Health & Medical Health & Medicine Journal & Academic

Evaluating a Sick Child After Travel to Developing Countries

Evaluating a Sick Child After Travel to Developing Countries

Abstract and Introduction

Abstract


Every year, millions of children travel internationally with their families, many to developing countries. Although the vast majority experience uneventful travel and return home well, it is not uncommon for children to present as ill during or after travel. Although the majority of travel-associated illness is mild and self-limited, serious conditions regularly occur. Almost all life-threatening conditions after travel present with fever, and malaria is the most important of these to rapidly exclude. Gastrointestinal symptoms are common after travel in the developing world, and most diarrhea in child travelers has a bacterial source. Children who have a rash in association with fever or who appear ill should receive a priority work-up focused on ruling out serious conditions. Many children traveling internationally experience respiratory illness during or shortly after travel, mainly common upper respiratory infections, yet serious conditions, such as tuberculosis, may occur. Eosinophilia is common in the returned pediatric traveler, particularly those with prolonged stays in the tropics. Not all eosinophilia is caused by parasitic infection; drug reactions, asthma, and other allergic conditions are also common causes. With a focus first on ruling out life-threatening disease and subsequently on an informed and efficient path to diagnosis and treatment, clinicians may confidently provide care for this challenging group of patients.

Introduction


Every year, millions of children travel internationally with their families, many to developing countries. Although the vast majority experience uneventful travel and return home well, it is not uncommon for children to present as ill during or after travel. Although the majority of travel-associated illness is mild and self-limited, serious conditions regularly occur. Because many health care practitioners in industrialized countries may be unfamiliar with conditions uncommon in their practice setting, this article seeks to review common presentations of the ill child after travel and offer an organized approach to their evaluation.

Related posts "Health & Medical : Health & Medicine Journal & Academic"

Maternal Hyperlipidemia and the Risk of Preeclampsia

Journal

Tenofovir Alafenamide vs. Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate

Journal

Dual Antiplatelet Therapy After PCI With Drug Eluting Stents

Journal

Vitamin D and Multiple Health Outcomes

Journal

Enrollment and Retention Predictors in Preventive Parenting Intervention

Journal

Iatrogenic Hyponatremic Seizures

Journal

The Growing Epidemic of HPV-Positive Oropharyngeal Carcinoma

Journal

Normalization of Testosterone Level and Incidence of MI in Men

Journal

Hyperkalemia in a Dialysis Patient After Colon Diversion

Journal

Leave a Comment