fever in a returned traveller Flashcards
how will travel related illness generally manifest?
- GI symptoms
- jaundice
- respiratory symptoms
- rash
what things should be established in the history?
- geographic region of travel within last 12 months
- dates of travel and duration of stay
- time on onset of symptoms
- type of accommodate (rural vs urban)
- recreation activities and exposures
- type of food and water consumed
- sexual history and exposure
- PMH
what tropical illnesses have an incubation period of 0-10 days from exposure?
Dengue, rickettsia, viral (including infectious mononucleosis), gastrointestinal (bacteria / amoeba)
what tropical illnesses have an incubation period of 10-21 days from exposure?
Malaria, typhoid, primary HIV infection
what tropical illnesses have an incubation period of >21 days from exposure?
Malaria, chronic bacterial infections (e.g. brucella, coxiella, endocarditis, bone and joint infections); TB; parasitic infections (helminths/protozoa)
what pre travel immunisations can be given?
Vaccination against hepatitis A, hepatitis B, typhoid, tetanus + yellow fever and rabies when appropriate
can consider malarial chemoprophylaxis if area is high risk
(NB: when they present check their vaccination history e.g for MMR)
what illnesses can cause a maculopapular rash?
dengue fever, leptospirosis, rickettsia, infectious mononucleosis (EBV, CMV), childhood viruses (rubella, parvovirus B19), primary HIV infection
what illnesses can cause splenomegaly?
mononucleosis, malaria, visceral leishmaniasis, typhoid fever, brucellosis
what can a fever and altered mental status in the returned traveller indicate?
may represent meningo-encephalitis and is a medical emergency. E.g. cerebral malaria, Japanese encephalitis and West Nile Virus encephalitis.
Do not forget common infective causes (N. meningitis, Strep. Pneumonia, Herpes simplex virus (HSV)).
what investigations should be done?
- Complete blood count with differential
- LFTs
- U+E, electrolytes
- Malaria smears ± antigen detection dipstick: at least 3 times over 24-48 hours
- Blood cultures x2 (must have biohazard labels/travel documented)
- Urinalysis (± urine culture)
- Stool culture +/- stool for ova, cysts and parasites (OCP)
- Chest x-ray
- HIV, Hep B, Hep C and Syphillis (treponema) serology (white top)
- Acute serology tube to be saved in lab (white top)