Traveler's diarrhea (TD) is the most common illness affecting travelers. Traveler's diarrhea is defined as three or more unformed stools in 24 hours, commonly accompanied by abdominal cramps, nausea, and bloating.
Persons at particular high-risk include young adults, immunosuppressed persons, persons with inflammatory-bowel disease or diabetes, and persons taking H-2 blockers or antacids. Attack rates are similar for men and women.
Although traveler's diarrhea usually resolves within three to five days (mean duration: 3.6 days), in about 20 percent of persons the illness is severe enough to cause bed confinement and in 10 percent of cases the illness lasts more than one week.
For those who get serious infections, TD can occasionally be life-threatening.The serious infections include bacillary dysentery, amoebic dysentery, and cholera.
The onset of TD usually occurs within the first week of travel but may occur at any time while traveling, and even after returning home. Most TD cases begin abruptly. The illness usually results in increased frequency, volume, and weight of stool. Altered stool consistency also is common. Typically, a traveler experiences four to five loose or watery bowel movements each day. Other commonly associated symptoms are nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal cramping, bloating, low fever, urgency, and malaise, and usually the appetite is low or non-existent .
It is much more serious, if there is blood or mucous in the diarrhea, belly pain, or high fever. Dehydration is possible. With serious cases of cholera, there is a rapid onset of symptoms, which include weakness, malaise (feeling rotten), and torrents of watery diarrhea with flecks of mucous -- called rice water stools.
Dehydration is a serious consequence, with death occurring in as quickly as 24 hours with cholera.
| E. coli, enterotoxigenic | 20-75% |
| E. coli, enteroinvasive | 0-6% |
| Shigella spp | 2-30% |
| Salmonella spp | 0-33% |
| Campylobacter jejuni | 3-17% |
| Vibrio parahemolyticus | 0-31% |
| Aeromonas hydrophila | 0-30% |
| Giardia lamblia | 0 to less than 20% |
| Entameba histolytica | 0-5% |
| Cryptosporidium sp | 0 to less than 20% |
| Rotavirus | 0-36% |
| Norwalk virus | 0-10% |
Travelers who develop three or more loose stools in a 24-hour period —especially if associated with nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps, fever, or blood in stools— should be treated by a doctor and may benefit from antimicrobial therapy. Antibiotics usually are given for 3–5 days. If diarrhea persists despite therapy, travelers should be evaluated and treated for possible parasitic infection. There are different medications needed for bacterial dysentery, for amoebic dysentery, for giardia and for worms. There is no medication for Cryptosporidium, which can devastate people with AIDS. There can be 100% recovery from cholera when properly treated, which usually only means rehydration, usually through an intravenous line.
It is not recommend to take antimicrobial drugs to prevent TD, because they kill off beneficial bacteria and create resistant breeds of bad bacteria. Among the primary measures to prevent gastrointestinal illness are keeping good hygiene, getting specific vaccines and prophylactic medications. Studies show a decrease in the incidence of TD with use of bismuth subsalicylate and with use of antimicrobial chemoprophylaxis. Several studies show that bismuth subsalicylate taken as either 2 tablets 4 times daily or 2 fluid ounces 4 times daily reduces the incidence of travelers' diarrhea. The mechanism of action appears to be both antibacterial and antisecretory. Use of bismuth subsalicylate should be avoided by persons who are allergic to aspirin, during pregnancy, and by persons taking certain other medications (e.g., anticoagulants, probenecid, or methotrexate). In addition, persons should be informed about potential side effects, in particular about temporary blackening of the tongue and stool, and rarely, ringing in the ears. Because of potential adverse side effects, prophylactic bismuth subsalicylate should not be used for more than 3 weeks.
There are vaccines against typhoid fever, which is caused by salmonella, and for the Hepatitis A virus.
The vaccine for cholera that is available in Europe is a more reliable and longer acting than the one available in U.S.A.
If handled properly well-cooked and packaged foods are usually safe. Avoid eating raw or undercooked meat and seafood. Unpasteurized milk, dairy products, mayonnaise and pastry icing are associated with increased risk for TD, as are foods or drinking beverages purchased from street vendors or other establishments where unhygienic conditions are present.
This fact sheet is for information only and is not meant to be used for self-diagnosis or as a substitute for consultation with a health care provider. If you have any questions about the disease described above or think that you may have a disease, consult a health care provider
Gastroenterology | Foodborne illnesses | Water-borne diseases | Infectious diseases | Symptoms
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"Traveler's diarrhea".
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