Travel medicine

Fever

  1. get incubation period- if > 1mo, dengue, rickettsia, viral hem fvr less likely
  2. cbc c diff, thick smear, lft, ua, blood/ stool cx, cxr, serologies for specific viruses

Malaria

Dengue

Rickettsia/ Typhus

  1. fvr, ha, myalgia
  2. xmitted by arthropods/ ticks
  3. painless eschar at inoculation site imp clue
  4. camping, hiking in grassy/ scrub area
  5. regional LN, rash, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia
  6. dx clinically
  7. tx c tetracycline
  8. confirm serologically

Leptospirosis

Typhoid Fever

Hemorrhagic Fever

  1. meningococcemia, malaria, leptospirosis, rickettsia- all treatable with abx
  2. also untreatable viruses- dengue, yellow fvr- but hem forms rarely seen in travelers
  3. also consider Ebola and Lassa fever- public health hazard
  4. h/o visit to rural area or contact with ill people in endemic area
  5. usually 3 wk after exposure

CNS Changes and Fever

  1. malaria, tb, typhoid fvr, rickettsia, poliomyelitis, rabies, viral (Japanese/ West Nile/ tick borne) encephalitis
  2. meningococcal meningitis assoc with Haj to Mecca
  3. eosinophilic meningitis assoc c coccidiomycosis or angiostrongyliasis- rat lung worm to brain
  4. trypanosomiasis by tsetse fly- Africal sleeping sickness- red chancre at site of fly bite, fvr, ha, myalgia going to meningoencephalitis. May see trypansosomes in smear in acute phase

Resp Sx and Fever

  1. consider strep pneumonia, influenza, mycoplasma, legionella, tb
  2. Q Fever- coxiella burnetti- fvr, pna, hepatitis and animal exposure
  3. Lofflers syn- pulm infiltrates, eosinophilia from transient migration of larval helminthes through lungs
  4. Cough also seen in malaria, typhoid fvr, scrub typhus, dengue

Sex/ Blood Exposure and Fever

  1. can have fvr without genital findings- hiv, syphilis (treponema pallidum) cmv, ebv, hep B
  2. also from tattoo, piercing, share razor, blood xfsn

Eosinophilic Fever

  1. >400 per cubic mm
  2. due to blood CA or allergy or helminthic infc
  3. hookworm, ascariasis, strongyloides, schistosomiasis, filariasis, visceral larva migrans, trichinosis, cocci
  4. eval with stool for O&P
  5. serology
  6. blood smear
  7. skin snips for microfilariae

Traveler's Diarrhea

Skin Conditions

Papules

  1. insect bites- cluster or linear distribution
  2. scabies- if sex active or backpacker
  3. seabathers eruption- confined to skin covered by swim suit- jellyfish larvae trapped under cloth
  4. cercarial dermatitis- skin exposed to freshwater schistosomes or coastal water clam diggers itch

Sub Q Swelling and Nodules

  1. myasis- skin invaded by fly larvae- like boil but with central opening in which larvae may hide
  2. tungiasis
  3. loa loa
  4. trypanosomiasis

Ulcers

  1. pyoderma/ ecthyma- secondary staph cellulitits post bite
  2. leishmaniasis
  3. mycobacterium marinum

Linear and Migratory Lesions

  1. cutaneous larvae migrans- by soil contact with dog/ cat feces
  2. photodermatitis

Source

Mistry