Spectrum of disease and relation to place of exposure among ill returned travelers

被引:674
作者
Freedman, DO
Weld, LH
Kozarsky, PE
Fisk, T
Robins, R
von Sonnenburg, F
Keystone, JS
Pandey, P
Cetron, MS
机构
[1] Univ Alabama, Div Geog Med, Birmingham, AL 35294 USA
[2] Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Div Global Migrat & Quarantine, Atlanta, GA USA
[3] Emory Univ, Div Infect Dis, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA
[4] Univ Munich, Dept Trop & Infect Dis, Munich, Germany
[5] Univ Toronto, Div Infect Dis, Toronto, ON, Canada
[6] CIWEC Clin, Kathmandu, Nepal
关键词
D O I
10.1056/NEJMoa051331
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
BACKGROUND: Approximately 8 percent of travelers to the developing world require medical care during or after travel. Current understanding of morbidity profiles among ill returned travelers is based on limited data from the 1980s. METHODS: Thirty GeoSentinel sites, which are specialized travel or tropical-medicine clinics on six continents, contributed clinician-based sentinel surveillance data for 17,353 ill returned travelers. We compared the frequency of occurrence of each diagnosis among travelers returning from six developing regions of the world. RESULTS: Significant regional differences in proportionate morbidity were detected in 16 of 21 broad syndromic categories. Among travelers presenting to GeoSentinel sites, systemic febrile illness without localizing findings occurred disproportionately among those returning from sub-Saharan Africa or Southeast Asia, acute diarrhea among those returning from south central Asia, and dermatologic problems among those returning from the Caribbean or Central or South America. With respect to specific diagnoses, malaria was one of the three most frequent causes of systemic febrile illness among travelers from every region, although travelers from every region except sub-Saharan Africa and Central America had confirmed or probable dengue more frequently than malaria. Among travelers returning from sub-Saharan Africa, rickettsial infection, primarily tick-borne spotted fever, occurred more frequently than typhoid or dengue. Travelers from all regions except Southeast Asia presented with parasite-induced diarrhea more often than with bacterial diarrhea. CONCLUSIONS: When patients present to specialized clinics after travel to the developing world, travel destinations are associated with the probability of the diagnosis of certain diseases. Diagnostic approaches and empiric therapies can be guided by these destination-specific differences.
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页码:119 / 130
页数:12
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