Presentation of leptospirosis in the emergency department: An analysis of different patterns of clinical features during an outbreak

Background. Typically, doctors consider a diagnosis of probable leptospirosis when there is a history of fever with kidney or liver involvement and an elevated serum creatine phosphokinase level. However, there are increasing numbers of cases with atypical presentation, which renders the diagnosis c...

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Published in:Family Medicine and Primary Care Review
Main Author: Mohamad M.I.B.K.; Salehuddin R.B.M.; Isa M.R.; Mokhtar M.A.M.; Noor J.M.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Polish Society of Family Medicine 2020
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85090703311&doi=10.5114%2ffmpcr.2020.95319&partnerID=40&md5=1c38098833893ae321766722c2f88c61
id 2-s2.0-85090703311
spelling 2-s2.0-85090703311
Mohamad M.I.B.K.; Salehuddin R.B.M.; Isa M.R.; Mokhtar M.A.M.; Noor J.M.
Presentation of leptospirosis in the emergency department: An analysis of different patterns of clinical features during an outbreak
2020
Family Medicine and Primary Care Review
22
2
10.5114/fmpcr.2020.95319
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85090703311&doi=10.5114%2ffmpcr.2020.95319&partnerID=40&md5=1c38098833893ae321766722c2f88c61
Background. Typically, doctors consider a diagnosis of probable leptospirosis when there is a history of fever with kidney or liver involvement and an elevated serum creatine phosphokinase level. However, there are increasing numbers of cases with atypical presentation, which renders the diagnosis challenging. Objectives. The aim of this study is to determine the presentation patterns of leptospirosis during an outbreak, in order to increase the understanding of this potentially complex disease. Material and methods. This is a retrospective, observational study of an outbreak that occurred in an army camp in 2012. The data were collected by retrieving the patients’ medical records, including signs and symptoms, laboratory findings, and outcomes. Results. There were 47 cases of leptospirosis confirmed by a microscopic agglutination test (MAT). Of these, only 50% had a positive point-of-care serology test result at initial encounter in the emergency department. The majority (58%) presented with mild upper respiratory tract and gastrointestinal symptoms and 64% had no fever on presentation. Only five patients had leukocytosis (12%); 86% were within the normal range. Half of the patients (50%) had a normal platelet count and 60% had normal renal function. However, 74% had a creatine phosphokinase level over 200. Conclusions. Leptospirosis is difficult to diagnose due to its ambiguous clinical presentation. Most of the laboratory findings can be unhelpful in excluding the diagnosis. The point-of-care serology test done in the primary setting should not be relied on in highly suspicious cases. In a cluster where leptospirosis is endemic, the MAT might be warranted; otherwise, empirical antibiotics may be considered, even for mild symptoms. © by Wydawnictwo Continuo.
Polish Society of Family Medicine
17343402
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Mohamad M.I.B.K.; Salehuddin R.B.M.; Isa M.R.; Mokhtar M.A.M.; Noor J.M.
spellingShingle Mohamad M.I.B.K.; Salehuddin R.B.M.; Isa M.R.; Mokhtar M.A.M.; Noor J.M.
Presentation of leptospirosis in the emergency department: An analysis of different patterns of clinical features during an outbreak
author_facet Mohamad M.I.B.K.; Salehuddin R.B.M.; Isa M.R.; Mokhtar M.A.M.; Noor J.M.
author_sort Mohamad M.I.B.K.; Salehuddin R.B.M.; Isa M.R.; Mokhtar M.A.M.; Noor J.M.
title Presentation of leptospirosis in the emergency department: An analysis of different patterns of clinical features during an outbreak
title_short Presentation of leptospirosis in the emergency department: An analysis of different patterns of clinical features during an outbreak
title_full Presentation of leptospirosis in the emergency department: An analysis of different patterns of clinical features during an outbreak
title_fullStr Presentation of leptospirosis in the emergency department: An analysis of different patterns of clinical features during an outbreak
title_full_unstemmed Presentation of leptospirosis in the emergency department: An analysis of different patterns of clinical features during an outbreak
title_sort Presentation of leptospirosis in the emergency department: An analysis of different patterns of clinical features during an outbreak
publishDate 2020
container_title Family Medicine and Primary Care Review
container_volume 22
container_issue 2
doi_str_mv 10.5114/fmpcr.2020.95319
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85090703311&doi=10.5114%2ffmpcr.2020.95319&partnerID=40&md5=1c38098833893ae321766722c2f88c61
description Background. Typically, doctors consider a diagnosis of probable leptospirosis when there is a history of fever with kidney or liver involvement and an elevated serum creatine phosphokinase level. However, there are increasing numbers of cases with atypical presentation, which renders the diagnosis challenging. Objectives. The aim of this study is to determine the presentation patterns of leptospirosis during an outbreak, in order to increase the understanding of this potentially complex disease. Material and methods. This is a retrospective, observational study of an outbreak that occurred in an army camp in 2012. The data were collected by retrieving the patients’ medical records, including signs and symptoms, laboratory findings, and outcomes. Results. There were 47 cases of leptospirosis confirmed by a microscopic agglutination test (MAT). Of these, only 50% had a positive point-of-care serology test result at initial encounter in the emergency department. The majority (58%) presented with mild upper respiratory tract and gastrointestinal symptoms and 64% had no fever on presentation. Only five patients had leukocytosis (12%); 86% were within the normal range. Half of the patients (50%) had a normal platelet count and 60% had normal renal function. However, 74% had a creatine phosphokinase level over 200. Conclusions. Leptospirosis is difficult to diagnose due to its ambiguous clinical presentation. Most of the laboratory findings can be unhelpful in excluding the diagnosis. The point-of-care serology test done in the primary setting should not be relied on in highly suspicious cases. In a cluster where leptospirosis is endemic, the MAT might be warranted; otherwise, empirical antibiotics may be considered, even for mild symptoms. © by Wydawnictwo Continuo.
publisher Polish Society of Family Medicine
issn 17343402
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
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