Tropical Gastroenterology Flashcards

1
Q

History of a returned traveller?

A

Where have they been? - rural/urban, accomodation (air con)

When did they go?

When did they get back?

When did they start becoming unwell?

Did they have insect bites – any tick bites?

What are their symptoms?

Is anyone else unwell?

What did they do when away?

Swimming/water sports/animal contact/bat caves/walking in bush/sex/work?

What precautions did they take – vaccinations/malaria prophylaxis/bite protection/condoms?

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2
Q

Examination of a returned traveller?

A
Fever
Rash
Hepatosplenomegaly
Lymphadenopathy
Insect bites
Wounds
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3
Q

Causes of fever in a returned traveller?

A

Respiratory tract infections – pneumonia/influenza
Traveler’s diarrhoea
Malaria
Enteric fever (typhoid/paratyphoid fever)
Arboviruses – Dengue/Chikungunya

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4
Q

Typical cause of acute traveller’s causes and others (bacteria, viruses, parasitic)?

A

Typically enterotoxigenic E. coli
Also, Campylobacter, Salmonella, Shigella
Cruise ships – Norovirus and rotavirus
Others – Amoebic diarrhoea

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5
Q

Causes of dysentery?

A

Bacterial causes include E.coli o157 and Amoebic colitis

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6
Q

Causes of profuse watery diarrhoea?

A

Cholera - toxin mediated disease often assoc. with outbreaks in refugee camps

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7
Q

Treatment of acute traveller’s diarrhoea?

A

Supportive – fluid rehydration (oral/IV)

Bloody diarrhea with systemic upset may warrant treatment

In those travelling a fluoroquinolone (ciprofloxacin) single dose can stop worsening (a three day course is often recommended - simple gastroenteritis will resolve without treatment)

Antibiotic resistance – macrolide (azithromycin) may be more useful

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8
Q

What is enteric fever?

A

Typhoid or paratyphoid fever, caused by Salmonella typhi or paratyphi,
that is common in those returning from Indian subcontinent and SE Asia

Incubation period 7-18 days (though occasionally up to 60 days)

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9
Q

Symptoms and complications of enteric fever?

A

Fever

Non-specific:
Headache
Constipation or diarrhoea
Dry cough

Complications:
GI bleeding
GI perforation
Encephalopathy
Bone and joint infection
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10
Q

Pre-hepatic, hepatic and post-hepatic causes of fever and jaundice?

A

Pre-hepatic (haemolytic):
Malaria
HUS as complication of diarrhoeal illness – E.coli 0157, Shigella
Sickle cell crisis triggered by infection

Hepatic:
Hep A and E – acute (occasionally Hep B)
Leptospirosis – Weils diseases (Icteric, haemorrhagic and renal failure)
Malaria
Enteric fever
Typhus
Viral haemorrhagic fever

Post-hepatic – ascending cholangitis – and helminths

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11
Q

Symptoms of amoebic liver abscess?

A

Incubation period 8-20 weeks:
Symptoms develop over 2-4 weeks, inc. fever, cough, aching abdominal pain, hepatomegaly, sometimes a history of GI upset (dysentery)

Usually male

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12
Q

Ix and signs of amoebic liver abscess?

A

CXR - raised right hemi-diaphragm.

Abnormal LFTs
USS/CT scan
Serology
Stool microscopy often negative.

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13
Q

What are helminth infections??

A

Parasitic, e.g: Ascariasis worms

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14
Q

Example of protozoal infections?

A

Giardia lamblia

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