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Fever in the returning traveller Part II. Dr Viviana Elliott Consultant Acute Medicine. Viral haemorrhagic Fever . Lassa fever RARE!!! Only VHF reported inUK Dengue Others Ebola Marburg Yellow fever Malaria: Plasmodium falciparum
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Fever in the returning traveller Part II Dr Viviana Elliott Consultant Acute Medicine
Viral haemorrhagic Fever Lassa fever RARE!!! Only VHF reported inUK Dengue Others Ebola Marburg Yellow fever Malaria: Plasmodium falciparum 5000 x common than Lassa fever!!!!! Fever, rural area, likely contact, high fever , severe exudative sore throat, prostration out of proportion with fever
Malaria • Should be thought in febrile illness in travellers returning to Europe from tropic Sub - Saharan Africa
Early diagnosis and assessment of severity is vital to avoid deaths Symptoms are non specific Almost 50% are a febrile on presentation but all have history of fever Consider country of travel, stopovers and date of return. Incubation: at least 6 days and within 3 months more with prophylaxis Consider other infections: Typhoid fever, hepatitis, dengue fever, avian influenza, SARS, HIV, Meningitis, Encephalittis and VHF
Urgent investigations • Thick (find it) and thin (typify it) and rapid antigen test ( less sensitive for non falciparum, no info about parasite count, maturity or mixed species. Use in adjunct with microscopy) • FBC: Thrombocytopenia, U&Es, LFT and GLUCOSE • BCM for typhoid and other bacteriemia • Urine dipstick for haemoglobinuria and culture. Stool culture if diarrhoea • CXR to r/o CAP
LaLaboratory diagnostic approach Diagnostic Approach FBC Eosinophils: helminth, drugs. Unlikely bacterial LFTs
Enteric Fever(Typhoid and Paratyphoid)) • Commonest serious tropical disease from Asia • Distribution: worldwide in developing countries • Asia and south east Asia >100 cases per 100.000 person per year 77% in person visiting friends and family • Most cases occur 7 – 18 days after exposure range 3-60 days
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
Treatment • Unstable treat empirically pending BCM • First choice: Ceftriaxone 2g iv • 70% of isolated S typhi and paratyphi imported into Uk are resistant to Cipro • In patients returning from Africa resistance 4% • If resistance to Cipro, Azitromycin • NOTE: fever take some time to respond regardless of antibiotic use failure to defervesce is not a reason to change antibiotics if sensitive
Rickettsia: Common infection in travellers to games parks in southern Africa
Common presentation • Incubation: 5-7 days (up to 10 days) • Non specific fever, head ache , mialgia, inoculation echar/rash and lymphadenitis • Consider other causes of fever and skin lesions wich resembles echar: Antrax African Trypanosomiasis (chancre at site of tsetse fly bite)
R Conorii: single R Africae: multiple R Typhi
Investigations • Treatment should be started on suspicion : - illness onset within 10 days - exposure to tick in game park - fever and headache with or without rash • Doxycyxline 100 mg bd for 7 days or 48 hs after fever defervescence • Confimation IFA paired initial and convalescence –phase serum sample • If wider differential is considered: Cipro or Azithromycin
Arbovirus infection • Commonest arboviral infection in returning travellers to the UK are Dengue and Chikungunya • Incubation: 4 – 8 days (range 3-14) • Distribution: Asia and south America • Repoted >100 countries and annual global incidence 50-100 million per year • Transmission: Aedes aegypty
Clinical presentation • Mild febrile illness Headache- retro-orbital pain Myalgia - arthralgia (> back pain) Rash 1st erythrodermic 2nd petechial Bleeding gums, epistaxis and GI bleed Rarely hepatitis, myocarditis, encephalities and neuropathies Convalescence desquamation and post viral fatigue
Dengue 2 days later
Dengue diagnosis and treatment • Positive PCR or if symptoms> 5-7 days +IgM ELISA • Retrospective > 4 fold ↑ Ig G by haemoaglutination inhibition test • UK reference laboratory services: HPA Special Pathogens reference Unit, Poton Down • Treatment identify those patients at high risk of shock with daily FBC and platelets.
Acute Schistosomiasis • Katayama fever • Incubation: 4-6 weeks ( range 3-10 weeks) • Distribution: Africa (Asia- South America) • Transmission: Swimming in lakes or rivers Cercariae release from snails penetrates intact skin
Clinical presentation • Non specific signs and symptoms (? immune complex phenomenon) fever myalgiaarthralgia lethargy cough/wheeze headache rash ↑Liver/spleen diarrhoea • Investigations: eosinophilia egg urine-stools minority serology + seroconversion 0-6 months)
Treatment • Diagnosis: Fresh water exposure 4-8 weeks previously Fever-Urticarial rash-Eosinophilia • Treatment empiric!!!! • Praziquantel 2 doses 20 mg/kg, 4-6 hs apart (Mature Schistosomes) Repeat after 3 months ( Immature schistosomes) • Short course of Steroids may alleviate acute symptoms
Leptospirosis • Distribution: Worldwide including UK (> tropical and subtropical regions) • Risk: exposure to fresh surface water, rodents (infected urine) sports events river rafting rescue efforts after flooding
Leptospirosis clinical presentation • Incubation : 7 – 12 days (range 2-30 days) • Initial phase: “flu like symptoms” lasting 4-7 days • Immune phase: “Weil’s disease” 1-3 days later fever, myalgia (calves) haepatorrenal syndrome haemorrhages Conjunctiva suffusions suggestive
Other manifestations • GI: V-D, loss appetite, jaundice and hepatomegaly, liver failure, pancreatitis and GI bleed • Respiratory: Cough + SOB • Meningitis • ARF • Myocarditis • Haemorrages – may confuse DHF
Investigations • Urinalysis proteinuria/haematuria • FBC PMN leucocytosis Thrombocytopenia Anaemia • Clotting normal (capillary fragility) • LFT high bili + mildly raised ALT • U&Es ARF • Serology IgM titre > 1:320 (early infection) > 10 days after symptoms send for IgM ELISA+ Microscopic agglutination MAT to confirm diagnosis
Treatment • Upon suspicion • Penicillin and tetracycline antibiotics during bacteraemia phase • Un well patients and Weil’s disease need renal and liver support • Severe diseases is probably immunologically mediated ( ? Benefit from antibiotics)
Amoebic Liver Abscess • Incubation: 8-20 weeks ( up to a year) • Distribution : Worldwide > developing countries • Presentation: 67-98% Fever 72-95% Abdominal pain 43-93% Haepatomegaly 20% PMH dysentery 10% diarrhoea on diagnosis
Investigations • FBC neutrophil leucocytosis > 10 X 10 6 L • LFT dearranged ↑↑ Alk Pho • CRP/ESR raised • Indirect haemagglutination >90% sensitivity • Stools negative • CxR Raised hemi-diaphragm • USS DD piogenic abscess (percutanous aspiration) R/O Hydatidic disease first!
Treatment • Start empiric treatment in patients with suggestive history, epidemiology and imaging • Metronidazole 500 mg tds orally for 7-10 days ( Cure in 90%) • Tinidazole 2 g daily for 3 days (less nauseas) • Follow treatment with 10 days luminal amoebicide to reduce relapse. • Furoate 500 mg tds or Paromomycin 30 mg/kg per day in 3 divided doses
Brucellocis • Incubation: 2-4 weeks (up to 6 months) • Distribution: world-wide ( Middle East, URRS, Balkan Peninsula and Mediterranean basin) • Transmission: infected unpasteurised milk products. Farmers, vets with contact infected parts.
Clinical presentation • Fever Commonest presentation acute with rigors or chronic low grade relapsing • Lymphadenopathy • Hepatosplenomegaly Complications: • Osteoarticular disease OA: knees, hips, ankles and wrists Sacroillitis lumbar spine
Other complications • Epididymo-orchitis • Septic abortions • Neurological: meningitis encephalitis brain abcess • Endocarditis: Aortic valve and requires early surgery
Investigations and treatment • LFT: mild transaminitis • FBC: pancytopenia • Bone marrow: gold standard • BCM: sensitivity 15-70% (prolong cultures up to 4 weeks) Note: Q Fever, rarer, similar from same area Serology is key diagnosis!! • Treatment: Doxycycline and Rifampicin 6-8 weeks + amynoglucosides 2 weeks • Relapse 10 %
HIV • Prevalence in tropical countries is high 1/3 sexually active population and not restricted to high-risk groups • 5-51% travellers take part in casual sex while abroad • HIV seroconversion and syphilis can present as febrile illness