| Literature DB >> 28883979 |
Christopher A Duplessis1, Ramiro L Gutierrez1, Chad K Porter1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Travelers' diarrhea is a common malady afflicting up to 50% of travelers after a 2-week travel period. An appreciable percentage of these cases will become persistent or chronic. We summarized the published literature reporting persistent/chronic diarrhea in travelers elucidating current understanding of disease incidence, etiology and regional variability.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic diarrhea; Enteropathogens; GeoSentinel surveillance; Giardiasis; Persistent diarrhea; Post-infectious irritable bowel syndrome; Travelers’ diarrhea
Year: 2017 PMID: 28883979 PMCID: PMC5531020 DOI: 10.1186/s40794-017-0052-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Dis Travel Med Vaccines ISSN: 2055-0936
Categorization and brief exposition of known etiologies for persistent/chronic diarrhea in returning travelers
| 1). Infectious | Bacterial: [ |
| Parasitic: [ | |
| Helminthic: [ | |
| 2). Presumed Infectious | [ |
| 3). Post infectious sequelae | [ |
| 4). Unmasked | [ |
| [ | |
| Brief Exposition of Etiologies for Persistent/Chronic Diarrhea in Returning Travelers | |
| 1). Infectious | Bacterial |
| 1). Aeromonas is a gram negative bacilli, oxidase positive and associated with freshwater identified in chronic watery diarrhea cases and associated with asymptomatic carriage [ | |
| Parasitic | |
| 1). Giardiasis is a ubiquitous parasitic infection exhibiting global transmission. This infection produces the classic steatorhea emanating from malabsorption associated with bloating, nausea, and emesis often mimicking IBS. The trophozoites localize in the small intestine. Giardia may be transmitted via contaminated food, water or direct person-person contact (fecal oral spread common in day care centers, residential institutions, and among MSM). The diagnosis is best rendered with a stool ELISA measuring the Giardia antigen often coupled with the | |
| 1). | |
| 2). Presumed Infectious | 1). Brainerd’s diarrhea is an epidemic form of watery secretory diarrhea. It was first described after an outbreak which emerged in Brainerd Minnesota [ |
| 3). Post infectious sequelae | 1). Lactose Intolerance: Gastroenteritis may precipitate secondary enzymatic disaccharidase deficiency. These enzymes are located within the microvilli [brush border] of small intestinal enterocytes, which are responsible for carbohydrate (lactose, sucrose) hydrolysis contributing to malabsorption (maldigestion) and diarrhea. Perhaps the quintissential mucosal malabsorption syndrome, lactose intolerance involves a deficiency in the enzyme lactase which is responsible for lactose hydrolysis. The unabsorbed lactose leads to mild osmotic diarrhea associated with abdominal pain, cramping, bloating, and diarrhea. The enzymatic deficiency is typically transient, but in a minority (genetically predisposed) may be permanent [ |
| 4). Unmasked | 1). Celiac disease: celiac disease is an immune-based reaction to dietary gluten (storage protein for wheat, barley, and rye) that primarily affects the small intestine in those with a genetic predisposition and resolves with exclusion of gluten from the diet. Celiac disease is the most common small bowel inflammatory enteropathy in the Western world (afflicting 1% of Caucasians) and presents with diarrhea, steatorrhea, weight loss, bloating, flatulence, post-prandial abdominal pain, and a host of extraintestinal complications attributed to malabsorption including osteoporosis, neurologic and skin disorders (dermatitis herpetiformis) [ |
| [ | |
Studies identifying the syndromic diagnosis of chronic diarrhea with ranking relative to all assessed syndromic diagnosesa
| Author | Publication Year | Surveillance Years | Origin of Travelers | %Male | Age | Destinationc | Number of Travelers | PMd Chronic Diarrhea (CD) | Rank Among Syndromic Diagnoses | Leading Syndromic Dignoses [Rank & PM]b |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Freedman | 2006 | 1996–2004 | Global | 52 | 33 (26–45) IQR | Global | 17353 | 113 | 4 | #1: AFI 226 |
| 46 | 37 (27–50) IQR | Carribean | 1115 | 132 | 4 | #1: D: 261 | ||||
| 55 | 30 (23–42) IQR | South America | 1675 | 130 | 4 | #1: D 264 | ||||
| 48 | 32 (24–45) IQR | Central Am/Mexico | 1326 | 173 | 3 | #1: AD 234 | ||||
| 56 | 34 (27–45) IQR | SSA | 4524 | 57 | 7 | #1: AFI 371 | ||||
| 50 | 32 (25–45) IQR | SC Asia | 2403 | 129 | 4 | #1: AD 327 | ||||
| 53 | 32 (25–42) IQR | SE Asis | 2793 | 97 | 4 | #1: AD 248 | ||||
| Leder | 2006 | 1996–2004 | Global | 49 | 36.4 (1–85) | SSA | 2062 | 40 | 4 | #1: AFI 180 |
| 48 | 34.8 (1–91) | Asia | 4615 | 60 | 5 | #1: AD 210 | ||||
| 47 | 35 (1–83) | Latin America | 2581 | 80 | 4 | #1: D 230 | ||||
| Greenwood | 2008 | 2000–2005 | Global | -- | -- | Global | 22569 | 57 | -- | -- |
| Davis | 2008 | 1998–2007 | Global | -- | -- | SE Asia | 6913 | 66 | 6 | #1: D 209 |
| -- | -- | SC Asia | 3543 | 116 | 3 | #1: AD 294 | ||||
| Chene | 2009 | 1996–2008 | Global-Short Terme | 50 | 38 (NA) | Global | 24807 | 45 | 4 | #1 AD 123 |
| Global-Long Terme | 57 | 33 (NA) | Global | 4039 | 50 | 1 | #1: CD 50 | |||
| --- | --- | South America | ---- | 58 | 3 | #1: CL: 72 | ||||
| --- | --- | Central Am/Mexico | ---- | 108 | 1 | #1: CD 108 | ||||
| --- | --- | North Africa | ---- | -- | -- | #1: G 44 | ||||
| --- | --- | Middle East | ---- | 31 | 2 | #1: G 109 | ||||
| --- | --- | SC Asia | ---- | 87 | 1 | #1: CD 87 | ||||
| --- | --- | SE Asia | ---- | 54 | 2 | #1: D 63 | ||||
| Mendelson | 2010 | 1997–2009 | Global | 52 | SSA | 13460 | 56 | 6 | #1: AFI 314 | |
| 50 | -- | South Africa | 823 | 66 | 5 | #1: AFI 390 | ||||
| Field | 2010 | 2008 | European | 51.1 | 36 (0–89) | Global | 6957 | 70 | 5 | #1: AFI 200 |
| --- | --- | Carribean | 116 | 80 | 4 | #1: D: 300 | ||||
| --- | --- | South Am | 477 | 90 | 4 | #1: D: 180 | ||||
| --- | --- | Central Am/Mexico | 133 | 110 | 5 | #1: AD 320 | ||||
| --- | --- | North Africa | 366 | 160 | 2 | #1: AD 360 | ||||
| --- | --- | SSA | 1832 | 50 | 6 | #1: AFI 330 | ||||
| --- | --- | Middle East | 109 | 90 | 5 | #1: AD 310 | ||||
| --- | --- | SC Asia | 683 | 110 | 3 | #1: AD 390 | ||||
| --- | --- | SE Asia | 637 | 90 | 5 | #1: AFI 250 | ||||
| Schlagenhauf | 2010 | 1997–2007 | Global (Males) | 100% | 35.9 (NA) | Global | 29265 | 53 | 4 | #1 AD 216 |
| Global (Females) | 100% | 34.4 (NA) | Global | 29643 | 65 | 4 | #1 AD 246 | |||
| Flores-Figueroa | 2011 | 1996–2010 | NA Europe | 46 | 35.9 +/− 14.7 | Central America | 4779 | 114 | 4 | #1:AD 235 |
| Gautret | 2012 | 1997–2009 | Global | 49 | 65 (60–98) | Global | 7034 | 59 | 7 | #1: AD 167 |
| Latin America | 1161 | 102 | 5 | #1: D 188 | ||||||
| Africa | 1543 | 70 | 5 | #1: AFI 225 | ||||||
| Middle East | 179 | 78 | 6 | #1: D 179 | ||||||
| Asia | 3311 | 37 | 9 | #1: AD 197 | ||||||
| Gautret | 2012 | 1997–2009 | Global | 55 | 30 (18–45) | Global | 56042 | 65 | 5 | #1: AD 229 |
| Odolini | 2012 | 2008 | Europe | 51 | 36 (27–48) IQR | Global | 6957 | 40 | 4 | #1: AD 60 |
| --- | --- | North Africa | 330 | 80 (140) | 2 | #1: AD 160 | ||||
| --- | --- | SC Asia | 676 | 60 | 4 | #1: G 110 | ||||
| --- | --- | SE Asia | 631 | 50 | 4 | #1: Dengue 100 | ||||
| --- | --- | South America | 351 | 50 | 3 | #1: AD: 70 | ||||
| Odolini | 2012 | 20092009 | Europe | 50 | 35 (27–47) IQR | Global | 6392 | 40 | 4 | #1: AD 60 |
| --- | --- | North Africa | 248 | 60 (150) | 3 | #1: AD 150 | ||||
| --- | --- | SC Asia | 550 | 70 | 4 | #1: G 110 | ||||
| --- | --- | SE Asia | 678 | 40 | 5 | #1: Dengue 100 | ||||
| --- | --- | South America | 374 | 50 | 4 | #1: AD: 80 | ||||
| Harveyf | 2013 | 1997–2011 | U.S. | 49 | 34 (med) | Global | 13,059 | 80 | 5 | #1: Acute Diarrhea 220 |
| Mendelsong | 2014 | 1997–2011 | NA Europe | 52 | 35 (0–92) | Africa | 16893 | 50 (70) | 4 | #1 Malaria 130 |
| --- | 37 (0–87) | North Africa | 2474 | 110 (150) | 2 | #1: AD 230 | ||||
| --- | 35–37 (0–92) | Central/West Africa | 7446 | 30 | 6 | #1: Malaria 250 | ||||
| --- | 34 (0–89) | East Africa | 5516 | 50 (70) | 4 | #1: AD 120 | ||||
| --- | 40 (0–89) | South Africa | 1457 | 50 | 4 | #1: R 190 | ||||
| Boggild | 2014 | 2009–2011 | Canadian | 42 | 38 (0–89) | Global | 2010 | 82 (166) | 3 | #1: AD 85 |
| Wilson | 2014 | 1997–2013 | Global | 55 | 33 (0–78) | Brazil | 1586 | 44 | 4 | #1: D 397 |
| Monge-Maillo | 2014 | 1989–2010 | Spain | 44 | 36 (28–44) | SSA | 209 | 10 | -- | ---- |
| 35 | Latin America | 142 | 63 | -- | -- | |||||
| Hagmann | 2014 | 2000–2012 | U.S. | 48.6 | 33 (0–94) | Global | 9624 | 105 | 6 | #1: AD-- |
| --- | --- | Caribbean | --- | --- | --- | #1: AD: 156 | ||||
| --- | --- | South America | --- | 34 (121) | 5 | #1: AD 197 | ||||
| --- | --- | Central Am/Mexico | --- | 30 (99) | 4 | #1: AD 275 | ||||
| --- | --- | North Africa | --- | 40 (103) | 4 | #1: AD: 280 | ||||
| --- | --- | SSA | --- | (28) | 7 | #1: Malaria 127 | ||||
| --- | --- | Middle East | --- | (57) | 4 | #1: AD: 220 | ||||
| --- | --- | SC Asia | --- | 28 (83) | 3 | #1: AD: 250 | ||||
| --- | --- | SE Asia | --- | 31 (84) | 5 | #1: AD 194 | ||||
| Schlagenhaufh | 2015 | 2008–2012 | European | 51 | 35 (27–48) | Global | 32136 | 40 | 4 | #1: Malaria 70 |
aThere were 18 total reviews identified. Two studies reported upon two discrete cohorts, therefore 20 total reviews are reported. Most reviews reported relative ranking of the syndromic diagnoses and these are delineated with leading syndromic diagnoses
bSyndromic Diagnoses: CD: Chronic Diarrhea; AD Acute Diarrhea; G: Giardia; IBS: Irritable bowel disease; D: Dermatologic; CL: cutaneous leishmaniasis; AFI: Acute febrile illness; R: respiratory disease; ND GI: Non diarrheal GI disease: MSK: musculoskeletal
cSSA: Subsaharan Africa; Central Am: Central America; SC Asia: South Central Asia; SE Asia: South East Asia
dPM: proportionate morbidity—the number of cases per 1000 travelers surveyed
eIncluding study by Chen e al which reported upon both Long Term Travelers defined as > 6-months; Short Term Travelers < 1-month
f5% of enrollees were <18 years old
g7% of enrollees were < 19 years old
hApproximate values culled from graphs
Fig. 1Flow Chart Depicting Search Methodology
Fig. 2Forest Plot depicting point estimates (95% CI) for the incidence (PM) persistent/chronic diarrhea in Global Returning Travelers
Fig. 3a-c Forest Plot depicting point estimates (95% CI) for the incidence (PM) persistent/chronic diarrhea in Returning Travelers Stratified by Continent (Latin America, Africa, and Asia)
Fig. 4a-c Forest Plots depicting point estimates (95% CI) for the incidence (PM) persistent/chronic diarrhea in Returning Travelers Stratified by Continent (Latin America, Africa, and Asia) and Region