Introduction
Recently, much attention has been drawn to viral infections affecting cruise ship passengers (e.g. the Norwalk virus). Information on such epidemics can be obtained from the US Centers for Disease control & prevention (CDC) at: "Viral Gastroenterology" http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/gastro.htm. (Robert Griffith, Editor)
A relatively high proportion of
travelers from North America or Western Europe to other world countries
closer to the equator, such as Mexico, Central America, Morocco, Jamaica,
Thailand, Micronesia, Nepal and the Philippines, contract the syndrome of
Travelers' Diarrhea (TD). Considerable morbidity and loss of bowel function
for at least two days characterize TD. The rate of TD varies somewhat with
the year and season, but, on average, nearly 25 % of those from the United
States or Western Europe who visit these regions develop a diarrheal illness.
The Presentation
Acute onset of abdominal cramping
pains quickly progresses to daily multiple watery stools and is often accompanied
by nausea and, not infrequently, emesis. Fever may be present. Symptoms
usually continue for more than two days and, then, gradually subside. Patients
often become incapacitated with anorexia, thirst and fatigue; dehydration
may become severe and intravenous replacement is sometimes necessary.
The Culprits
Bacterial infection accounts for
the vast majority of cases of Travelers' Diarrhea, the most common source
being contamination of food and water with fecal organisms. Enterotoxigenic
or enteroaggregative E. coli have been found in one-quarter to one-half
the cases of TD in Jamaica and Mexico. Other bacteria are also important
pathogens in TD, particularly Campylobacter species that has been
shown to be even more common than E. coli in traveling United States
military personnel, as well as salmonella and shigella. Epidemics of severe
secretory diarrhea caused by Vibrio cholera, most often from contaminated
shellfish, appear from time to time. In protracted diarrheal illness, especially
in the immunocompromised host, cyclospora and microsporidium have been isolated.
Are Diagnostic Tests Required?
Recent applications of newer molecular
probes for bacteria, particularly utilizing the polymerase chain reaction
(PCR) to amplify the bacterial gene product in stool, have improved the
sensitivity of detection. Because bacteria that are susceptible to quinolone
antibiotic therapy cause the majority of TD cases, a clinical diagnosis
of the disease is sufficient to warrant therapy.
Is Therapy Worthwhile?
Many years ago, prophylaxis with
trimethiprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) was demonstrated to markedly reduce
the development of TD. However, the large fraction (75%) of travelers who
escape the disease must be subjected needlessly to the drug, and this might
also lead to the development of antibiotic resistance. Instead of prophylactic
treatment of all travelers to the endemic areas, therapy at the first symptom
of TD was been found to be very effective in aborting the acute diarrheal
disease. Also, the addition of loperamide to the therapeutic regimen to
control the cramps and frequent, loose stools has proved to be a useful
supplement to the antibacterial therapy.
As some resistance to TMP-SMX began to develop, the quinolone antibiotics,
especially ciprofloxacin, became the most commonly chosen antibacterial
drugs. An effective combination is ciprofloxacin 500 mg b.i.d. for 3-5
days and loperamide, initially at a 4-mg loading dose, and, then, 2 mg
after each passage of any unformed stool. Such combined therapy of a quinolone
antibiotic with the anti-diarrheal agent shortens the course of the symptomatic
illness from greater than two days to a single day. A clinical cure with
complete disappearance of symptoms is achieved in 95 % of patients with
three days of quinolone antibiotic therapy, whereas symptoms resolve in
only 25 % of patients within this time if no antibiotic is taken.
A live, attenuated, oral V. cholera vaccine, designed by deletion
of most of the gene for the active subunit, has been recently demonstrated
to protect human volunteers from V. cholera infections This vaccine
may prove to be useful in special groups, such as those on military expeditions
who travel to areas of high risk for cholera.
The concept that antibiotic therapy of a relatively routine bacterial
enteric infection, such as that caused by salmonella sp., may predispose
to a relapsing infection, perhaps with resistant organisms, has not been
supported by the clinical trials in TD. With the exception of the occasional
case of recurrent Campylobacter sp. when quinolone antibiotic therapy
is used, antibiotic therapy with the commonly used ciprofloxacin, has
been highly effective in aborting the TD attack in recent years.
The espoused advice to avoid anti-diarrheal agents, because reduction
of stool flow may lead to delay in the clearance of the bacterial pathogen,
has not been substantiated in the TD clinical trials. Instead, a drug
such as loperamide plays a role in reducing the number and increasing
the consistency of stools, thereby shortening the clinical course.
Oral Rehydration Therapy (ORT), known to be highly effective in the devastating
secretory diarrheas and particularly popularized in World Health Organization
trials in the "rice water" diarrhea induced by Vibrio cholera,
does not shorten the course in TD over and above that provided by loperamide
alone.
Practical Approach by the Physician
It is impractical for the traveler
to avoid ingestion of contaminated food and water. Instead, antibiotic therapy
at the outset of the disease is the first line of defense. For those traveling
to developing countries located in temperate climates, where bacterial contamination
of food and water is known to be endemic, therapy should be instituted with
the first sign of abdominal cramping pain and watery stools. Providers should
give travelers to these endemic locales a three-day supply (six 500 mg capsules)
of ciprofloxacin or other quinolone antibiotic and sufficient loperamide
capsules to allow for the loading dose and several subsequent doses (a total
of ~20 tablets). For the few patients who do not respond with a rapid return
to normal bowel function, the physician should then examine the patient,
obtain routine laboratory blood tests (complete blood count, other appropriate
tests depending upon the physical exam), stool analysis for bacterial culture
and ova and parasite examination.
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