Travel Infections Flashcards

1
Q

If a travel infection isn’t treated with antibiotics what kind of differential diagnosis are you thinking?

A

Parasite - maybe malaria

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2
Q

Why is travel history important?

A

Gives idea of imported diseases
Helps identify treatment
Different strains of pathogen antigenically different
Antibiotic resistance

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3
Q

What should you ask in the travel history?

A
When they went
When they came back
Have they been in contact with anyone unwell
Pre travel vaccinations
Preventative measures
Recreational activities
Healthcare exposure
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4
Q

What are symptoms/signs malaria?

A

Sometimes NONE

Othertimes - Fatigue, fever, malaise, hepatosplenomegaly, fever can be tertian

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5
Q

What are the three most common species of malaria?

A

Plasmodium falciparum
Plasmodium ovale
Plasmodium vivax

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6
Q

What is the method of transmission of malaria?

A

Vector - female mosquito

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7
Q

Can you have case to case spread?

A

No

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8
Q

If the person has travelled from Africa what is the most likely plasmodium?

A

Falciforum

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9
Q

If the person has travelled from India what are the two most likely plasmodiums?

A

Ovale

Vivax

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10
Q

What is the incubation period?

A

Min 6 days
P falciform up to 6/12
P vivax/ovale up to 1 year

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11
Q

Why such a long incubation period?

A

Due to dormant stage in liver

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12
Q

On examination what might you see indicating malaria?

A

Not much apart from increased temp and splenomegaly

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13
Q

Which is the most severe malaria? Why? How much burden do you need?

A

Falciparum - only need 2% burden
Can lead to microvasc occlusion which can lead to cardiac problems, acute respiratory distress syndrome DIC CNS problems, tachy, diarrhoea etc.

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14
Q

What is the lifecycle of malaria in an infected human?

A
Malaria infected mosquito bites 
Releases sporozoites 
Travel to liver and infect liver cells 
Mature into schizonts 
Form merozoites 
Lyse and release into blood stream
Infect RBCs - form more merozoites
and so on...lyse etc
Some meozoites become gametocytes - female mosquito feeding can pick up these gametocytes and become infected
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15
Q

What blood tests would you do for malaria? Other tests?

A

3 x blood films - thick and thin (thick looks at parasites in general - thin looks more closely at malaria parasites)
Rapid antigen test

Blood cultures - to check for bacterial origin
FBCs - platlets/WBC/RBC etc
LFTs - deranged 
Albumin - indication of liver function
Bilirubin- raised in haemolysis due to breakdown of haem
Glucose - gives hypoglycaemia
Clotting if platelets low
CRP - inflammation
U and Es - affects kidneys

Chest Xray

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16
Q

What blood results might you see for malaria?

A
Positive blood film for parasite 
Positive antigen test
Raised bilirubin due to haemolysis
Deranged LFTs due to liver dysfunction
Low/normal WBC
Low platelets
Hypoglycaemic
17
Q

What is the treatment for malaria?

A

Falciparum - artesunate. quinine + doxycycline

Viviax and ovale - chloroquine and primaquine

18
Q

Which enzyme deficiency disorder are you concerned about in someone with malaria?

A

G6PDH - as get haemolytic anaemia. Will be even worse with malaria

19
Q

Why can’t you give chloroquine and primaquine to falciparum malaria?

A

Resistant

20
Q

What is the ABC of malaria prevention?

A

A - assess risk/knowledge of area
B - bite prevention - clothes, nets, repellant
C - chemoprophylaxis - start before and continue after return

21
Q

What are differentials for malaria?

A

Typhoid
Dengue
Rickettsial infection
Meningococcal septicaemia

22
Q

If Salmonella typhi is on blood culture what is the diagnosis? Where would you catch this most likely? What from? What is the method of transmission? What is the incubation period? Symptoms?

A

Typhoid/paratyphoid
Asia
Poor sanitation
Falco-Oral - cases or carriers only - human pathogen
7-10 days
Fever headache abdominal discomfort constipation dry cough
Relative bradycardia

23
Q

What is a major complication of salmonella typhi?

A

Intestinal haemorrhage and perforation - 10% mortality if untreated

24
Q

What is the difference between typhoid/paratyphoid?

A

Paratyphoid is generally milder

25
Q

How would you diagnose typhoid?

A

Culture - blood/faeces
Moderate anaemia
Relative lymphopenia
Raised LFTs (transaminase and bilirubin)

26
Q

How do you treat typhoid?

A

Ceftriaxone

27
Q

How do you prevent typhoid (2)?

A

Food and water hygiene precautions
Typhoid vaccine
Live attenuated vaccine - 50-75% effect

28
Q

What are the differentials for fever and rash?

A

Measles, mumps, rubella, EBV, CMV, acute HIV, dengue

29
Q

How do you test for dengue?

A

Viral PCR

IgM antibody serology

30
Q

What kind of virus is dengue?

A

Arbovirus

31
Q

What is the interesting thing about dengue?

A

2nd time infected with different serotype = antibody dependent enhancement and severe haemorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome

32
Q

What are the symptoms of dengue?

A

Asymptomatic to severe febrile illness
Rash
Fever

33
Q

What virus causes Ebola?

A

Filovirus

34
Q

What are the symptoms?

A

Flu like with vomitting, diarrhoea, headaches, confusion, internal/external bleeding at 5-7days.

35
Q

How is it spread?

A

Direct contact with body fluids

36
Q

How is it treated? Prevented?

A

Antivirals
Monoclonal antibiotics

Now have vaccine

37
Q

What is Zika virus?

A

Arbovirus - differential for dengue - flu like

38
Q

What is the important thing to remember about Zika virus? Is there any vaccine or treatment?

A

Congenital microcephaly - foetal loss
Sexual transmission
No treatment no vaccine