Travel Related Infections Flashcards

1
Q

What is vulnerability of travelers to infection impacted by?

A
  • Temptation to take risks away from home
    • food, water, animals, sex
  • Different epidemiology of some diseases
    • HIV, TB, polio, diphtheria
  • Incomplete understanding of health hazards
  • Stress of travel
  • Refugees: deprivation, malnutrition, disease, injury
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2
Q

What are some common infections worldwide?

A
  • influenza
  • community-acquired pneumonia
  • meningococcal disease
  • sexually transmitted diseases
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3
Q

What are some climate or environmental health problems?

A
  • Sunburn
  • Heat exhaustion and heatstroke
  • Fungal infections
  • Bacterial skin infections
  • Cold injury
  • Altitude sickness
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4
Q

What are some public health measures to control infection?

A
  • Sanitation
    • Travelers’ diarrhoea
    • Typhoid
    • Hepatitis A or E
    • Giardiasis
    • Amoebiasis
    • Helminth infections
    • Viral gastroenteritis
    • Food poisoning
    • Shigella dysentery
    • Cholera
    • Cryptosporidiosis
  • Immunization
    • Poliomyelitis
    • Diphtheria
  • Education
    • HIV
    • STD’s
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5
Q

What are some water related infections?

A
  • Schistosomiasis
  • Leptospirosis
  • Liver flukes
  • Strongyloidiasis
  • Hookworms
  • Guinea worms
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6
Q

What are some arthropod-borne infections?

A
  • Malaria (mosquitos)
  • Dengue fever (mosquitos)
  • Rickettsial infections (ticks: typhus)
  • Leishmaniasis (sand flies: Kala-azar)
  • Trypanosomiasis (tsetse fly: sleeping sickness)
  • Filariasis (mosquitoes: elephantiasis)
  • Onchocerciasis (black flies: River Blindness)
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7
Q

What is the malaria vector?

A

Malaria vector is the female anopheles mosquito

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8
Q

Describe the malaria lifecycle?

A

1) Bite
2) Sporozoite released
3) Becomes merozoitres in liver
4) Infects red blood cells

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9
Q

What are the 5 species of malaira?

A
  • Potentially severe
    • Plasmodium falciparum
  • Benign
    • Plasmodium vivax
    • Plasmodium ovale
    • Plasmodium malariae
    • Plasmodium knowlesi
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10
Q

What are the clinical features of malaria?

A
  • Symptoms
    • fever
    • rigors
    • aching bones
    • abdo pain
    • headache
    • dysuria
    • frequency
    • sore throat
    • cough
  • Signs
    • none
    • splenomegaly
    • hepatomegaly
    • mild jaundice
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11
Q

What are some potential complications of malaria?

A
  • Cerebral malaria (encephalopathy)
  • Blackwater fever
  • Pulmonary oedema
  • Jaundice
  • Severe anaemia
  • Algid malaria
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12
Q

How is malaria diagnosed?

A
  • Thick and thin blood films
  • Quantitative buffy coat (QBC)
  • Rapid antigen tests
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13
Q

How is severity of malaria measured?

A

Severity assessment, complicated malaria has one or more of:

  • Impaired consciousness or seizures
  • Hypoglycaemia
  • Parasite count ³2%
  • Haemoglobin £ 8mg/dL
  • Spontaneous bleeding / DIC
  • Haemoglobinuria
  • Renal impairment or pH <7.3
  • Pulmonary oedema or ARDS
  • Shock (algid malaria)
  • ?Gram negative bacteraemia
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14
Q

What is the 1st and 2nd line treatment of malaria?

A
  • 1) Quinine
  • 2) Artemisinins
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15
Q

What are the treatment options for malaria?

A
  • Uncomplicated malaria
    • Riamet (3 days)
    • Eurartesim (3 days)
    • Malarone (3 days)
    • Quinine (7 days) plus oral doxycycline
  • Complicated or severe P. Falciparum malaria
    • IV artesunate (unlicensed in UK)
    • IV quinine plus oral doxycycline
  • Treatment of P. Vivax, P. Ovale, P. Malariae, P. Knowlesi
    • Chloroquine 3 days
    • Riamet 3 days
    • Add primaquine 14 days in vivax and ovale to eradicate liver hyponozoites
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16
Q

What are some methods of controlling malaria?

A
  • Mosquito breeding sites
    • Drainage of standing water
  • Larvacides
    • (Paris green), temphos, biological
  • Mosquito killing sprays
    • DDT, malathion, (dieldrin)
  • Human behaviour
    • Bed nets
    • Mesh windows
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17
Q

Typhoid fever is also known as what?

A

Enteric fever

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18
Q

Typhoid is caused by what organisms?

A
  • Salmonella typhi
  • Salmonella paratyphi
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19
Q

What are the clinical features of typhoid?

A
  • Incubation period: 7 days - 4 week
  • 1st week:
    fever, headache, abdo. discomfort, constipation, dry cough, relative bradycardia, neutrophilia, confusion
  • 2nd week:
    fever peaks at 7-10 days, Rose spots, diarrhoea begins, tachycardia, neutropenia
  • 3rd week (Complications):
    intestinal bleeding, perforation, peritonism, metastatic infections
  • week 4 (Recovery):
    10 - 15% relapse
20
Q

How is typhoid diagnosed?

A
  • Clinical is not easy, done by evolution of features
  • Laboratory
    • Culture blood, urine and stool
    • Culture bone marrow
21
Q

What is the treatment of typhoid?

A
  • Oral azithromycin
    • If uncomplicated
  • IV ceftriaxone
    • If complicated or concerned regarding absorption
22
Q

What is dengue caused by?

A

Dengue virus

23
Q

What is the vector of dengue?

A

Mosquito borne (aedes aegypti)

24
Q

What are the clinical features of dengue?

A
  • Sudden fever
  • Severe headache, retro-orbital pain
  • Severe myalgia and arthralgia
  • Macular/ maculopapular rash
  • Haemorrhagic signs: petechiae, purpura, positive tourniquet test
25
How is dengue diagnosed?
* Clinical * Thrombocytopenia * Leucopenia * Elevated transaminases * Positive tourniquet test * Laboratory * PCR * Serology
26
Describe the management of dengue?
* No specific therapeutic agents * Complications * Dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF) * Dengue shock syndrome (DSS) * Rx: IV fluids, fresh frozen plasma, platelets * Prevention * Avoid bites * New vaccine (Dengvaxia)
27
What is schistosomiasis also known as?
Snail fever
28
What is schistosomiasis caused by?
Parasite flatworms called schistosomes
29
What is the vector of schistosomiasis?
Freshwater snails
30
What are different species of schistosomes?
* *S. haematobium* * *S. mansoni* * *S. japonicum*
31
What are the different kinds of schistosomiasis?
Can be hepatic or urinary infection (or a mix)
32
Describe the lifecycle of schistosomiasis?
33
What are the clinical features of schistosomiasis?
* **Swimmers Itch** (1st few hrs) * clears 24-48hrs * **Invasive stage** (after 24hrs) * cough, abdo discomfort, splenomegaly, eosinophilia * **Katayama Fever** (after 15-20 days) * prostrate, fever, urticaria, lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, diarrhoea, eosinophilia * **Acute disease** (6-8 weeks) * eggs deposited in bowel (dysentery) or bladder (haematuria) * **Chronic disease**
34
How is schistosomiasis diagnosed?
* Clinical diagnosis * Antibody tests * Ova in stools and urine * Rectal snip
35
What is the treatment for schistosomiasis?
* Praziquantel * 20mg/kg * Prednisolone if severe
36
What organism caused tick thyphys?
Caused by rickettsiosis
37
What are some different illnesses caused by rickettsiosis?
* Tick typhus (*R. conorii, R. africae*) * Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (*R. rickettsii*) * Epidemic typhus (*R. prowazekii*) * Murine or endemic typhus (*R. mooseri*) * Scrub typhus (*R. tsutsugamushi*) * others
38
What are some clinical features of tick typhus?
* Abrupt onset of fever * Headache * Confusion * Endovasculitis * Rash * Bleeding
39
How is tick typhus diagnosed?
* Clinical features * Serology
40
Describe the management of tick typhus?
* Tetracycline
41
What are examples of viral haemorrhagic fevers?
These are serious infections but rare in UK: * Ebola * Congo-Crimea haemorrhagic fever * Lassa fever * Marburg disease
42
What is the treatment for viral haemorrhagic fevers?
Rule out common severe infections Requires isolation in high security infection unit Only treatment is supportive
43
What causes zika?
Flavivirus
44
What is the vector of zika?
Transmitted by daytime-biting aedes mosquitoes, or sexual contact or blood transfusion
45
What are clinical features of zika?
* No or mild symptoms * Headache * Rash * Fever * Malaise * Conjunctivitis * Joint pains * In pregnancy can cause microcephaly and other neurological problems
46
What is the treatment of zika?
* No antiviral therapy * Mosquito control measures * Vaccines in development
47
What illnesses have specific tests available?
* dengue * respiratory viral/atypical * hepatitis A, B, C * tick typhus (Rickettsia) * schistosomiasis * amoebic * leptospirosis/hantavirus * viral haemorrhagic fevers