Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Acute Rheumatic Fever

Background

Acute rheumatic fever (ARF) is an autoimmune inflammatory process that develops as a sequela of streptococcal infection. ARF has extremely variable manifestations and remains a clinical syndrome for which no specific diagnostic test exists. Persons who have experienced an episode of ARF are predisposed to recurrence following subsequent (rheumatogenic) group A streptococcal infections. The most significant complication of ARF is rheumatic heart disease, which usually occurs after repeated bouts of acute illness.

Pathophysiology

ARF is characterized by nonsuppurative inflammatory lesions of the joints, heart, subcutaneous tissue, and central nervous system. An extensive literature search has shown that, at least in developed countries, rheumatic fever follows pharyngeal infection with rheumatogenic group A streptococci.1,2,3,4 The risk of developing rheumatic fever after an episode of streptococcal pharyngitis has been estimated at 0.3-3%.1 More recent investigations of rheumatic fever occurring in the aboriginal populations of Australia suggest that streptococcal skin infections might also be associated with the development of rheumatic fever.5,6 In Oceania and Hawaii, streptococcal strains that are not typically associated with rheumatic fever have been found to cause the disease.

Molecular mimicry accounts for the tissue injury that occurs in rheumatic fever. Both the humoral and cellular host defenses of a genetically vulnerable host are involved. In this process, the patient's immune responses (both B- and T-cell mediated) are unable to distinguish between the invading microbe and certain host tissues.8 The resultant inflammation may persist well beyond the acute infection and produces the protean manifestations of rheumatic fever.

Frequency

United States

The incidence of ARF has declined markedly in the past 50 years in both the United States and Western Europe. Most Western physicians see only the late sequelae of rheumatic heart disease; the diagnosis of an acute case is usually reason enough for a ground rounds presentation. This remarkable decline of rheumatic fever likely reflects improved socioeconomic conditions, as well the decline in prevalence of the classically described rheumatogenic strains of group A streptococci.

Following two decades of almost total absence, a resurgence of ARF occurred in the 1980s among middle-class white children in Salt Lake City, Utah.9 Clusters were also reported in US Army and Navy training camps during the same period.10 These limited outbreaks were associated with mucoid rheumatogenic strains that were rarely seen in the preceding 20 years. Today, ARF remains a rarity in most of the United States, although Hawaii and American Samoa continue to see a significant number of cases, many of which are caused by streptococcal strains not usually associated with rheumatic fever in persons of Polynesian descent.

International

In developing countries, the magnitude of ARF is enormous. Recent estimates suggest that 15.6 million people worldwide have rheumatic heart disease and that 470,000 new cases of rheumatic fever (approximately 60% of whom will develop rheumatic heart disease) occur annually, with 230,000 deaths resulting from its complications. Almost all of this toll occurs in the developing world.12,13 The incidence rate of rheumatic fever is as high as 50 cases per 100,000 children in many areas. Areas of hyperendemicity (eg, indigenous populations of Australia and New Zealand) see an incidence of 300-500 cases per 100,000 children, while the rates are approximately 50-fold lower in their nonindigenous compatriots.6 Rheumatic fever in the 21st century appears to be largely a disease of crowding and poverty.

Mortality/Morbidity

Cardiac involvement is the most serious complication of rheumatic fever and causes significant morbidity and mortality. As stated above, about 60% of the approximately 470,000 patients diagnosed with ARF annually eventually develop carditis, joining the approximately 15 million worldwide with rheumatic heart disease. Those with rheumatic heart disease are at a high risk for additional cardiac damage with subsequent bouts of ARF and require secondary prophylaxis. Morbidity due to congestive heart failure (CHF), strokes, and endocarditis is common among individuals with rheumatic heart disease, and about 1.5% of persons with rheumatic carditis die of the disease annually.

Race

ARF is predominantly a disease of developing countries and is concentrated in areas of deprivation and crowding. It is rampant in the Middle East, in sub-Saharan Africa, in the Indian subcontinent, in certain areas of South America, in Polynesia, and among the indigenous populations of Australia and New Zealand. Although a genetic predisposition to ARF clearly exists,1 the disease does not seem to have a major racial predisposition, as it was once common in the United States and Europe and seems to decline in any locale where living conditions improve.

Sex

Rheumatic fever does not have a clear-cut sexual predilection, although certain clinical manifestations, such as mitral stenosis and Sydenham chorea, are more common in females who have gone through puberty.

Age

ARF is most common among children aged 5-15 years. It is relatively rare in infants and uncommon in preschool-aged children. ARF occurs in young adults, but the incidence of first episodes of ARF falls steadily after adolescence and is rare after age 35 years.6 The lower rate of ARF in adults may represent a decreased risk of streptococcal pharyngitis in this cohort. Recurrent episodes, with their predisposition to cause or exacerbate valvular damage, occur until middle age.

Clinical

History

Rheumatic fever manifests as various signs and symptoms that may occur alone or in various combinations.

Sore throat: Although estimates vary, only 35%-60% of patients with rheumatic fever recall having any upper respiratory symptoms in the preceding several weeks. Many symptomatic individuals do not seek medical attention, go undiagnosed, or do not take the prescribed antibiotic for acute rheumatic fever (ARF) prevention.

Polyarthritis: Overall, arthritis occurs in approximately 75% of first attacks of ARF. The likelihood increases with the age of the patient, and arthritis is a major manifestation of ARF in 92% of adults.

The arthritis of ARF is usually symmetrical and involves large joints, such as the knees, ankles, elbows, and wrists. Tenosynovitis is common in adults and may be severe enough to suggest a diagnosis of disseminated gonococcal disease.
The evolution of arthritis in individual joints tends to overlap; therefore, multiple joints may be inflamed simultaneously, causing more of an additive than a migratory pattern.10
In most instances, the entire bout of polyarthritis subsides within 4 weeks without any permanent damage. If not, a different diagnosis should be entertained.
Carditis: Of first attacks of ARF, carditis occurs in 30%-60% of cases. It is more common in younger children but does occur in adults.
Severe inflammation can cause congestive heart failure (CHF).
Patients with carditis may present with shortness of breath, dyspnea upon exertion, cough, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, chest pain, and/or orthopnea. Carditis may also be asymptomatic and may be diagnosed solely by auscultation or, perhaps, echocardiography (controversial; see Physical).

Sydenham chorea: This occurs in up to 25% of ARF cases in children but is very rare in adults. It is more common in girls. Sydenham chorea in ARF is likely due to molecular mimicry, with autoantibodies reacting with brain ganglioside.14
Sydenham chorea may occur with other symptoms or as an isolated finding. It typically presents 1-6 months after the precipitating streptococcal infection and usually has both neurologic and psychological features.

In the isolated form, laboratory evidence of a preceding streptococcal infection may be lacking.
Like the polyarthritis, Sydenham chorea usually resolves without permanent damage but occasionally lasts 2-3 years and be a major problem for the patient and her family.6
Erythema marginatum: In first attacks of ARF in children, erythema marginatum occurs in approximately 10%. Like chorea, it is very rare in adults.

Patients or parents may report a nonpruritic, painless, serpiginous, erythematous eruption on the trunk. It is usually noted only in fair–skinned patients.
The lesions may persist intermittently for weeks to months.
Subcutaneous nodules are rarely noticed by the patient (see Physical).

Other symptoms may include fever, abdominal pain, arthralgia, malaise, and epistaxis.

Physical

Polyarthritis
Joint involvement in ARF may range from arthralgia to frank polyarthritis characterized by swelling, redness, warmth, and joint tenderness.
The joints frequently involved include the knees, ankles, elbows, and wrists. The small joints of the hands and the spine are rarely involved. Hand involvement tends to occur in poststreptococcal arthritis, a related syndrome without a risk of carditis.
Inflammation begins to subside within a few days to a week and disappears within 2-4 weeks.
The arthritis is classically described as migratory, but, in many cases, new joints are affected before the previously involved joints improve, leaving the appearance of an additive arthritis.10
In most cases, the process does not leave any residual damage. On very rare occasions, periarticular fibrosis occurs after rheumatic arthritis, the so-called Jaccoud joint.

Carditis

Carditis is the only manifestation of ARF with significant potential to cause long-term disability and/or death. It is usually a pancarditis involving the pericardium, myocardium, and endocardium.

The signs of carditis include the development of new murmurs, cardiac enlargement, CHF, pericardial friction rub, and/or pericardial effusion.
Characteristic murmurs of acute carditis include the high-pitched, blowing, holosystolic, apical murmur of mitral regurgitation; the low-pitched, apical, mid-diastolic, flow murmur (Carey-Coombs murmur); and a high-pitched, decrescendo, diastolic murmur of aortic regurgitation heard at the aortic area. Murmurs of mitral and aortic stenosis are observed in chronic valvular heart disease. Isolated aortic disease is distinctly unusual.

The features of CHF include tachycardia, a third heart sound, rales, and edema.
Pericarditis presents as a pericardial rub or effusion.
The use of echocardiography to detect subclinical carditis reveals subclinical rheumatic cardiac disease (both acute and chronic) not appreciated by the standard examination.15,16,17 Whether these subclinical carditis findings carry the same clinical importance as those detected by standard auscultation is unclear; echocardiography findings alone do not currently count toward fulfillment of the Jones criteria, and it is unclear whether they necessitate secondary antibiotic prophylaxis (see Diagnosis). This issue is the most contentious in the rheumatic fever literature18,19 and has major implications for diagnosis and screening. For now, clinicians must rely on their best judgment when evaluating possible carditis detected only with echocardiography.

Subcutaneous nodules

Subcutaneous nodules are uncommon and are usually associated with severe carditis. They tend to occur several weeks after illness onset, are usually painless, and usually go unnoticed by the patient.
They are found primarily over the bony surfaces or prominences and in tendon sheaths. The common sites include the elbows, knees, wrists, ankles, over the Achilles tendon, the back of the scalp, and spinous process of the vertebrae.2
They usually persist for 1-2 weeks. The main differential diagnosis includes primarily the nodules of rheumatoid arthritis.

Erythema marginatum

The individual lesions of erythema marginatum are evanescent, moving over the skin in serpiginous patterns. Likened to smoke rings, they have a tendency to advance at the margins while clearing in the center.
The lesions may be macular and can develop and disappear in minutes, appearing to change shape while being examined.
They are found on the trunk and proximal aspects of the extremities and often go unnoticed by patients and parents, as they are usually covered by clothing.

Sydenham chorea

This is a neurological disorder characterized by emotional lability, personality change, muscular weakness, and uncoordinated, involuntary, purposeless movements.
The classic weakness is characterized by the inability to sustain a tetanic contraction. Patients are unable to maintain a clenched fist when attempting to grip the examiner's hand. Other findings include dysarthric speech, gait problems, and poor fine-motor skills.14
The motor symptoms usually disappear during sleep and may be partially suppressed by sedation.
They can involve the face, hands, and feet.
The average duration of an untreated ARF attack is 3 months. Chronic rheumatic fever, generally defined as disease persisting for longer than 6 months, occurs in less than 5% of cases.

Causes

Group A beta-hemolytic streptococcal infection may lead to rheumatic fever. The overall attack rate after streptococcal pharyngitis 0.3-3%, but certain genetically predisposed individuals, comprising perhaps 3%-6% of the population, account for those who develop rheumatic fever.6
Studies in developed countries have established that rheumatic fever followed only pharyngeal infections and that not all serotypes of group A streptococci cause rheumatic fever. For example, some strains (eg, M types 4, 2, 12) in a population susceptible to rheumatic disease do not result in recurrences of rheumatic fever. The classic rheumatogenic serotypes are thought to include 3, 5, 6, 14, 18, 19, and 24.2 More recent data, largely from studies of the indigenous peoples of Australia, suggest that skin infections (pyoderma) can predispose to ARF and that various other serotypes may be involved.

Two basic theories have been postulated to explain the development of ARF and its sequelae following group A streptococcal infection: (1) a toxic effect produced by an extracellular toxin of group A streptococci on target organs such as the myocardium, valves, synovium, and brain and (2) an abnormal immune response to streptococcal components. Increasing and compelling evidence now strongly favors the autoimmune explanation. It seems clear that an exaggerated immune response in a susceptible individual leads to rheumatic fever. This probably occurs through molecular mimicry, in which the immune response fails to differentiate between epitopes of the streptococcal pathogen and certain host tissues.

Chronic Kidney Disease

What is chronic kidney disease (CKD)?

Healthy kidneys remove waste from your blood. The waste then leaves your body in your urine. The kidneys also help control blood pressure and make red blood cells.

When the kidneys are damaged, they cannot remove waste from the blood as well as they should. This is called chronic kidney disease. Almost 20 million people in the United States have this disease.

The most common causes of CKD are high blood pressure, diabetes and heart disease. CKD can lead to kidney failure, but early treatment can slow or prevent this. Chronic kidney disease can also be caused by infections or urinary blockages.

Am I at risk for CKD?

You may be at risk if someone in your family has CKD or if you have diabetes or if you have high blood pressure. Talk to your doctor about your risk factors. It is important to diagnose CKD early.

What are the symptoms of CKD?

Most people don't have any symptoms early in the disease. Once the disease progresses, the symptoms can include the following:
Feeling tired
Feeling weak
Loss of appetite
Not sleeping
Not thinking clearly
Swelling of the feet and ankles

How can my doctor tell if I have CKD?

Your doctor will ask you about risk factors for kidney disease, such as diabetes and high blood pressure. Your doctor also will test your blood and urine for signs of CKD.

I have CKD, what can I do to prevent or slow down problems?

Your doctor will talk to you about treating the problems that damaged the kidneys.

If you have high blood pressure, it is important to lower your blood pressure to 130/80 mm Hg or lower. Medicines called ACE inhibitors and angiotensin-II receptor blockers can be helpful. These medicines lower blood pressure and may help keep your kidney disease from getting worse. Exercise and a healthy diet can also help to lower your blood pressure.

If you have diabetes, your doctor will tell you what to do to keep your blood sugar level normal. You may need to change your diet or take medicine.

If you smoke, you must quit. Smoking worsens kidney disease and interferes with medicines used to treat high blood pressure.

Your doctor may also talk to you about your diet. You may need to watch how much protein you eat. Too much protein can make the kidneys work too hard.

You will need to have regular checkups so your doctor can check how your kidneys are working and treat problems caused by CKD.

How else is CKD treated?

You may need to lower your triglyceride (say: try-gliss-er-eyed) and cholesterol levels. Triglycerides are a type of fat. Triglyceride levels often are higher in people who have kidney disease. Your doctor may have you take medicine to lower your triglyceride and cholesterol levels.

CKD sometimes causes anemia. Anemia occurs when your blood doesn't have enough hemoglobin ( a protein that carries oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body). Symptoms of anemia include feeling tired and weak. If you have anemia, your doctor may have you take medicine.

CKD can also change the way your body uses minerals like calcium and phosphorus. As a result, your bones can become weak. Your doctor may have you avoid certain foods or take medicine.

If you have chronic kidney disease, you may lose your appetite. A nutritionist can help you plan a diet that will keep you strong.

What happens if CKD gets worse?

Even with the right treatments, CKD can get worse over time. Your kidneys could stop working. This is called kidney failure. If this happens, waste builds up in your body. This can cause vomiting, weakness, confusion and coma.

If you have kidney failure, your doctor will send you for dialysis (say: die-al-uh-sis). In dialysis, a machine is used to take waste out of the blood. One kind of dialysis has to be done in a clinic. For another kind of dialysis, the machine is so small it can be strapped to your body while you go about your daily activities.

HIV

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease was first described in 1981 among 2 groups—one in San Francisco and the other in New York City. Numerous young homosexual men presented with opportunistic infections that, at the time, were typically associated with severe immune deficiency due to Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) or aggressive Kaposi sarcoma.1 The HIV virus itself was not identified for another 2 years2 ; during that time, various other causes were considered, including lifestyle factors, chronic drug abuse, and other infectious agents.3

The HIV epidemic spread rapidly and silently in the absence of testing. However, clear clinical implications arose before society became aware of the disease; for example, prior to the recognition of HIV, only one case of Pneumocystis pneumonia not clearly associated with immune suppression was diagnosed in the Unites States between January 1976 and June 1980. In 1981 alone, 42 similar diagnoses were made, and, by December 1994, 127,626 cases of Pneumocystis pneumonia with HIV infection as the only identified cause of immune suppression had been reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Also, Kaposi sarcoma is up to 30,000 times more likely to develop in persons with HIV infection than in immunocompetent persons.

HIV is a blood-borne, sexually transmissible virus. The virus is typically transmitted via sexual intercourse, shared intravenous drug paraphernalia, and mother-to-child transmission (MTCT), which can occur during the birth process or during breastfeeding. The most common route of infection varies from country to country and even among cities, reflecting the population in whom HIV was introduced initially and local practices. Co-infection with other viruses that share similar routes of transmission, such as hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and human herpes virus 8 (HHV8; also known as Kaposi sarcoma herpes virus [KSHV]), is common.

Two distinct species of HIV (HIV-1 and HIV-2) have been identified, and each is composed of multiple subtypes, or clades. All clades of HIV-1 tend to cause similar disease, but the global distribution of the clades differs. This may have implications on any future vaccine, as the B clade, which is predominant in the developed world (where the large pharmaceutical companies are located), is rarely found in the developing countries that are more severely affected by the disease.

HIV-1 probably originated from one or more cross-species transfers from chimpanzees in central Africa.4 HIV-2 is closely related to viruses that infect sooty mangabeys in western Africa.5 Genetically, HIV-1 and HIV-2 are superficially similar, but each contains unique genes and its own distinct replication process.

HIV-2 carries a slightly lower risk of transmission, and HIV-2 infection tends to progress more slowly to acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). This may be due to a less-aggressive infection rather than a specific property of the virus itself. Persons infected with HIV-2 tend to have a lower viral load than people with HIV-16,7 , and a greater viral load is associated with more rapid progression to AIDS in HIV-1 infections.8,9 Because HIV-2 is rare in the developed world, most of the research and vaccine and drug development has been (perhaps unfairly) focused on HIV-1.

Electron microscopy of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)–1 virions. Courtesy of CDC/Dr. Edwin P. Ewing, Jr.

A considerable amount of stigma has been attached to HIV infection, mostly because of the virus's association with sexual acquisition and the inference of sexual promiscuity. Consequences of this stigma have included discrimination and reluctance to be tested for HIV infection. However, such attitudes are inappropriate because HIV is poorly transmissible without sexual contact or blood contact and because the expected survival is long in patients with HIV infection who are receiving treatment. HIV is not transmitted during casual contact and is readily inactivated by simple detergents. Much of the concern regarding HIV infection is due to the incurability of the infection and the relentless immune decline and eventual premature death in the vast majority of infected people.

The spread of HIV was retrospectively shown to follow the trucking routes across Africa from logging camps, and the bush-meat trade combined with aggressive logging and improved transportation in the mid-20th century may have allowed what was likely occasional cross-species transmission events to propagate across the country and, eventually, the globe.10

Since the discovery of HIV and its link to acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), great strides have been made in understanding its biology and in developing effective treatments. The difficulty in dealing with HIV on a global scale is largely due to the fact that HIV infection is far more common in resource-poor countries. In the developed world, antiretroviral therapy has greatly improved prognosis and increased survival rates. Public education programs have raised awareness such that testing and prevention of infection are more common. Both of these approaches are difficult in countries with undereducated or underfunded populations.

Political denial and inaction have also likely caused considerable damage. Several governments in countries with high HIV infection rates were slow to admit that they had an HIV epidemic, and at least one (South Africa) initially rejected that AIDS was even a problem, then that the disease was caused by HIV infection, and, most recently, that antiretroviral therapy was effective in treating HIV infection and preventing MTCT. Changes have now occurred but have been slow and have had an unknown cost.

For supplementary information, see the eMedicine articles Early Symptomatic HIV Infection and HIV Infection and AIDS.
Pathophysiology

Virology of HIV

HIV-1 and HIV-2 are retroviruses in the Retroviridae family, Lentivirus genus. They are enveloped, diploid, single-stranded, positive-sense RNA viruses with a DNA intermediate, which is an integrated viral genome (a provirus) that persists within the host-cell DNA. There is no fixed site of integration, but the virus tends to integrate in areas of active transcription, probably because these areas have more open chromatin and more easily accessible DNA.11,12 This greatly complicates eradication of the virus by the host, as latent proviral genomes can persist without being detected by the immune system and cannot be targeted by antivirals.


Genome layout of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)–1 and HIV-2.

HIV contains the 3 species-defining retroviral genes— gag (group-specific antigen; the inner structural proteins), pol (polymerase; also contains integrase and protease—the viral enzymes—and is produced as a C-terminal extension of the Gag protein), and env (envelope; the outer structural proteins responsible for cell-type specificity).

HIV-1 has 6 additional accessory genes— tat, rev, nef, vif, vpu, and vpr. HIV-2 does not have vpu but instead has the unique gene vpx. The only other virus known to contain the vpu gene is simian immunodeficiency virus in chimpanzees (SIVcpz), which is the simian equivalent of HIV.4 Interestingly, chimpanzees with active HIV-1 infection are resistant to disease.13

The accessory proteins of HIV-1 and HIV-2 are involved in viral replication and may play a role in the disease process.14,15 The outer part of the genome consists of long terminal repeats (LTRs) that contain sequences necessary for gene transcription and splicing, viral packaging of genomic RNA, and dimerization sequences to ensure that 2 RNA genomes are packaged. The dimerization, packaging, and gene-transcription processes are intimately linked; disruption in one process often subsequently affects another. The LTRs exist only in the proviral DNA genome; the viral RNA genome contains only part of each LTR, and the complete LTRs are re-created during the reverse-transcription process prior to integration into the host DNA.

The Biologic Basis for AIDS

The specific details of the disease process that leads to AIDS are not fully understood despite considerable progress in the virology of HIV and the immunology of the human host, much of which has been driven by the urge to better understand AIDS.16,17,18

There is a specific decline in the CD4+ helper T cells, resulting in inversion of the normal CD4/CD8 T-cell ratio and dysregulation of B-cell antibody production.19,20 Immune responses to certain antigens begin to decline, and the host fails to adequately respond to opportunistic infections and normally harmless commensal organisms. Because the defect preferentially affects cellular immunity, the infections tend to be nonbacterial (fungal, viral).

The pattern of opportunistic infections in a geographic region reflects the pathogens that are common in that area. For example, persons with AIDS in the United States tend to present with commensal organisms such as Pneumocystis and Candida species, homosexual men are more likely to develop Kaposi sarcoma because of co-infection with HHV8, and tuberculosis is common in developing countries.

Recent work has shown the importance of gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) in HIV replication.21 Although the portal of entry for HIV infection is typically through direct blood inoculation or exposure of the virus to genital mucosal surfaces, the GI tract contains a large amount of lymphoid tissue, making this an ideal site for HIV replication.

GALT has been shown to be a site of early viral seeding and establishment of the proviral reservoir. This reservoir contributes to the difficulty of controlling the infection, and efforts to reduce the levels of HIV provirus through sustained antiretroviral therapy (alone or in combination with interleukin-2 activation of resting HIV-infected T cells) have consistently failed.22

A feature of HIV replication in GALT is that it is compartmentalized, even among different areas of the gut.23 Measurements of CD4+ T cells in GALT show relatively less reconstitution with antiretroviral therapy than that observed in peripheral blood.24,25 At least one report has suggested that early treatment may result in better GALT CD4 T-cell recovery25 , but clinical data generally argue against early initiation of therapy, which has not been shown to improve long-term survival. In addition, HIV replication can be detected even in patients with supposedly suppressed replication, as judged by plasma viral load measurements. CD8+ killer T-cell responses to HIV occur in GALT and do not decline with antiviral therapy as much as peripheral measurements do.26 These findings underscore the limitations of peripheral measurements in what is really a central viral replication.

One theory for the discrepancy between GALT and blood measurements is that ongoing viral replication in the lymphoid tissue, and the resulting immune activation, may actually hamper efficient CD4+ T-cell replenishment.27

Studies of T-cell–replication kinetics have revealed that untreated HIV infection is characterized by rapid T-cell turnover but a defect in T-cell replication from the thymus.28,29 These changes can be reversed with effective long-term antiviral therapy,30,31 suggesting that they are due to a direct effect of the virus or are a feature of the immune response against HIV. It is known that normal cell cycling is necessary to produce a normal cytokine profile32 and that HIV causes cell-cycle arrest,33 but whether this is the exact mechanism is unresolved.

Several of the HIV proteins directly affect T-cell function, either by disrupting cell cycling or down-regulating the CD4 molecule. The loss of T cells is clearly a primary issue, as the T-cell repertoire narrows in terms of which antigens the immune system will recognize and respond to. Antiviral therapy is able to reverse these changes,34 but the degree of reversal is decreased if therapy is initiated very late in the infection and is further decreased when therapy is initiated when CD4 T-cell counts are 200/μL and below. Direct cytotoxic effects of viral replication are likely not the primary cause of CD4 T-cell loss; a significant bystander effect35 is likely secondary to T-cell apoptosis as part of immune hyperactivation in response to the chronic infection. Infected cells may also be affected by the immune attack.

One interesting issue is that the co-receptor usage of the virus strains tends to change over time. The initial infection nearly always involves a strain that uses the chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) co-receptor found on macrophages and dendritic cells. People who are homozygous for deletions in the CCR5 gene tend to be resistant to infection and may have some protection against progression.36,37 Over time, the receptor usage shifts to chemokine-related receptor (CXCR4) and other related receptors found on CD4 T cells. These virus strains are more likely to cause cell fusion (syncytia formation). This trend is far from absolute but does correlate in many people with disease progression.38

Regardless of the cause for the disruption, a loss of thymic replacements in the face of an induced state of immune activation and T-cell loss seems to be a key component of the mechanism by which HIV narrows the T-cell repertoire and progresses to AIDS.39,40,41

Visible effects of HIV infection come in the form of disrupted lymph-node architecture. This disruption is temporal, and, at one point, lymph-node biopsy was considered as a form of staging the disease.42,43 The disruption of the follicular dendritic network in the lymph nodes and subsequent failure of normal antigen presentation are likely contributors to the disease process. HIV replicates in activated T cells (its promotor is a nuclear factor kappa B [NF-kappa-B]–binding region, the same protein that promotes other proteins in activated T cells and macrophages), and activated T cells migrate to the lymph nodes. As such, much of the viral replication occurs outside of the peripheral blood, even though serum viral load is still a useful surrogate marker of viral replication.

For additional information, see Medscape's HIV Pathogenesis Resource Center.
Phases of HIV Infection
Clinical HIV infection undergoes 3 distinct phases—acute seroconversion, asymptomatic infection, and AIDS. Each is discussed below.

Acute seroconversion

During this phase, the infection is established, and a proviral reservoir is created.44,45 This reservoir consists of persistently infected cells, typically macrophages, and appears to steadily release virus. Some of the viral release replenishes the reservoir, and some goes on to produce more active infection. The proviral reservoir, as measured by DNA polymerase chain reaction (PCR), seems to be incredibly stable. Although it does decline with aggressive antiviral therapy, the half-life is such that eradication is not a viable expectation.

The size of the proviral reservoir correlates to the steady-state viral load and is inversely correlated to the anti-HIV CD8 T-cell responses. Aggressive early treatment of acute infection may lower the proviral load, but, generally, treatment in newly infected (but postseroconversion) patients yields no long-term benefit.

At this point, the viral load is typically very high, and the CD4 T-cell count drops precipitously. With the appearance of anti-HIV antibodies and CD8 T-cell responses, the viral load drops to a steady state and the CD4 T-cell count returns to levels within the reference range, although slightly lower than before infection.

Seroconversion may take a few weeks, up to several months. Symptoms during this time may include fever, flulike illness, lymphadenopathy, and rash and develop in approximately half of all people infected with HIV.

Asymptomatic HIV infection

At this stage in the infection, persons infected with HIV exhibit few or no signs or symptoms for a few years to a decade or more. Viral replication is clearly ongoing during this time,46 and the immune response against the virus is effective and vigorous. In some patients, persistent generalized lymphadenopathy is an outward sign of infection. During this time, the viral load, if intreated, tends to persist at a relatively steady state, but the CD4 T-cell count steadily declines. This rate of decline is related to, but not easily predicted by, the steady-state viral load.

No firm evidence has shown that the initiation of therapy early in the asymptomatic period is effective, although very late initiation is known to result in a less effective response to therapy and a lower level of immune reconstitution.

AIDS

When the immune system is damaged enough that significant opportunistic infections begin to develop, the person is considered to have AIDS. For surveillance purposes in the United States, a CD4 T-cell count less than 200/μL is also used as a measure to diagnose AIDS, although some opportunistic infections develop when CD4 T-cell counts are higher than 200/μL, and some people with CD4 counts under 200/μL may remain relatively healthy.

Many opportunistic infections and conditions are used to mark when HIV infection has progressed to AIDS. The general frequency of these infections and conditions vary from rare to common but are uncommon or mild in immunocompetent persons. When one of these is unusually severe or frequent in a person infected with HIV and no other causes for immune suppression can be found, AIDS can be diagnosed.47

The following are such opportunistic infections and conditions:
Candidiasis of bronchi, trachea, or lungs
Candidiasis, esophageal
Cervical cancer, invasive*
Coccidioidomycosis, disseminated or extrapulmonary
Cryptococcosis, extrapulmonary
Cryptosporidiosis, chronic intestinal (duration >1 mo)
Cytomegalovirus disease (other than liver, spleen, or nodes)
Cytomegalovirus retinitis (with vision loss)
Encephalopathy, HIV-related
Herpes simplex - Chronic ulcer or ulcers (duration >1 mo) or bronchitis, pneumonitis, or esophagitis
Histoplasmosis, disseminated or extrapulmonary
Isosporiasis, chronic intestinal (duration >1 mo)
Kaposi sarcoma
Lymphoma, Burkitt (or equivalent term)
Lymphoma, immunoblastic (or equivalent term)
Lymphoma, primary, of the brain
Mycobacterium avium complex or Mycobacterium kansasii infection, disseminated or extrapulmonary
Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection, any site (pulmonary* or extrapulmonary)
Mycobacterium infection with other species or unidentified species, disseminated or extrapulmonary
Pneumocystis pneumonia
Pneumonia, recurrent*
Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy
Salmonella septicemia, recurrent
Toxoplasmosis of the brain
Wasting syndrome due to HIV infection
*Added in the 1993 AIDS surveillance case definition




Timeline of CD4 T-cell and viral-load changes over time in untreated human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. From Wikipedia, based on an original from Pantaleo et al (1993).


Frequency
United States

The most recent frequency data concerning HIV infection in the United States are from 2006. According to data from states that have confidential name-based reporting, the national-average incidence of HIV infection is 18.5 per 100,000 population. The incidence rate of late HIV disease (AIDS) is 12.3 per 100,000 population. With improved estimation methods, the number of new HIV infections in 2006 has been estimated at 56,300. Approximately 1 million persons have been diagnosed with AIDS since 1981, and more than 500,000 people have died with AIDS (although reporting limitations mean that not every "death with AIDS" is directly attributable to AIDS itself). Approximately 1.1 million people currently have HIV infection in the United States.

US rates vary by state. See the latest Centers for Disease Control (CDC) surveillance report for full details (maps 1 and 2).

The overall figures may give a false impression that the HIV epidemic is relatively homogenous. In fact, the HIV epidemic is best viewed as numerous separate epidemics among distinct risk groups, although the various epidemics clearly have some level of overlap. In any given area, the infection may be most prevalent among users of intravenous drugs who share needles. In another, the main risk group may be men who have sex with other men. And in yet another, the main risk group may be female sex workers.

These sub-epidemics each follow their own pattern, although there is some degree of interdependence. Nearly all early cases of HIV infection detected in the Western Hemisphere were in homosexual men, but female partners of bisexual men with HIV infection gave rise to an increased spread among heterosexual persons. Contributing to the increased cross-prevalence were persons with hemophilia who had been infected with HIV from contaminated factor VIII and persons who used intravenous drugs, an activity that transcends all sexual preferences. Currently, less than half of new HIV infections are reported in homosexual men, and infected heterosexual women outnumber infected heterosexual men nearly two to one.48



Incidence of HIV infection by risk group. From the CDC Web site (copyright free) derived from the revised 2006 estimated figures.


Additional risk factors may predispose to HIV infection. Concomitant infection with other STDs (eg, gonorrhea, herpes, syphilis) is the most well-known. These infections may cause mucosal ulcerations or tears or a higher concentration of inflammatory cells in the mucosa, which are targets for HIV infection. In addition, certain sexual acts are more likely to lead to HIV infection than others. For example, fellatio carries the lowest risk of transmission (with very few case reports in the literature), while receptive anal intercourse carries the highest risk (a likelihood of approximately 1.5% per act with an infected individual). Higher viral loads in the source partner are associated with higher transmission rates; thus, because barrier contraception is imperfect (although by far the best method to prevent sexual transmission), good control of viral load is important.

The introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has significantly improved mortality rates. One study of nearly 7000 men with HIV infection found that annual mortality rates decreased from 7% in 1996 to 1.3% in 2004, although the findings highlighted the fact that non–AIDS-related illnesses were accounting for a greater proportion of deaths.49

International

Worldwide, approximately 39.5 million people (1% of the global adult population aged 15-49 y) are infected with HIV. UNAIDS estimates that 4.3 million people were newly infected with HIV and that 2.9 million people died from AIDS in 2006. The vast majority of infections remain in sub-Saharan Africa, where nearly 6% of the population is thought to be infected.

Between 2004 and 2006, the prevalence of HIV infection in central and eastern Asia and Eastern Europe increased by 21%. During this period, the number of new HIV infections in persons aged 15 to 64 years rose by 70% in Eastern Europe and central Asia.

The infection rates in many developed countries remain stable, and some developing countries have achieved significant gains in controlling and even reversing the effects of the HIV epidemic. However, this is partially due to deaths in HIV-infected people, together with simultaneous prevention of new infections. These figures together show that global HIV infection is in a state of flux.

The mortality rate in some countries has greatly increased. In South Africa (a country that, despite having a relatively late-onset HIV epidemic, has developed one of the highest prevalence rates), the all-cause HIV-associated mortality rate increased by 79% between 1997 and 2004. In women aged 25-34 years, mortality rates increased by 500% during this period.

Swaziland has the highest overall prevalence of HIV infection (>33.4% of all adults).

The Ministry of Health in Zambia predicts that, without therapy and assuming current levels of prevalence, young adults have a 50% lifetime risk of dying from AIDS.

In developing nations, co-infection with HIV and tuberculosis is very common. The immunosuppressed state induced by HIV infection contributes not only to a higher rate of tuberculosis reactivation but also to an increased disease severity, as with many other opportunistic infections.

Further details of the global epidemic can be found in the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS 2006 Epidemic Update.
Mortality/Morbidity

Untreated HIV infection carries an overall mortality rate of more than 90%. The CD4 T-cell counts remain stable in a small percentage of people with HIV infection. This is usually associated with strong anti-HIV CD8 T-cell responses, a low viral load, and low proviral reservoir. The average interval between initial HIV infection and progression to AIDS is 8-10 years.

Once infection has progressed to AIDS, the survival period is usually less than 2 years in untreated patients. Persons in whom the infection does not progress long-term may not develop AIDS for 15 years or longer, although many still exhibit laboratory evidence of CD4 T-cell decline or dysfunction.50,51,52,53

The appropriate use of combination antiretroviral therapies and prophylaxis for opportunistic infections dramatically improves survival and greatly decreases the risk of secondary opportunistic infections.54,55,49 The risk of AIDS-associated lymphoma is not altered by antiviral therapy and, as such, has grown in prevalence among overall AIDS-defining conditions. Sackoff et al found that, since 1999, the HIV-related mortality rate in New York City has decreased by approximately 50 deaths per 10,000 people with AIDS per year. The rate of non–HIV-related deaths has also seen a more modest but consistent decline, with about 7.5 fewer deaths per 10,000 people with AIDS per year.55 Importantly, many researchers have consistently shown that the primary risk factor for infection affects mortality. For example, the mortality rate among intravenous drug users tends to be higher, whether related to HIV disease or non-HIV disease.

Overall, with the increasing use of antiretroviral therapy and the introduction of better antiviral regimens, survival with HIV infection has increased over time, although it is not yet equivalent to that in uninfected individuals.


Changes in survival of people infected with HIV. As therapies have become more aggressive, they have been more effective, although survival with HIV infection is not yet equivalent to that in uninfected people. Modified from an original published by Lohse et al (2007), "Survival of persons with and without HIV infection in Denmark, 1995-2005."



In addition to the concern for new opportunistic infections, pre-existing infections can reactivate and cause significant disease in people with AIDS. The most important example on a global scale is that of tuberculosis, as reactivated tuberculosis can cause symptomatic disease with lower levels of reactivation. Other important pathogens include cytomegalovirus, (which causes retinitis, pneumonitis, and colitis) and Pneumocystis jiroveci (formerly known as Pneumocystis carinii; the causative organism in Pneumocystis pneumonia). In immunocompetent hosts, these organisms are generally nonpathogenic, and asymptomatic infection is common (and in the case of cytomegalovirus infection, life-long).

Antiviral medications are associated with adverse effects and thus contribute to patient morbidity and mortality rates, especially because of the growing population of long-term survivors who are receiving combination antiviral therapy. In particular, protease inhibitors may cause lipid-profile abnormalities.
Race

In the United States, the prevalence of HIV infection is highest in blacks (71.3 cases per 100,000 population). The prevalence is also high among Hispanic persons (27.8 per 100,000 population). These increased rates are due to socioeconomic factors rather than genetic predisposition.
Sex

In the developed world, HIV infection is much more common in males. Among heterosexuals, females are more likely to acquire HIV infection from an infected male than a male is from an infected female, but a large proportion of infections in males are due to homosexual contact, with or without injection drug use. Males are also more likely to acquire HIV infection from injection drug use alone.

Males were also more likely to acquire HIV infection through contaminated blood products during treatment of hemophilia before universal testing of the blood supply was instituted. (The procedures used in purifying factor VIII and producing cryoprecipitate are effective in preserving biologic activity of HIV. To negate this, heat treatment was added to the purification of factor VIII to inactivate HIV and other viruses). This is a small contribution to the predominance of HIV infection in males.

In the developing world, HIV infection is equally common in males and females. The primary route of HIV transmission in the developing world is heterosexual contact.

Age

Young adults tend to be at higher risk of acquiring HIV, typically through high-risk activities such as unprotected sexual intercourse or intravenous drug use.
Clinical
History

The history should be carefully taken to elicit possible exposures to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Risk factors include the following:

Unprotected sexual intercourse, especially receptive anal intercourse (8-fold higher risk of transmission)
A large number of sexual partners
Prior or current STDs: Gonorrhea and chlamydia infections increase the HIV transmission risk 3-fold, syphilis raises the transmission risk 7-fold, and herpes genitalis raises the transmission risk up to 25-fold during an outbreak.
Sharing of intravenous drug paraphernalia
Receipt of blood products (before 1985 in the United States)
Mucosal contact with infected blood or needle-stick injuries
Maternal HIV infection (for newborns, infants, and children): Steps taken to reduce the risk of transmission at birth include cesarean delivery and prenatal antiretroviral therapy in the mother and antiretroviral therapy in the newborn immediately after birth.

The patient may present with signs and symptoms of any of the stages of HIV infection. Acute seroconversion manifests as a flulike illness, consisting of fever, malaise, and a generalized rash.

The asymptomatic phase is generally benign. Generalized lymphadenopathy is common and may be a presenting symptom.

AIDS manifests as recurrent, severe, and occasionally life-threatening infections and/or opportunistic malignancies. The signs and symptoms are those of the presenting illness, meaning that HIV infection should be suspected as an underlying illness when unusual infections present in apparently healthy individuals.

HIV infection itself does cause some sequelae, including AIDS-associated dementia/encephalopathy and HIV wasting syndrome (chronic diarrhea and weight loss with no identifiable cause).
Physical

No physical findings are specific to HIV infection. The physical findings are those of the presenting infection or illness.
Generalized lymphadenopathy is common.
Weight loss may be apparent.
Evidence for risk factors or minor concurrent opportunistic infections (eg, herpetic lesions on the groin, widespread oral candidiasis) may be clues to HIV infection.
Many patients with AIDS develop cytomegalovirus retinitis with severe vision loss.
Causes

HIV disease is caused by infection with HIV-1 or HIV-2, both of which cause very similar conditions. They differ in transmission and progression risks.

There is less evidence that treatment of HIV-2 infection slows progression, and certain antiretroviral medications are not effective against HIV-2. The HIV-1 viral-load assays are much less reliable, if they work at all. HIV-2 viral load assays have been developed, but none has been approved by the FDA except as blood donor–screening tools.

Typhoid Fever

Background

Typhoid fever, also known as enteric fever, is a potentially fatal multisystemic illness caused primarily by Salmonella typhi. The protean manifestations of typhoid fever make this disease a true diagnostic challenge. The classic presentation includes fever, malaise, diffuse abdominal pain, and constipation. Untreated, typhoid fever is a grueling illness that may progress to delirium, obtundation, intestinal hemorrhage, bowel perforation, and death within one month of onset. Survivors may be left with long-term or permanent neuropsychiatric complications.

S typhi has been a major human pathogen for thousands of years, thriving in conditions of poor sanitation, crowding, and social chaos. It may have responsible for the Great Plague of Athens at the end of the Pelopennesian War.1 The name S typhi is derived from the ancient Greek typhos, an ethereal smoke or cloud that was believed to cause disease and madness. In the advanced stages of typhoid fever, the patient's level of consciousness is truly clouded. Although antibiotics have markedly reduced the frequency of typhoid fever in the developed world, it remains endemic in developing countries.

Transmission

S typhi has no nonhuman vectors. The following are modes of transmission:

Oral transmission via food or beverages handled by an individual who chronically sheds the bacteria through stool or, less commonly, urine
Hand-to-mouth transmission after using a contaminated toilet and neglecting hand hygiene
Oral transmission via sewage-contaminated water or shellfish (especially in the developing world)

An inoculum as small as 100,000 organisms causes infection in more than 50% of healthy volunteers.

Pathophysiology

All pathogenic Salmonella species are engulfed by phagocytic cells, which then pass them through the mucosa and present them to the macrophages in the lamina propria. Nontyphoidal salmonellae are phagocytized throughout the distal ilium and colon. With toll-like receptor (TLR)–5 and TLR-4/MD2/CD-14 complex, macrophages recognize pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) such as flagella and lipopolysaccharides. Macrophages and intestinal epithelial cells then attract T cells and neutrophils with interleukin 8 (IL-8), causing inflammation and suppressing the infection.

In contrast to the nontyphoidal salmonellae, S typhi enters the host's system primarily through the distal ilium. S typhi has specialized fimbriae that adhere to the epithelium over clusters of lymphoid tissue in the ilium (Peyer patches), the main relay point for macrophages traveling from the gut into the lymphatic system. S typhi has a Vi capsular antigen that masks PAMPs, avoiding neutrophil-based inflammation. The bacteria then induce their host macrophages to attract more macrophages.

It co-opts the macrophages' cellular machinery for their own reproduction7 as it is carried through the mesenteric lymph nodes to the thoracic duct and the lymphatics and then through to the reticuloendothelial tissues of the liver, spleen, bone marrow, and lymph nodes. Once there, the S typhi bacteria pause and continue to multiply until some critical density is reached. Afterward, the bacteria induce macrophage apoptosis, breaking out into the bloodstream to invade the rest of the body.

The gallbladder is then infected via either bacteremia or direct extension of S typhi –infected bile. The result is that the organism re-enters the gastrointestinal tract in the bile and reinfects Peyer patches. Bacteria that do not reinfect the host are typically shed in the stool and are then available to infect other hosts

Risk factors

S typhi are able to survive a stomach pH as low as 1.5. Antacids, histamine-2 receptor antagonists (H2 blockers), proton pump inhibitors, gastrectomy, and achlorhydria decrease stomach acidity and facilitate S typhi infection.

HIV/AIDS is clearly associated with an increased risk of nontyphoidal Salmonella infection; however, the data and opinions in the literature as to whether this is true for S typhi infection are conflicting. If an association exists, it is probably minor.

Other risk factors for clinical S typhi infection include various genetic polymorphisms. These risk factors often also predispose to other intracellular pathogens. For instance, PARK2 and PACGR code for a protein aggregate that is essential for breaking down the bacterial signaling molecules that dampen the macrophage response. Polymorphisms in their shared regulatory region are found disproportionately in persons infected with Mycobacterium leprae and S typhi.12
On the other hand, protective host mutations also exist. The fimbriae of S typhi bind in vitro to cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance receptor (CFTR), which is expressed on the gut membrane. Two to 5% of white persons are heterozygous for the CFTR mutation F508del, which is associated with a decreased susceptibility to typhoid fever, as well as to cholera and tuberculosis. The homozygous F508del mutation in CFTR is associated with cystic fibrosis. Thus, typhoid fever may contribute to evolutionary pressure that maintains a steady occurrence of cystic fibrosis, just as malaria maintains sickle cell disease in Africa.

Environmental and behavioral risk factors that are independently associated with typhoid fever include eating food from street vendors, living in the same household with someone who has new case of typhoid fever, washing the hands inadequately, sharing food from the same plate, drinking unpurified water, and living in a household that does not have a toilet.15,12 As the middle class in south Asia grows, some hospitals there are seeing a large number of typhoid fever cases among relatively well-off university students who live in group households with poor hygeine.16 American clinicians should keep this in mind, as members of this cohort often come to the United States for higher degrees.

Frequency

United States

Since 1900, improved sanitation and successful antibiotic treatment have steadily decreased the incidence of typhoid fever in the United States. In 1920, 35,994 cases of typhoid fever were reported. Currently, 200-400 cases of typhoid fever are reported per year in the United States, 75% of which occur in international travelers (mostly to the Indian subcontinent and Latin America)17 within 30 days of entry. The rare outbreaks of typhoid fever due to S typhi transmission within the United States are generally traceable to imported food or to a food handler from an endemic region.

International

Typhoid fever occurs worldwide, primarily in developing nations whose sanitary conditions are poor. Typhoid fever is endemic in Asia, Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, and Oceania. Typhoid fever infects roughly 21.6 million people and kills an estimated 200,000 people every year.

Mortality/Morbidity

With prompt and appropriate antibiotic therapy, typhoid fever is typically a short-term febrile illness with a negligible risk of mortality. Untreated typhoid fever is a life-threatening illness of several weeks' duration with long-term morbidity. The case fatality rate in the United States in the pre-antibiotic era was 9-13%.Race

Typhoid fever has no racial predilection.

Sex

Typhoid fever has no sexual predilection.

Age

Most documented typhoid fever cases involve school-aged children and young adults. However, the true incidence among very young children and infants is thought to be higher. The presentations in these age groups may be atypical, ranging from a mild febrile illness to severe convulsions, and the S typhi infection may go unrecognized. This may account for conflicting reports in the literature that this group has either a very high or a very low rate of morbidity and mortality.
Clinical

History

A severe nonspecific febrile illness in a patient who has been exposed to S typhi should always raise the diagnostic possibility of typhoid fever (enteric fever).

Classic typhoid fever syndrome

Typhoid fever begins 7-14 days after ingestion of S typhi. The fever pattern is stepwise, characterized by a rising temperature over the course of each day that drops by the subsequent morning. The peaks and troughs rise progressively over time.

Over the course of the first week of illness, the notorious gastrointestinal manifestations of the disease develop. These include diffuse abdominal pain and tenderness and, in some cases, fierce colicky right upper quadrant pain. Monocytic infiltration inflames Peyer patches and narrows the bowel lumen, causing constipation that lasts the duration of the illness. The individual then develops a dry cough, dull frontal headache, delirium, and an increasingly stuporous malaise.2

At approximately the end of the first week of illness, the fever plateaus at 103-104°F (39-40°C). The patient develops rose spots, which are salmon-colored, blanching, truncal, maculopapules usually 1-4 cm wide and fewer than 5 in number; these generally resolve within 2-5 days.2 These are bacterial emboli to the dermis and occasionally develop in persons with shigellosis or nontyphoidal salmonellosis.

During the second week of illness, the signs and symptoms listed above progress. The abdomen becomes distended, and soft splenomegaly is common. Relative bradycardia and dicrotic pulse (double beat, the second beat weaker than the first) may develop.

In the third week, the still febrile individual grows more toxic and anorexic with significant weight loss. The conjunctivae are infected, and the patient is tachypneic with a thready pulse and crackles over the lung bases. Abdominal distension is severe. Some patients experience foul, green-yellow, liquid diarrhea (pea soup diarrhea). The individual may descend into the typhoid state, which is characterized by apathy, confusion, and even psychosis. Necrotic Peyer patches may cause bowel perforation and peritonitis. This complication is often unheralded and may be masked by corticosteroids. At this point, overwhelming toxemia, myocarditis, or intestinal hemorrhage may cause death.

If the individual survives to the fourth week, the fever, mental state, and abdominal distension slowly improve over a few days. Intestinal and neurologic complications may still occur in surviving untreated individuals. Weight loss and debilitating weakness last months. Some survivors become asymptomatic S typhi carriers and have the potential to transmit the bacteria indefinitely.

Various presentations of typhoid fever

The clinical course of a given individual with typhoid fever may deviate from the above description of classic disease. The timing of the symptoms and host response may vary based on geographic region, race factors, and the infecting bacterial strain. The stepladder fever pattern that was once the hallmark of typhoid fever now occurs in as few as 12% of cases. In most contemporary presentations of typhoid fever, the fever has a steady insidious onset.

Young children, individuals with AIDS, and one third of immunocompetent adults who develop typhoid fever develop diarrhea rather than constipation. In addition, in some localities, typhoid fever is generally more apt to cause diarrhea than constipation.

Atypical manifestations of typhoid fever include isolated severe headaches that may mimic meningitis, acute lobar pneumonia, isolated arthralgias, urinary symptoms, severe jaundice, or fever alone. Some patients, especially in India and Africa, present primarily with neurologic manifestations such as delirium or, in extremely rare cases, parkinsonian symptoms or Guillain-Barré syndrome. Other unusual complications include pancreatitis,24 meningitis, orchitis, osteomyelitis, and abscesses anywhere on the body