II. Precautions: Malaria risk
-
Fever in a returning traveler from Malaria endemic area is Malaria until proven otherwise
- Stat blood smear with direct communication with reading pathologist
- Especially consider Malaria with Leukopenia and Left Shift, Thrombocytopenia
- Up to 50% of Malaria cases are misdiagnosed on the first visit
- This is an emergent evaluation
- Other common causes in the differential of Malaria
- Hepatitis
- Typhoid
- Dengue Fever
III. Causes: Fever with other organ involvement
IV. Causes: By frequency in febrile travelers returning to developed countries
- Malaria (21%)
- Febrile Diarrhea (15%)
- Febrile respiratory infections (14%)
- Dengue Fever (6%)
- Non-Diarrheal, febrile gastrointestinal illness (5%)
- Fever with rash (4%)
- Genitourinary infections with fever (4%)
- Ricckettsia (2%)
- Typhoid Fever or Paratyphoid Fever (2%)
- Wilson (2007) Clin Infect Dis 44(12): 1560-8 [PubMed]
V. Causes: Geographic regions
- Caribbean
- Malaria (Haiti)
- Dengue Fever
- Also consider acute Histoplasmosis, Leptospirosis
- Central America and South America
- Malaria (primarily Plasmodium vivax)
- Dengue Fever
- Also consider Leptospirosis, Histoplasmosis, Coccidioidomycosis, bartonellosis
- South Central Asia
- Malaria (typically NOT Plasmodium falciparum)
- Dengue Fever
- Enteric Fever (Salmonella typhi and paratyphi)
- Also consider Chikungunya virus
- Southeast Asia
- Malaria (typically NOT Plasmodium falciparum)
- Dengue Fever
- Also consider Chikungunya virus, Leptospirosis
- Sub-Saharan Africa
- Malaria (mostly Plasmodium falciparum)
- Tick-borne Rickettsiae
- Acute Schistosomiasis
- Filariasis
- Also consider african trypanosomiasis
- West Africa (Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea)
- Ebola (as of 2014)
- References
- See CDC Yellow Book resource below
VI. Causes: Exposure Related Febrile Illnesses
- Sexually Transmitted Disease
- Vector Contact
- See Vector Borne Disease
- Mosquitoes
- Ticks
- Rickettsioses
- Tularemia
- Reduviid Bugs
- Tsetse Flies
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Animal Contact
- Infected Person Contact
- Viral hemorrhagic fever
- Enteric Fever (Salmonella typhi and paratyphi)
- Meningococcal infection
- Tuberculosis
- Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
- Raw or undercooked meat or fish
- See Foodborne Illness
- Enteric Infections
- Cestodiasis
- Trichinosis
- Typhoid Fever
- Cholera
- Salmonellosis
- Untreated water or unpasteurized dairy products
- See Waterborne Illness
- Salmonellosis
- Shigellosis
- Hepatitis A
- Amebiasis
- Cholera
- Brucellosis (dairy exposure)
- Tuberculosis (dairy exposure)
- Freshwater Exposure
- Barefoot Exposure
- Strongyloidiasis
- Cutaneous Larva Migrans
- Infected soil exposure or cave exploring
VII. Causes: Incubation Periods
- Incubation <7-10 days
- Incubation 7-21 days
- Leptospirosis
- Viral hemorrhagic fevers (including Ebola)
- Malaria (common)
- Enteric Fevers
- Typhoid Fever (common)
- Paratyphoid
- Typhus
- East African Trypanosomiasis
- Q Fever
- Incubation >21 days
- Human Immundeficiency Virus (HIV)
- Hepatitis A (common) and other Viral Hepatitis
- Malaria (common, symptoms may be delayed months)
- Tuberculosis (common, symptoms may be delayed years)
- Amebic Liver Abscess
- West African Trypanosomiasis
- Borreliosis
- Brucellosis
- Visceral Leishmaniasis
- Systemic Schistosomiasis (Katayama)
VIII. History
- Travel itinerary
- Who did you see (family, wildlife, farm animals)?
- Where did you travel (what country, what environments, what living conditions)?
- When did you travel and for how long?
- What did you do (wilderness travel, mission work, farm work, construction)?
- Exposures
- Insects (e.g. ticks, Mosquitos)
- Animal exposures
- Skin Trauma
- Contagious contacts (in travel country or home country)
- Sexual transmitted infection risk or exposure while traveling
- Food sources of infection
- Water sources of infection
- Medications
- New medications (especially immune compromising medications)
- Pretravel antibiotic prophylaxis (e.g. Mefloquine for Malaria Prophylaxis)
- Symptoms
IX. Exam: Focal areas
-
Vital Signs
- See Pulse-Temperature Dissociation
-
Pulse slower than normal for fever degree (pulse fails to increase with fever spike)
- Seen with Typhoid Fever, Rickettsial infection
- Eye Exam
- Lymph Node Exam
- Cardiopulmonary Exam
- Abdominal Exam
-
Neurologic Exam
- See Altered Mental Status in Febrile Returning Traveler
- Altered Level of Consciousness in a returning febrile patient is a medical emergency (consider cerebral Malaria, or Hemorrhagic Shock)
- Skin Exam
X. Labs
-
Complete Blood Count (CBC) with differential
- Observe for Eosinophilia
- Manual differential (standard with Wright stain) has Test Sensitivity for Malaria approaching that of thin smear (Giemsa stain)
- Serum Electrolytes with Glucose
- Renal Function tests including Blood Urea Nitrogen
- Liver Function Tests
- Malaria thick and thin smears (Giemsa stain) x3, 12 hours apart
- Serologies as indicated
- Serum sample spun and saved for later Antibody titers
- Consider Dengue Fever IgM, IgG and virus detection
- Diagnose and start treatment based on clinical findings if suspected
- Use labs only for confirmation
- Cultures
XI. Management
- Consider Infectious Disease Consultation
- Consider empiric antibiotic coverage until diagnosis
- Example: Doxycycline 100 mg PO qd
XII. Prevention
XIII. Resources
XIV. References
- Anderson (2014) Crit Dec Emerg Med 28(7): 11-9
- Walker (2001) HP Primary Care Medicine Lecture
- Feder (2013) Am Fam Physician 88(8): 524-30 [PubMed]
- Lo Re (2003) Am Fam Physician 68(7):1343-50 [PubMed]
- Suh (1999) Med Clin North Am 83(4):997-1017 [PubMed]

