Severe Leptospirosis Observed in a Man Who Had Just Returned from Abroad

Leptospirosis, a re-emerging zoonosis caused by pathogenic Leptospira, has a low incidence in Bulgaria. This paper reports a case of leptospirosis in Pleven, Bulgaria, in which the subject was infected after wading through irrigative canal in northern Greece. Two days later, he had a fever, myalgia...

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Main Authors: Galya Gancheva, Milena Karcheva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Galenos Publishing House 2013-03-01
Series:Balkan Medical Journal
Online Access:http://balkanmedicaljournal.org/text.php?lang=en&id=434
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spelling doaj-5d0dca85bec74832b54191df048ea0aa2020-11-24T22:23:56ZengGalenos Publishing HouseBalkan Medical Journal2146-31232146-31312013-03-0130111611910.5152/balkanmedj.2012.085Severe Leptospirosis Observed in a Man Who Had Just Returned from AbroadGalya Gancheva0Milena Karcheva1Department of Infectious Diseases, Epidemiology, Parasitology and Tropical Medicine, Medical University, Pleven, BulgariaDepartment of Infectious Diseases, Epidemiology, Parasitology and Tropical Medicine, Pleven Medical University, Pleven, BulgariaLeptospirosis, a re-emerging zoonosis caused by pathogenic Leptospira, has a low incidence in Bulgaria. This paper reports a case of leptospirosis in Pleven, Bulgaria, in which the subject was infected after wading through irrigative canal in northern Greece. Two days later, he had a fever, myalgia and vomiting followed by jaundice, darkness of urine and oliguria. The patient was admitted to Clinic of Infectious Diseases at University Hospital-Pleven after returning to Bulgaria. The history and laboratory findings suggested icterohaemorrhagic leptospirosis. Penicillin G was prescribed and intensive supportive treatment was initiated. Dialysis was performed two hours after admission and was followed by poliuric stage of acute renal failure (peak urine output 16 600 mL/day). Microaglutination test (MAT) for sero-diagnosis was positive (L. hardjo 1:1600, L. icterohaemorrhagiae 1:800). The patient was discharged after sixteen days with improved renal and liver functions. In conclusion, The probability of leptospirosis should not be ignored in patients with fever after returning from abroad. The prompt dialysis and adequate treatment improve prognosis.http://balkanmedicaljournal.org/text.php?lang=en&id=434
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Galya Gancheva
Milena Karcheva
spellingShingle Galya Gancheva
Milena Karcheva
Severe Leptospirosis Observed in a Man Who Had Just Returned from Abroad
Balkan Medical Journal
author_facet Galya Gancheva
Milena Karcheva
author_sort Galya Gancheva
title Severe Leptospirosis Observed in a Man Who Had Just Returned from Abroad
title_short Severe Leptospirosis Observed in a Man Who Had Just Returned from Abroad
title_full Severe Leptospirosis Observed in a Man Who Had Just Returned from Abroad
title_fullStr Severe Leptospirosis Observed in a Man Who Had Just Returned from Abroad
title_full_unstemmed Severe Leptospirosis Observed in a Man Who Had Just Returned from Abroad
title_sort severe leptospirosis observed in a man who had just returned from abroad
publisher Galenos Publishing House
series Balkan Medical Journal
issn 2146-3123
2146-3131
publishDate 2013-03-01
description Leptospirosis, a re-emerging zoonosis caused by pathogenic Leptospira, has a low incidence in Bulgaria. This paper reports a case of leptospirosis in Pleven, Bulgaria, in which the subject was infected after wading through irrigative canal in northern Greece. Two days later, he had a fever, myalgia and vomiting followed by jaundice, darkness of urine and oliguria. The patient was admitted to Clinic of Infectious Diseases at University Hospital-Pleven after returning to Bulgaria. The history and laboratory findings suggested icterohaemorrhagic leptospirosis. Penicillin G was prescribed and intensive supportive treatment was initiated. Dialysis was performed two hours after admission and was followed by poliuric stage of acute renal failure (peak urine output 16 600 mL/day). Microaglutination test (MAT) for sero-diagnosis was positive (L. hardjo 1:1600, L. icterohaemorrhagiae 1:800). The patient was discharged after sixteen days with improved renal and liver functions. In conclusion, The probability of leptospirosis should not be ignored in patients with fever after returning from abroad. The prompt dialysis and adequate treatment improve prognosis.
url http://balkanmedicaljournal.org/text.php?lang=en&id=434
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