Fever in a returned traveller

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Revision as of 13:55, 20 November 2019 by Aidan (talk | contribs) (: initial table)

History

  • Pretravel
    • Vaccinations
    • Prophylaxis, e.g. malaria
    • Vector protection, including bed nets and mosquito spray
  • Travel
    • Make explicit timeline of locations visited, for how long
    • Assess activities and exposures in each location
    • Food and water
    • Recreational water
    • Animals
    • Vectors
    • Sex
  • Combine timeline of exposures with incubation periods to rule out diseases
    • Dengue: 3-5 days
    • Malaria: 7-21 days
    • Hepatitis A: 6 days to 6 weeks
    • Hepatitis B: 1-6 months
    • Typhoid: 7-21 days
    • Non-typhoidal Salmonella: 3-7 days

Differential Diagnosis

Disease Incubation Distribution Exposures Diagnosis
Viruses
Avian influenza 2-8 days East and Southeast Asia Poultry PCR
MERS-CoV 2-14 days Arabian peninsula Infected humans or camels PCR
Ebola, Lassa fever, or Marburg hemorrhagic fever up to 22 days Africa Infected humans and animals PCR
Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever 1-9 days (tick) or 3-13 days (contact) Southern Europe, Middle East, Africa, northwestern China Ixodes ticks or infected humans or animals PCR

Investigations

  • First-line
    • CBC
    • Liver enzymes and function, for viral hepatitides
    • Electrolytes, urea, and creatinine
    • Urinalysis, for proteinuria that would suggest Leptospirosis
    • Blood cultures x2, for enteric/typhoid fever
    • Thick and thin smears x3 over 3 days, for malaria
  • Based on history and lab results
    • Urine culture
    • Stool culture and O&P
    • Hepatitis serologies
    • Serology for zika, chikungunya, and dengue viruses, with repeat in 14 days if negative
    • C. difficile toxin
    • NP swab

Further Reading