|
|
|
|
|
| |
Current Issue

Past Issues

Instructions to Authors

Search



Changing characteristics of typhoid fever in Taiwan

Chan-Ping Su1, Yee-Chun Chen2, Shan-Chwen Chang2
1Department of Emergency Medicine and 2Section of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei; Taiwan, ROC

Received: October 22, 2002 Revised: January 11, 2003 Accepted: April 8, 2003

Corresponding author: Dr. Shan-Chwen Chang, Section of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, National Taiwan University Hospital, No. 7, Chung-Shan South Road, Taipei, Taiwan 100, ROC. E-mail:

Typhoid fever, a systemic disease caused by Salmonella typhi, is classically characterized by fever and abdominal symptoms. Although now considered uncommon, it seems to have re-emerged in Taiwan in recent years. We conducted a retrospective study of the clinical characteristics and microbiologic findings in 24 confirmed cases of typhoid fever treated over a 7-year period at a medical center in northern Taiwan. There were 11 males and 13 females, including 15 adults (over 18 years in age) and 9 children. Their mean age was 24.7 years (range, 9 months to 58 years). Twelve patients had recently returned from abroad, mostly from Southeast Asia. The most common complaints were fever (24/24), diarrhea (18/24), abdominal pain (10/24), and cough (10/24). The average duration of fever before diagnosis was 14.1 days, with a maximum of 30 days. Relative bradycardia was noted in 6 patients. Leukopenia was noted in 2 patients. S. typhi was isolated from blood culture in 20 cases, from stool culture in 3 cases, and from bone marrow culture in 1 case. Widal test was only positive initially in 7/18 cases. Fever of unknown origin was the most common initial diagnosis. Typhoid or enteric fever was impressed initially in only 2 cases. Almost all isolates of S. typhi were susceptible to antibiotics currently used for typhoid fever, with only 1 isolate resistant to chloramphenicol. All patients survived after antibiotic treatment. Only 1 patient developed recurrence after a 10-day course of ceftriaxone. In conclusion, the diagnosis of typhoid fever is often challenging due to non-specific symptoms and lack of an immediate confirmatory test. It is important to include this disease in the differential diagnosis of febrile patients with abdominal symptoms.

Key words: Differential diagnosis, fever of unknown origin, Salmonella typhi,typhoid fever

J Microbiol Immunol Infect 2004;37:109-114.

[Full Article in PDF]


This website is designed and maintained by Scientific Communications International Limited on behalf of the Chinese Society of Microbiology, the Chinese Society of Immunology, the Infectious Diseases Society of the Republic of China, and the
Taiwan Society of Parasitology