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Typhoid


Typhoid fever, also known as typhoid is an infection caused by a bacteria called Salmonella typhi (S. typhi) (1). The disease has received various names, such as gastric fever, abdominal typhus, infantile remittant fever, slow fever, nervous fever or pythogenic fever. The name "typhoid" means "resembling typhus” and comes from the neuropsychiatric symptoms common to typhoid and typhus (2). Typhus comes from Greek word typhos meaning smoky or hazy, describing the state of mind of those affected with typhus (3).

Transmission:
It is transmitted mainly by faeco-oral route through poor hygiene habits and public sanitation conditions, and sometimes also by flying insects feeding on feces (2). A person may become an asymptomatic carrier of typhoid fever, suffering no symptoms, but capable of infecting others (2). Approximately 5% of people who contract typhoid continue to carry the disease after they recover (2).

The most famous asymptomatic carrier was Mary Mallon (commonly known as "Typhoid Mary"), a young cook who was responsible for infecting at least 53 people with typhoid, three of whom died from the disease. Mallon was the first apparently perfectly healthy person known to be responsible for an "epidemic" (4).

Many carriers of typhoid were locked into an isolation ward never to be released to prevent further typhoid cases. These people often deteriorated mentally, driven mad by the conditions they lived in — “For most people, the idea of being judged insane and held in a 1950s asylum is the stuff of nightmares. But to be locked up when you are sane would be regarded as an appalling injustice. And yet …. nearly 50 women were locked in an isolation ward in a mental asylum in Surrey - not because they had a mental illness - but because they carried typhoid and were deemed a public health risk. Many of those women - admitted sane - deteriorated mentally, driven mad by the conditions they lived in.   (5).”


Clinical features (6):
First week: Non specific features of malaise, headache, rising remitting fever (step wise fashion) with initial constipation followed by diarrhoea, mild cough with conjunctivitis.
Second week: Patient is toxic & apathetic; sustained high temperatures with relative bradycardia; rose spots on upper thorax; distended abdomen; hepatomegaly and/or splenomegaly.
Third week: Patient delirious with abdominal distension & profuse pea soup diarrhea.


*Remitting fever:  Temperature variation is >20C, but does not touch normal. E.g. Tuberculosis, viral fever, many bacterial infections etc (7).
*Step - ladder fever is the one where the temperature rises gradually to a higher level with every spike of temperature (7). So there is a step-like daily increase in temperature to 40-41°C (8).
*Bradycardia in an adult is any heart rate less than 60 beats per minute. Relative bradycardia is used in explaining a heart rate which, although not actually below 60 beats per minute, is still considered too slow for the individual's current medical condition (9). Usually there is a proportionate increase in heart rate with increase in temperature. But in typhoid, the increase in heart rate is less as compared to the rise in body temperature, so the condition is called Relative Bradycardia.
*Pea soup diarrhea: the stools are green with a characteristic smell, comparable to pea soup (2).
*Rose spots: Rose spots are red macules (rash) 2-4 millimeters in diameter. They appear as a rash between the seventh and twelfth day from the onset of symptoms. They occur in groups of five to ten lesions on the lower chest and upper abdomen. Rose spots typically last three to four days (10).


Differential Diagnosis: Typhoid may be confused with, Malaria, Visceral leishmaniasis (Kala -Azar), Dengue fever, Short term viral fevers, Hepatointestinal amoebiasis (6).


Diagnosis of Typhoid is made by any Blood, Bone marrow or stool cultures and with the Widal test. In epidemics and less wealthy countries, after excluding malaria, dysentery or pneumonia, a therapeutic trial time with Chloramphenicol is generally undertaken while awaiting the results of Widal test and cultures of the blood and stool (2).


Treatment of Typhoid:
Typhoid fever is treated with antibiotics that kill the Salmonella bacteria. Several antibiotics are effective for the treatment of typhoid fever. Chloramphenicol was the original drug of choice for many years. Because of rare serious side effects, chloramphenicol has been replaced by other effective antibiotics. The choice of antibiotics needs to be guided by identifying the geographic region where the organism was acquired and the results of cultures once available. (Certain strains from South America show a significant resistance to some antibiotics.) Ciprofloxacin is frequently used for nonpregnant patients. Ceftriaxone, is an alternative for pregnant patients. Ampicillin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole are frequently prescribed antibiotics although resistance has been reported in recent years (11).
With antibiotics and supportive care, mortality is around 1%-2% from the fatality rate was 20% which was seen prior to the use of antibiotics. With appropriate antibiotic therapy, there is usually improvement within one to two days and recovery within seven to 10 days (11).
Home based supportive care includes complete bed rest. Patient should be kept on a liquid diet of orange, barley juice and milk. Orange juice, especially, hastens recovery as it increases energy, promotes body immunity and increases urinary output. Administer warm water enema regularly. Apply cold compress to the forehead if temperature rises above 103 degrees Fahrenheit. Alternatively, wrap the body and legs twice with a sheet wrung in cold water and then cover it with a warm material. The pack should be kept for an hour and renewed after every 3 hours.  Fresh fruits and easily digestible foods can be given after once the fever subsides and body temperature comes down to normal. Plain water or unsweetened lemon water can be used for drinking. Gradually start a well-balanced diet (12).


Chronic carrier of Typhoid:
 Chronic carrier is a person excreting S.typhi in stools or urine (or has shown repeated positive bile or duodenal string cultures) for longer than one year after the onset of acute typhoid fever (6).

The chronic typhoid carrier state can occur following symptomatic or subclinical infections of Salmonella typhi. Chronic carriers of typhoid are, by definition, asymptomatic. Transmission may occur from person-to person or by ingestion of food or water contaminated by the urine or feces of acute cases or carriers. Humans are the only known reservoir for S. typhi. Among untreated cases, 10% will shed bacteria for three months after initial onset of symptoms and 2-5% will become chronic carriers. The chronic carrier state occurs most commonly among middle-aged women (13).

Careers can be treated with Oral Amoxicillin- 3 Gms in adults (100 mg/kg in children in 3 divided doses) for 3 months or Trimethoprim /Sulphamethoxazole 8/40 mg twice daily for 3 months or Ciprofloxacin 750 mg twice daily for 4 weeks (6). Often, removal of the gallbladder, the site of chronic infection, cures the carrier state (11).


Prevention:
Sanitation and hygiene are the critical measures that can be taken to prevent typhoid. Typhoid does not affect animals and therefore transmission is only from human to human. Typhoid can only spread in environments where human feces or urine are able to come into contact with food or drinking water. Careful food preparation and washing of hands are crucial to preventing typhoid (2).

There are two vaccines licensed for use for the prevention of typhoid:  the live, oral Ty21a vaccine and the injectableTyphoid polysaccharide vaccine. Both are between 50% to 80% protective and are recommended for travelers to areas where typhoid is endemic. Boosters are recommended every five years for the oral vaccine and every two years for the injectable form (2).

References:

1.
Pubmed. [Online]. [cited 2012. Available from: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH0002308/.
2.
[Online]. [cited 2012. Available from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhoid_fever.
3.
[Online]. Available from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhus.
4.
[Online]. Available from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhoid_Mary.
5.
6.
7.
[Online]. Available from: http://www.rationalmedicine.org/fever.htm.
8.
9.
[Online]. Available from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradycardia.
10.
[Online]. Available from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rose_spots.
11.
12.
13.
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