HIV • Viral Hepatitis • Heterosexual • Random casual sexual encounters • Sex Tourism e.g. Thailand • South Asian? • TB • Others- Tattoos,Piercings, Recreational drug use (IVDU, Dysinhibition)
“5 W questions” • Who? • What? • Where? • When? • Why?
What? • Occupation • Farmer recently died of listeria at UHCW • Sewerage workers and leptospirosis • Activities • Ramblers and tick bites eg. Lyme disease • Animal contact
“5 W questions” • Who? • What? • Where? • When? • Why?
Where? Details of travel • Malaria endemic country? • Sub-Saharan Africa • TB • Malaria • HIV • South Asian • TB • HIV • Malaria • East Asia • Swine Flu or Bird flu • HIV • Eastern Europe • MDRTB XDRTB • www.cdc.gov
“5 W questions” • Who? • What? • Where? • When? • Why?
When? • When did they go? • When did they return? • When did the symptoms start?
Objectives • To be able to understand the importance • To be able to take a direct related history • To be able to correlate incubation period with most likely diagnosis
Incubation period • Short (<10 days) • Medium (10-21 days) • Long (>21 days)
Short (<10 days) • Gastroenteritis • Respiratory infection -LRTI- Bronchitis and Pneumonia • Urinary tract infections Common things first!
Medium 10-21 days • Malaria • Enteric fever
Long (>21 days) • Viral hepatitis • Malaria • TB • HIV
“5 W questions” • Who? • What? • Where? • When? • Why?
Why? (travellers) • Did they go for sex? • Whom did they have sex with? • Package holiday? • Low risk
Objectives • To be able to understand the importance • To be able to take a direct related history • To be able to correlate incubation period with most likely diagnosis • To be able to identify diagnosis that you can’t miss
Key diagnoses not to miss • Malaria • Enteric fever • HIV • TB • Because if missed they can result in… • Death • Chronic disability
Malaria • Originated probably form animal Malaria in central Africa • Spread around the world by human migration • 500 million people infected every year • Holoendemic (most people infected) Sub-saharan Africa > 75 % rate Transmission all year round 75% of the deaths are in children under 5 Adults significant immunity low parasitemia few symptoms
Malaria in the UK • Imported into the UK from tropical countries 1500-2000 cases reported each year 10-20 deaths
Human Malaria – 4 species • ¾ reported malaria cases in the UK are caused by Plasmodium falciparum, which can lead to life threatening multi-organ disease. • Most non-falciparum malaria cases are caused by Plasmodium vivax • Few cases are caused by Plasmodium ovale or Plasmodium malariae.
Clinical presentation • In non-immune individuals(children in any area, adults in hypoendemica area (0-10 % rate) and visitors to non- malarious region • Incubation 10-21 days (longer) • Symptoms: Malaise Fever (up to 41˚ C) Rigors Drenching sweats Vomiting or diarrhoea
P. vivax or P. ovale infection • Mild illness • Gradual anaemia • May be tender hepatomegaly • Recovery 2-4 weeks • Hypnozoites in liver can cause relapses for many years after infection • Chronic ill health due to anaemia and hyperactive splenomegaly
P. malariae infection • Mild illness but tends to run a more chronic course • In children can cause Glonerulonephritis and nephrotic syndrome
P. falciparium • Vast majority of malaria death are due to P. Falciparum • Patients deteriorate rapidly • Higher risk of bacterial infections • “Blackwater fever” is due to widespread intravascular haemolysis affecting parasitized and unparasitized red cell giving rise to dark urine
Specific and urgent investigation “Malaria parasites” • Thick (find it) • Thin (typify it) • Rapid antigen test Less sensitive for non falciparum No info about parasite count, maturity or mixed species Use in adjunct with microscopy
Why high risk of hypoglycaemia? • Plasmodium use of glucose 75% greater than normal red cell • Quinine and Quinidine stimulates secretion of insuline • Associated to cerebral malaria > children and pregnant woman
Key featuresMalaria • Malaria is a medical emergency and patients withsuspected malaria should be evaluated immediately • Return travellers with fever and any other symptoms • Geographical distribution ( beware of package holidays to the Gambia) • Think of relapse in the absence of recent travel
Enteric Fever • 16 million new cases worldwide mainly India and Africa • 600.000death per year • Typhoid is caused by Salmonella typhi Typical form of Enteric Fever • Paratyphoid is caused by Salmonella paratyphy A,B or C Less severe illness
Acute systemic illness: • Incubation period: 10-14 days • Food/water- borne • Symptoms: • Headache • Fever • Abdominal discomfort
Clinical Presentation of Enteric Fever Fever is almost invariable relative bradycardia only first week
Clinical Presentation of Enteric Fever • Constipation more common than diarrhoea initial loose stools fairly common • Maybe evanescent rash: “Rose spots”
Investigations • First Week: Bloods: low WBC, platelets and mildly raised LFTs BCM positive 40-80% • Second week Urine culture 0-58% Stool culture 35-65% Bone marrow higher sensitivity than BCM • Newer rapid serology IgM against specific S Typhi • Widal test lacks sensitivity and specificity not recommended
Complications • Incidence: 10-15% illness >2 weeks • GI Bleed • Intestinal perforation • Typhoid encephalopathy Vaccination provides incomplete protection