Overview
Subjective illness is common after traveling and up to 10% of patients with recent international travel will seek healthcare. Remember, patients with recent travel are at risk for travel-related and non-travel related infections.
Risk Factors
- Exposures: eating habits (see below), fresh water (schistosomiasis, leptospirosis), insect (mosquitos and ticks), sexual history, IDU, animal contact, sick contacts.
- Eating habits and their associations: unpasteurized dairy (Brucella, Campylobacter, Salmonella, M. bovis), shellfish (Vibrio, enteric viruses), undercooked beef (Toxoplasma, Campylobacter, E. coli O157:H7).
- If taking malaria prophylaxis, ask the patient which drug and to describe the dosing schedule as they are often not taken as directed.
- In general, insect exposure cannot be ruled out with a negative history.
- Most travel vaccines are highly efficacious (when given at the correct time) with the exception of typhoid (<70%, both oral and IM).
- Consider non-travel related infections (e.g. CAP, UTI, etc.) or non-infectious causes (medications, VTE, malignancy, etc.).
Evaluation
- Physical exam: evaluation for skin lesions, lymphadenopathy, retinal/conjunctival changes, hepatosplenomegaly, neuro findings, or genital findings.
- Blood tests: CMP, CBC with diff (look for eosinophils to suggest helminths), blood culture (typhoid), thick and thin malaria smears (repeat if initial smears are negative and there is no alternative diagnosis), CXR.
- Most traveler’s diarrhea is self-limited within 48-72 hours and does not require routine stool cultures. If diarrhea > 10 days, send stool for Giardia, Cryptosporidium, and E. histolytica (depending on travel location). Consider stool cultures (or PCR panels), O+P, and fecal WBCs if patient with fever +/- bloody diarrhea. Evaluate severity of hypovolemia.
- Note in some cases, infection may have resolved and the patient now has post-infectious IBS.
- Consider the frequency of endemic disease in the region and incubation period of potential illness. Use the GeoSentinel database.
- Most bacteria and viruses have short incubation periods (within 2 weeks)
Infections by Incubation Period
<14 DAYS
- Bacterial: rickettsiae, leptospirosis, typhoid, meningococcus, Q fever.
- Viral: dengue, acute HIV, hemorrhagic fever, arboviral encephalitis, influenza, chikingunya, Zika.
- Parasitic: malaria, East African trypanosomiasis.
2 to 6 WEEKS
- Bacterial: typhoid (but usually <18 days), leptospirosis (but usually <12 days), Q fever.
- Viral: hepatitis A, E, acute HIV, East African trypanosomiasis, hemorrhagic fever (but usually <14 days).
- Parasitic: malaria, acute schistosomiasis, amebic liver abscess.
>6 WEEKS
- Bacterial: TB.
- Viral: hepatitis B, E.
- Parasitic: malaria, leishmaniasis, filariasis, schistosomiasis, amebic liver abscess, African trypanosomiasis.
- Fungal: endemic mycoses.
Common Infections by Geography
- Tropical travel: dengue (commonly in patients returning from SE Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean), malaria (most common cause overall and in particular in sub-Saharan Africa), typhoid (S. typhi and paratyphi), rickettsial disease, enteric infections, mononucleosis. Less commonly: leptospirosis, chikungunya, acute schistosomiasis, amebiasis (liver abscess), acute HIV, and viral hepatitis.
- Sub-Saharan Africa: malaria (esp. P falciparum). There is also an increase in rickettsial illness (African tick-bite fever) in this region.
- Respiratory illnesses account for around 15% of all causes of fever in a returned traveler (25-40% in Northern Asia, Europe, Australia and New Zealand), and around 20% overall have an undiagnosed febrile illness.
Key Points
- Remember to consider non-travel related illness (e.g., was the patient exposure pre- or post-travel). Infections can also be acquired en route or on brief layovers.
- Don’t anchor on the travel, the illness could be completely unrelated.
- Defining the possible incubation period may help limit the differential diagnosis.
- Risks for infectious diseases vary between regions and depending on the time of year.
- Non-infectious etiologies: consider drug fever related to travel meds, thromboembolic disease, malignancy.
- Rashes: consider dengue, chikungunya, acute HIV, measles.
- Eosinsophilia: acute schistosomiasis, strongyloidiasis, filariasis, ascaris, hookworms.
Please see the CDC travel information site for country-specific information: http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/
https://www.cdc.gov/vhf/abroad/diagnosis-considered-returning-traveler.html
Thwaites GE, Day NP. Approach to Fever in the Returning Traveler. N Engl J Med. 2017;376(6):548‐560. doi:10.1056/NEJMra1508435
Lo Re V 3rd, Gluckman SJ. Fever in the returned traveler. Am Fam Physician. 2003;68(7):1343‐1350.
Freedman et al. Spectrum of disease and relation to place of exposure among ill returned travelers. N Engl J Med 2006; 354:119.
Wilson, Mary E., et al. "Fever in returned travelers: results from the GeoSentinel Surveillance Network." Clinical infectious diseases 44.12 (2007): 1560-1568.
Leder, Karin, et al. "GeoSentinel surveillance of illness in returned travelers, 2007–2011." Annals of internal medicine 158.6 (2013): 456-468.
Mandell GL, Bennett JE, Dolin R. Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases, Sixth Edition. Churchill Livingstone;2005.
Key words: Fever, Travel, Malaria, Chikungunya, dengue, eosinophilia, rash, Salmonella, Typhoid, Japanese encephalitis