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161-163 of 163 results with category "International EM"
- General Information
- Organism: Bunyaviridae virus
- Transmission: inhalation of aerosols contaminated with rodent urine or feces.
- Seen in the southwestern United States, South and Central America
- Death occurs from decreased cardiac output and circulatory failure.
- Clinical Presentation
- Initial symptoms are nonspecific and occur 1-5 weeks after exposure: fever, malaise, myalgia, and GI upset
- Can progress to fulminant ARDS-like picture in previously health young patients.
- Signs NOT consistent with HPS: rash, hemorrhage, petechiae, peripheral or periorbital edema.
- Initial symptoms are nonspecific and occur 1-5 weeks after exposure: fever, malaise, myalgia, and GI upset
- Diagnosis
- The diagnosis must initially be made clinically.
- Lab tests may reveal nonspecific findings of thrombocytopenia, atypical lympthocytes with bandemia, hemoconcentration, and renal failure.
- Chest film will demonstrate bilateral interstitial infiltrates.
- Serology (ELISA) available through the CDC.
- Treatment
- There is no specific therapy for hantavirus infection; Treatment is primarily supportive, with attention to respiratory status and oxygenation.
University of Maryland Section for Global Emergency Health
Author: Andi Tenner
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Diagnosis should be considered in any individual over 5 years old with severe dehydration from diarrhea, regardless of exposure to an endemic area, and any patient over 2 years old with watery diarrhea in an endemic area.
Patients with severe cholera can stool as much as 1 L an hour. Replacing fluids is the most important part of treatment with oral rehydration being used as soon as possible. Oral rehydration therapy provides better potassium, carbohydrate, and bicarbonate replacement than most IV fluid solutions. Antibiotics will also decrease volume and duration of stooling but are only recommended in moderate to severe illness. Antiemetics are not useful because they can make patients sleepy and will reduce their ability to rehydrate orally. Antimotility medications will prolong the duration of illness.
University of Maryland Section for Global Emergency Health
Author: Jenny Reifel Saltzberg
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- Causative organism: members of the genus Borrelia
- Louse Borne Relapsing Fever (LBRF)
- Human body louse (Pediculus humanus)
- Associated with sporadic outbreaks especially in areas with large refugee populations
- Tick Borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF)
- Soft ticks of the genus Ornithodoros
- Typically found in higher elevations of the western United States as well as the central plateau region of Mexico, Central and South America and Africa
- Louse Borne Relapsing Fever (LBRF)
- Clinical Presentation
- Symptoms develop 3 to 18 days after infection.
- Onset is abrupt and may include fever, malaise, headache, arthralgias, nausea and vomiting and cough.
- The first febrile episode lasts 3 to 6 days and then recurrences may occur after 7 to 10 days.
- Diagnosis
- Definitive diagnosis: visualization of spirochetes on peripheral blood smear.
- May also see leukocytosis, anemia and/or thrombocytopenia, elevation of liver function tests
- Erythrocyte rosette formation may be present.
- Treatment
- Antibiotics recommended for treatment include penicillin, doxycycline and erythromycin.
- Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction common after treatment. This can be life threatening and all patients undergoing treatment should be closely monitored.
University of Maryland Section for Global Emergency Health
Author: Gentry Wilkerson