Tag: fever

  • Man Hospitalized With Fever, Recurrent Falls Diagnosed With Rare Infection Linked To Lake Swimming In Iowa

    Man Hospitalized With Fever, Recurrent Falls Diagnosed With Rare Infection Linked To Lake Swimming In Iowa

    A 77-year-old man’s mysterious symptoms, fever, and frequent falls due to fatigue left doctors puzzled for days until they diagnosed him with a potentially fatal Legionnaires’ disease, linked to his vacation swimming in an Iowa lake.

    According to the case published in CMAJ, the unidentified patient was admitted to a Winnipeg hospital with fever, cough, and multiple sudden falls due to fatigue. Tests showed an elevated blood cell count, indicating an infection, along with high levels of creatine kinase, suggesting potential kidney damage. Further testing revealed that the patient had developed severe pneumonia.

    The patient was initially treated for five days with antibiotics piperacillin-tazobactam, a broad-spectrum antibiotics for pneumonia but his condition did not improve. Doctors then performed a bronchoscopy but could not identify the specific bacteria from the sample.

    Although doctors initially requested Legionella testing of the bronchoalveolar lavage culture, the laboratory declined due to a lack of clinical justification. However, after the doctors highlighted the patient’s risk factors including recent travel, exposure to stagnant water, and pneumonia unresponsive to standard antibiotics, the lab proceeded with the test.

    While the bronchoalveolar lavage culture tested negative, a urine test confirmed the presence of Legionella. The negative culture result was likely due to recent antibiotic use.

    Once Legionnaires’ disease was confirmed, doctors prescribed a 10-day course of antibiotics levofloxacin (750 mg daily). By the fourth day of treatment, the patient had improved significantly and no longer needed supplemental oxygen, allowing him to be discharged from the hospital to continue his recovery at home.

    Legionnaires’ disease develops within 10 days after exposure to Legionella bacteria, which enters the body through inhalation from water or soil. Outbreaks have been linked to various water sources, including hot tubs, whirlpools, cooling towers in air conditioning systems, hot water tanks, heaters, decorative fountains, swimming pools, birthing pools, and drinking water.

    The initial signs of the infection include headache, muscle aches, and a high fever. Within three days, additional signs may appear, including cough, shortness of breath, chest pain, gastrointestinal issues, and confusion. Though it primarily affects the lungs, it can sometimes lead to infections in other parts of the body, such as wounds or the heart. If left untreated it can lead to life-threatening complications including septic shock, and lung and kidney failure.

    A milder form of the infection from the same bacteria causes Pontiac fever, with similar symptoms but doesn’t affect the lungs and generally resolves in a few days.

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  • What To Know About Rabbit Fever

    What To Know About Rabbit Fever

    Tularemia, often dubbed “rabbit fever,” has seen a startling 56% increase in U.S. cases over the past decade, according to a recent report from the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

    Rabbit fever is a rare but serious zoonotic disease that poses significant risks to human health. This bacterial infection caused by Francisella tularensis gets transmitted through bug bites or improper handling of infected animals, inhaling contaminated aerosols, or consuming tainted water. Tularemia is not contagious from person to person.

    There is no vaccine to prevent the infection, but it is treatable with antibiotics. However, if it is left untreated, the infection has the potential to cause fatality in more than 2% of cases, depending on the strain of bacteria that has caused the infection.

    “During 2011–2022, 47 states reported 2,462 tularemia cases (0.064 per 100,000 population), representing a 56% increase in incidence compared with 2001–2010. Incidence was highest among children aged 5–9 years, older men, and American Indian or Alaska Native persons, among whom incidence was approximately five times that among White persons,” the latest CDC report stated.

    The report reveals that half of all tularemia cases originated from just four states, with Arkansas leading at 18%, followed by Kansas and Missouri at 11% each, and Oklahoma at 10%. When comparing tularemia incidence among different races, white individuals represented the majority of cases at 84%, followed by American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) at 9%, Hispanic or Latino at 5%, Black or African American at 2%, and Asian or Pacific Islander at 1%.

    The recent rise in cases could be because more people are actually getting infected or healthcare systems are better at identifying and diagnosing the disease.

    To reduce incidence, the CDC urges the need for increasing awareness among healthcare providers, particularly those working with tribal communities to ensure quick and accurate diagnosis and treatment of tularemia.

    Know signs of Tularemia:

    Tularemia can affect various parts of the body, including the lymph nodes, skin, eyes, throat, lungs, and intestines. Symptoms depend on the route through which the bacteria enters the body. The signs include fever, swollen lymph nodes, skin ulcers, sore throat, and eye infections. In severe cases, the infection can lead to inflammation in the brain and heart, as well as pneumonia.

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