Table 6
Assessing the Patient for Category A Agents (
Continued
)
Pathogen(incubation period)
Systemic symptoms
Central nervoussystem
Cardiorespiratory
Gastrointestinal
Skin and mucousmembranes
Miscellaneous
Marburg virus:
Marburghemorrhagic fever(3–10 days)
Sudden onset of fever,
chills, headache,myalgia.
Delirium develops late
in the disease withshock, massivebleeding, and multi-organ failure. Uveitisreported.
Rash is followed by
nausea, vomiting,chest andabdominal pain.Jaundice, weightloss, pancreatitis,liver failure.
Some patients
develop amaculopapular rashbeginning on the 5thday of illness.
After 6–8 days,
patients progress tosevere hemorrhagicfever.
Mortality recorded at
25–90% (more often25–30%)
Flaviviridae
Dengue and dengue
hemorrhagic fever(2–7 days)
Nonspecific febrile
illness, Denguefever
Sudden onset of (break
bone fever) severemuscle pains,headache,prostration. Retro-orbital pain. Anorexicand restless4–6 days.
Facial flushing,
conjucntivalinjection. 50% ofpatients have anearly transienterythematous rash.
Fever, arthralgia, and rash.
Positive tourniquet test,epistaxis, petechiae, orpurpura.
As fever rapidly
resolves, amorbilliform orscarlatini-form rashappears onextremities withpetechiae on thelegs andgeneralizedlymphadenopathy.
There is a 2nd febrile phase
lasting 2–3 days with rashdesquamation.
Convalescence is long and
patients remaindebilitated anddepressed.
Dengue hemorrhagic
fever
Begins day 2–5 after
dengue fever.Restlessness,diaphroesis.
Shock, hypotension,
hemorrhagicmanifestations,respiratory failure(alveolarhemorrhage andfluid accumulation,renal failure).
Petechiae, purpura,
spontaneousbleeding from gumsand gastro-intestinal tract,tender hepato-megaly.
10% mortality may be
reduced to
<
1% mortality
with fluid resuscitation.
Encephalopathy may
complicate clinicalcondition
Yellow fever virus
and yellow fever(3–6 days)
Most infections mild
and patientsrecover in 48 hr.
Minority have severe
headache.
Relative bradycardia
for degree of fever.
Minority have low back pain
and proteinuria withheadache.
452 Cleri et al.