Kansenshogaku Zasshi
Online ISSN : 1884-569X
Print ISSN : 0387-5911
ISSN-L : 0387-5911
Clinical Research on Patients with Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever (1984-1987)
Misako MURATAGohta MASUDAMasachika TSUJIMasayoshi NEGISHI
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

1991 Volume 65 Issue 6 Pages 710-717

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Abstract

Patients with typhoid or paratyphoid fever, admitted to 14 hospitals for infectious diseases during 1984-1987, were epidemically and clinically studied. of the total number of 183 typhoid, 49 paratyphoid fever patients, those infected overseas was 44.3% and 71.4% respectively, giving an overall annual decrease, yet marking an increased ratio of overseas infection. Patients aged 20s-30s and males were dominant. One hundred and seventy six cases (96.2%) of typhoid and all the paratyphoid fever cases were bacteriologically diagnosed. The period from the onset to the diagnosis was around 14 days in most cases, but beyond 29 days in over 10% of the cases. We would like to emphasize that enteric fever, focusing on high fever, bradycardia, roseola, hepatosplenomegaly, leukopenia, elivated serum-GOT GPT and LDH, can be easily diagnosed by blood/stool culture before beginning chemotherapy. Intestinal bleeding was recognized in 24 cases (13.1%) of typhoid and 4 (8.2%) of paratyphoid fever, intestinal perforation in 2 (1.1%) and death in 1 (0.5%) of typhoid fever. CP was most commonly used in chemotherapy. Bacteriological relapse was recognized in 7/127 cases (5.5%) of typhoid, 6/48 (13.0%) of paratyphoid fever those followed beyond 3 weeks, though eradication was attaind by retreatment. One strain of S. typhi resistant to CP·ABPC·KM·SM was isolated in 1986 from a patient infected overseas. New quinolones seem reliable in our preliminary studies.

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© The Japansese Association for Infectious Diseases
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