Literature DB >> 12825887

Fever in the returning traveler, part II: A methodological approach to initial management.

Michael David Schwartz1.   

Abstract

The advent of modern commercial air travel ensures that a returning traveler could present to any emergency department or private physician's office in the United States bearing any infection from the farthest corner of the earth. Exotic illnesses in the returned traveler are of concern to the physician because they often strike an otherwise young and healthy segment of the population and may carry significant morbidity and mortality if not recognized early. The infrequency with which these diseases are encountered demands a systematic approach to history, a physical exam, and the construction of a differential diagnosis. Information about the geographic distribution, routes of transmission, and incubation periods of the pathogens allows a clinician to reduce the differential to a manageable number of the likeliest etiologies. This is the second of a 2-part article, proposing an orderly, systematic approach for use by the physician faced with a febrile returned traveler. The clinical features of specific diseases and their incubation periods are presented to support the assumptions on which an algorithm-centered approach is based.

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12825887     DOI: 10.1580/1080-6032(2003)014[0120:fitrtp]2.0.co;2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Wilderness Environ Med        ISSN: 1080-6032            Impact factor:   1.518


  1 in total

1.  Unusual cause of recurrent fever after travel in South America.

Authors:  B B Booth; E Petersen
Journal:  IDCases       Date:  2015-03-28
  1 in total

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