Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-23 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:24


Whipple’s Disease 1553

■Maldigestion due to pancreatic insufficiency (chronic pancreatitis)
or pancreatic duct obstruction (pancreatic carcinoma): fecal fat ele-
vated but xylose absorption normal
■Irritable bowel syndrome (multiple stools but scanty quantity and
no malabsorption)

management
What to Do First
■If intestinal biopsy reveals PAS-positive macrophages and positive
PCR for T. Whippelii, then CSF fluid should be obtained for PCR also

General Measures
■Add vitamin supplements for 2–3 months (multivitamins, folic acid,
fat-soluble vitamins [A,D,E])
■Initiation of appropriate long-term antibiotic therapy (see below)

specific therapy
■Long-term treatment with oral antibiotics (trimethoprim 160 mg/
sulfamethoxazole 800 mg p.o. b.i.d. for 1 to 2 years)
■If cerebral involvement, parenteral Penicillin G 1.2 million units and
streptomycin 1 Gm daily should be given initially for 14 days, fol-
lowed by the oral drugs

follow-up
■Response to antibiotic therapy usually prompt, within a week or so
■Monitoring of improvement in functional absorptive parameters
(xylose, fecal fat); serum albumen, correction of anemia
■Repeat intestinal biopsy for histology and PCR analysis for T. whip-
pelii at 6–12 months
■Long-term monitoring: yearly assessment of nutrition, cardiac and
neurologic status
■Prompt thorough evaluation at any suggestion of enteric, cardiac or
neurologic recurrence over the years

complications and prognosis
■At least 90% of patients have a complete and sustained response to
antibiotic therapy
■Relapse rate 15–20% in earlier years when oral penicillin was
most widely used; now relapse much lower after trimethoprim/
sulfamethoxazole therapy
■CNS recurrence may be severe and extensive, mimicking more com-
mon diseases such as ischemia, stroke or dementia
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