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Seventh International Symposium in Continuing Nursing Education/March 2014 Donald W. McLaren, MD To discuss epidemiology of typhoid To discuss myriad of ways Typhoid can present To discuss challenges in diagnosis and give some guidelines for diagnosis To discuss antibiotic resistance patterns and treatment recommendations for Typhoid Typhoid or Enteric fever is a systemic illness with fever and abdominal symptoms Caused by S. Typhi & paratyphi A, B, and C Now known as Salmonella enterica serotypes Typhi and Paratyphi A,B and C Typhi meaning “typhus like” according to one source. From Greek typhos - an ethereal smoke or cloud that was believed to cause illness and madness Known 2000 years ago - may have been cause of Great Plague of Athens at end of Pelopennesian War 431-404 B.C. 1659 First description of epidemic typhoid 1837 first differentiated from typhus 1880 Carl Eberth discovered typhoid bacillus 1896 Widal test described by George Widal 1948 Antibiotic treatment became available Increasing drug resistance since emergence of Multidrug resistance (MDR) 1984-1989 © Homeschool Freebie of the Day. . http://quigleyscabinet.blogspot.com/2010/07/typhoid-mary.html Mary Mallon (born 1869) Emigrated from Ireland at about age 15 First healthy carrier identified in the U.S. Unfortunately worked as a cook Hired by Charles Warren, investment banker 6 of 11 in his household became infected Hired civil engineer George Soper to investigate Suspected Ms. Mallon but getting stool and blood specimen proved to be a real challenge She with knife in hand put up resistance After unsuccessful attempts, 5 police officers took 5 hours to find her hiding in a closet Known infected 47 – maybe many more – 3 died Initially quarantined 3 years but released upon promise never to cook again for others Released once but started cooking again Lived in enforced quarantine for 23 more years Was demonized and butt of jokes Became term for disease carrier Salmonella species – Typhi, Paratyphi A,B,C. Typhi > Paratyphi: equal in severity now Highly specific to humans - infection means contact with infected individual, chronic carrier or contaminated food or water 3 common antigens – O (body), H (flagella), Vi (virulence antigen – lacking in about 10%) Resistance to Amp, chloramphenicol (CMP), TMP/SMX (Multidrug resistance or MDR) a worldwide problem since 1989; increasing resistance to fluoroquinolones (FLQ) 200-300 cases / year in U.S. 314 in 2006 – about 0.42/100,000 travelers 80% have travelled (< 20% traced to carrier) – 2/3 to India Almost none had gotten the vaccine. Most cases from India (47%), Pakistan, Mexico, Bangladesh India area travel (>100 case / million travelers); SE Asia and Africa 5-14/million Highest rate if visiting friends, relatives © 2014 Top-10-List.com. All Rights Reserved. http://top-10-list.org/2010/02/27/top-10-epidemics-list/2/ Infects > 21 mil/yr, kills >200,000 worldwide Most prevalent in impoverished areas with overcrowding and poor access to sanitation. Mortality 9-13% pre antibiotics – now < 1% Incidence South-central and SE Asia, Southern Africa > 100 cases / 100,000 person years Rest of Asia, Africa, Latin America, Oceana 10-100 cases/ 100,000 person years (but poor reporting) Percentage of paratyphi rising Resistance increasing from <1% 1986-89 to >12% Children < 1 more susceptible, more severe © Society for Science & the Public 2000 - 2013. All rights reserved. https://www.sciencenews.org/article/cheap-shots%E2%80%94-typhoid-vaccine-shows-broad-coverage Greater dose - higher attack rate, shorter incubation. About 30% of volunteers given 105 CFU, 10-20% with 103 CFU develop illness Most cases get low dose with low attack rate and long incubation of 2-3 weeks. Ingested - pass stomach to SB. Doesn’t tend to cause fulminant enteritis as do non–typhi salmonella; 10-20% get D at some point. Phagocytic cells take to sub-mucosal region and proliferate – primarily at terminal ileum Enter Peyer’s patches which hypertrophy lymphs and mononuclear cells recruited. Necrosis of sub-mucosal tissue leads to abdominal pain, sometimes ileal perforation. Dissemination from Peyer’s patches through lymphatic system, blood to replicate in the reticuloendothelial system This is a major part of Typhoid which can leads to prostration, sepsis, H-S megaly. (Primary bacteremia often silent) Remain in mononuclear cells in the liver, spleen, LNs, bone marrow (Source of relapse, late complications) Proliferate then break into bloodstream Need Fe for growth. Hemochromatosis carriers and carriers of cystic fibrosis gene have decreased susceptibility (and to cholera and Tb) Low stomach acid (PPIs) - more susceptibile Evidence mixed whether immune def (HIV) leads to more severe or complicated typhoid as it does for other salmonella organisms, but fare worse “A case of typhoid fever may present as a disease clinically indistinguishable from malaria, progress to a bacillary dysentery, mimic a case of acute bronchitis, simulate a fully fledged lobar pneumonia, cause an acute abdomen with perforation, and then finally in convalescence, with its evil spent, linger on as an orchitis, a myocarditis or a peripheral neuritis. The Seven Ages of Man are scarcely greater, or more diverse in their span, or the stage more prone to variety.” “Typhoid fever usually presents nonspecifically with abdominal pain, fever, chills and constitutional symptoms; as a result many other diagnoses may be entertained” Hohmann EL. Epidemiology, microbiology, clinical manifestations, and diagnosis of typhoid fever. UpToDate 2010. UpToDate.com Personal experience: one of hardest common tropical diseases to dx early and accurately Highly variable presentation Often nonspecific symptoms Many organs can be effected Can mimic many other diseases No good quick accurate test to diagnose Test most often used to diagnose in third world is totally unreliable Starts 7-14 (5-21) days after ingestion Week 1 - stepwise fever increase. Chills common. Abdominal pain. Bacteremia. (Constipation in some Dry cough, HA, delirium and malaise) Week 2 Fever plateaus: 103-4. Rose spots, abdominal pain. Relative bradycardia and dicrotic pulse. (abdominal distension and splenomegaly) Week 3 – More toxic, anorexic. Tachycardia. Bowel perforation, other complications, death possible. Week 4 Slow improvement/resolution over weeksmonths, but can still get neuro, GI complications. Weight loss and debilitation can last for months. Can vary a lot from classic presentation. Tends to be insidious onset Only 12% have classic stepwise fever Can develop D instead of constipation (especially in AIDS, children, but in 1/3 of normal persons, specific to some outbreaks) Non-localizing abdominal pain Non specific flu like symptoms Many atypical presentations Strickland, GT (ed). Hunter’s Tropical Medicine and Emerging Infectious Diseases, Eight Edition. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders Company, 2000. p 477 Fever most prominent feature and lasts 3-4 weeks untreated. Tends not to be sudden and high (unlike Dengue or Malaria) Tends to be stepwise (think 2 steps forward, and 1 step back each day) Relative bradycardia common – slower than would be expected for degree of fever but not very helpful sign 17Strickland, GT (ed). Hunter’s Tropical Medicine and Emerging Infectious Diseases, Eight Edition. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders Company, 2000. p 477 Magill AJ, et. Al. Hunter’s Tropical Medicine and Emerging Infectious Diseases. China: Saunders Elsevier, 2013. pp 568-576 Rose spots – small blanching 2-4 salmon-pink colored macules or M-P rash mainly on chest, abdomen and back. 30% at end of first week. Lasts 2-5 days. Organism grows from lesions which are clumps of bacteria, cells. Coated tongue – varies from 50-95%. White, yellow or brown sparing edge of tongue. Stepwise rise in temperature http://www.zipheal.com/typhoid/typhoid-fever-symptoms/3761 Figure 1 Bal, S. K. et al. CMAJ 2004;170:1095 Copyright ©2004 Canadian Medical Association or its licensors http://www.henriettes-herb.com - Copyright 1995-2014 Henriette Kress. Must have high index of suspicion Insidious onset – not sudden high fever If present classic fever curve Coated tongue Rose spots Often have abdominal findings. If malaria ruled out or already treated, and fever continues > 1 week must consider typhoid. Must have high index suspicion Consider if > 3 days non-focal fever. Good hx, px, lab can R/O other conditions Increased suspicion if: young age, T > 39oC, ill appearance and any abdominal symptoms. Consider W/U if >3 days non-localizing fever + any of these features Likelihood this is typhoid increases with length of fever: If > 7 days should be evaluated and treated (Magill AJ, et. Al. Hunter’s Tropical Medicine and Emerging Infectious Diseases. China: Saunders Elsevier, 2013. pp 568-576 Can present as pneumonia Massive rectal bleeding Delirium and coma Uncommon: hepato-biliary, CNS, CVS, Respiratory, GU, MS system complications. Severe presentation ill or toxic appearing, febrile > 1 week, moderate abdominal pain, constipation or diarrhea. Death most likely from GI perf, hemorrhage, encephalopathy, seizures or pneumonia Malaise, anorexia and lassitude are prominent in many cases. HA is common Dry cough is common as is vague abdominal discomfort is common, constipation Less common in antibiotic era Much less splenomegaly (60 to 10%) Fewer have rose spots (30 to 1.5%) Much lower mortality (15 to < 1%) Diarrhea now more common than constipation especially in children and varies with location. Not real helpful but Anemia (normocytic) common WBC normal or decreased (15-30%) but Tends to be increased in children, or if perforation. Increased ESR Thrombocytopenia common LFTs (ALT, AST, bili) about double in 90+% LDH, CPK often elevated; Na, K can be low Definitive diagnosis a + culture Positive from different places at different times Bone marrow most consistently + throughout disease – 90% sensitive up to 5 days after antibiotics started Stool + 30-50% early; 20% 2nd week; higher with later increased shedding from GB. Urine less. Blood 90% week 1, but less after first week Blood overall 40-80%. Can increase with high volume culture (10-15 cc) and multiple cultures Rose spots – about 60% positive culture Widal - measures agglutinating antibodies to H, O antigens of S. Typhi. Not specific, sensitive enough – no longer considered acceptable for diagnosis. Positive if prior infection or immunization. Great lab to lab variability – most not reliable O titer more specific, H more sensitive – > 1:160 (O titer) positive + in non-endemic area but 1:640 in endemic Fourfold increase in paired titers 2 weeks apart helpful in half of cases. Really not positive till 6-8 days (O) and 10-12 days (H) and negative in up to 30% of culture proven cases. Peaks week 3-5 Newer tests probably not available on field; not that helpful acutely since antibodies not present at beginning of illness, not very available. Includes PCR Gross intestinal hemorrhage Relapse Pneumonia Intestinal perforation Psychosis UTI Toxic myocarditis Transient deafness Toxic hepatitis Meningitis Endocarditis Transient paralysis – LE 21% 12.5% 11.4% 1.9% 1.9% 1.9% 1.7% 1.4% 0.6% 0.3% 0.3% 0.3% Hegazi AM. An update on: Typhoid Fever. http://www. imbabafevers.com/.../An%20update%20on%20typhoid%20fever/Epidemiology%20of %20typhoid%20fever.ppt Magill AJ, et. Al. Hunter’s Tropical Medicine and Emerging Infectious Diseases. China: Saunders Elsevier, 2013. pp 568-576 Pancreatitis or abscess Empyema Renal complications Focal infections in many places Post salmonella enteritis reactive arthritis 3.4% Bed sores CNS and neuritis (even psychosis) Dehydration Muscle degeneration and DVT Hemolytic anemia Acute cholecystitis Rare in children but as high as 25% in adults Classically in 3rd week (1-22 days) median 9 days Up to 3% in developing countries (1% in U.S.) Sx: worsening, sudden onset increased RLQ pain, tachycardia, rebound fever, abdominal distention tenderness or rigidity, leukocytosis in 3rd week 80% single perforation May be masked by steroids Tx: Surgery and broaden antibiotic coverage High mortality Delirium, stupor and confusion Sometimes altered consciousness or coma Seizures most common in children with increased mortality (usually < 35 cells in CSF) Has been reported in up to 17% of patients. High mortality around 50%. Decreased mortality to 10% if treated with dexamethasone in study out of Indonesia. Pneumonia serious complication of severe typhoid more common in children Other salmonella species Malaria Influenza Shigella and other bacterial enteritis Dengue Typhus, Rickettsial infections Pulmonary or abdominal Tb Brucellosis Many others: Trypanosomiasis, Leptospirosis, Amebic liver abscess, Acute HIV infections, Toxoplasmosis, Tularemia, leishmaniasis 10-15% (as high as 30%) mortality prior to CMP Now < 1%; 0.2% in U.S.; higher in developing countries – 2% in hospitalized patients Higher in infants and elderly Higher if antibiotics delayed (3) Causes of death Early shock, ARDS Late perforation Intestinal hemorrhage Pneumonia Other (myocarditis 4.4%) 27.4% 14.1 25.9 12.6 Hegazi AM. An update on: Typhoid Fever. http://www. imbabafevers.com/.../An%20update%20on%20typhoid%20fever/Epidemiology%20of%20typhoid%20fever.ppt Emergence of resistance to all first line drugs (MDR) began late 1980s – Amp, TMX/SMX, CMP (plasmid mediated) Subsequently nalidixic acid resistance (NARST) which is followed by FLQ (single point mutations) NARST (NaR) considered marker for decreased fluoroquinolone susceptibility. FLQ resistance common from India In 1996-1997 CDC reported 17% resistant to 5 drugs. (Now 13% MDR) Sporadic ceftriaxone resistance but not clinically much of a problem anywhere yet (MIC creep) U.S. 1999-2006 43% resistant to at least 1 antibiotic Resistance patterns change quickly – Asia: increase NaR resistance from 5-50% (1993 – 2004) 2009 from Central India 98% NaR resistant Full quinolone resistance India, Korea Nepal from 0-13% In Africa only about 5% resistant to FLQs. 3.7% Americas, 10.8% Middle East (When not resistant to CMP – very good drug despite 1:20,000 aplastic anemia – quick response (3-5 days), inexpensive, widely available, broad spectrum) With decreased usage, some reemergence sensitivity to older first line drugs – 2001-4 67% typhi and 80% paratyphi sensitive to CMP Resistance has lead to favoring FLQs, ceftriaxone, over 1st line drugs for initial treatment NARST especially problem in Asia – 70-90% in some parts of India, Nepal and Vietnam. Nalidixic acid resistant S. Typhi harbinger of fully quinolone – resistant S. Typhi. NaR resistant typhoid have slower and less reliable response to quinolones. Avoid FLQs as first line drugs in most of Asia and especially India Even if “sensitive” to FLQ, tx of NARST with FLQ less effective especially for short course tx of 3-5 days. Defervesce slower (> 10 days vs. 3.5 days) and > rate of treatment failure Better options Azithromycin, 3rd generation cephalosporins Alternatives being investigated – include imipenen, newer or higher doses of old fluoroquinolones, combinations. IF susceptible, Fluoroquinolones drug of choice for fully susceptible organisms High levels in GI tract after oral treatment Bactericidal with good IC (intracellular) penetration Oral and IV available; Not expensive Acts rapidly - Defervesce 3-4 days High cure rate; low failure rate with relapse rate < 2% Concentrated in biliary tract – decreasing carrier rate Cipro, ofloxacin, levofloxacin good – Not Norfloxacin – poorly absorbed Several studies show safety in children If resistant, Azithromycin also gets good intracellular levels (IC levels 50-100X > blood levels) Azithromax as effective as FLQ and have lower failure rate and relapse rate than 3rd generation cephalosporins 3rd generation cephalosporins (i.e. Ceftriaxone or cefixime) compared to FLQs - longer to defervescence and higher relapse rate Ciprofloxacin 500 mg BID or Ofloxacin 400 mg BID po or IV X 7-10 days. Ceftriaxone 2-3 gm IV, IM daily or Cefixime 20-30 mg/kg/day po divided BID X 7-14 days. Alternatives if can’t take, resistant to FQs Azithromycin 1 gm orally then 500 daily for 5-7 days OR 1 gm po daily X 5 days CMP 2-3 gm/day divided q6hr for 14 days Hohmann EL. Treatment and prevention of typhoid fever. UpToDate 2010. UpToDate.com A beta lactam Ceftriaxone 100 mg/kg/day max 4 gm/day for 10-14 days (qD or BID) Cefotaxime 150-200 mg/kg/day q6-8 hr max 12 g for 10-14 days Cefixime 20 mg/kg/day q12 hours max 400 mg/day 10-14 days (po) Fluoroquinolones Ciprofloxacin or Ofloxacin 30 mg/kg/day BID max 1000 mg/day oral or IV for 7-10 days Ofloxacin 30 mg/kg daily max 800 mg/day po or iv X 7-10 days Hohmann EL. Treatment and prevention of typhoid fever. UpToDate 2010. UpToDate.com Azithromycin 10-20 mg/kg to 1 g maximum once daily for 5-7 days If fully susceptible Amox 100 mg/kg/d q8hr max 4 g/day for 14 days TMP-SMX 8-12 mg/kg TMP 40-60 mg/kg SMX / day divided every 6 hours max 320 mg TMP/1600 mg SMX/day for 14 days. CMP 75 mg/kg/d po q6hr max 3g/day: 14-21 days Hohmann EL. Treatment and prevention of typhoid fever. UpToDate 2010. UpToDate.com Outside U.S. Fluoroquinolones 1st line in children and studies support they are ok if fluoroquinolones-sensitive. Treat at least 5 days after fever resolution If susceptible usually defervesce 3-5 days So much resistance from parts of S, SE Asia fluoroquinolone should not be 1st choice– use Azithromax or 3rd generation cephalosporin CMP, Amp, TMP-SMX ok if not resistant FLQ – cartilage toxicity in immature animals Large series show no evidence acute adverse bone or joint events in humans. For serious infection if no other options they are ok for children Optimal duration of cephalosporin treatment not established – but need > 7 days Ceftriaxone may be superior to cefotaxime so give ceftriaxone or cefixime 10-14 days http://thedhakaproject.blogspot.com/2011/02/treatment-of-typhoid-fever.html Pay attention to nutrition, fluid and electrolytes and monitor closely In complicated typhoid (critically ill - shock, obtundation, delirium, stupor, coma) studies with CMP in past show 80% reduced mortality from 55% to 10% with corticosteroids. Dexamethasone 3 mg/kg then 1 mg/kg q6hr for 48 hours. Perforation (most - 80% single – ileum) – primary repair. Sometimes needs segmental resection and appropriate antibiotics. 14-34% mortality. Common 2-3 wks after fever resolution (1-10 weeks) after antibiotics stopped. Relapse usually milder than initial infection. In past 10-25% but more recently 1-6% newer antibiotics seem to be more effective Usually can treat with same drug vs. longer course with third generation cephalosporin. But culture to be sure sensitive. Can shed normally up to 3 months in 10% Can be in stool or less commonly urine Chronic carrier = Excretion in stool (or urine) > 12 months (Typhoid > Paratyphoid) Incidence after Typhoid about 4 % (1-6%) Increased with cholelithiasis Urine carriage more common with kidney stones, urinary schistosomiasis or BPH Well but risk to others – esp. food preparers In past Ampicillin for 6-12 weeks + cholecystectomy. Now can treat try FLQ for 4 wks for near 90% cure rate. If FLQ treatment fails, cholecystectomy (for food handlers, day care workers, health care workers) Ciprofloxacin 500-750 mg BID for 4 weeks Ofloxacin 400 mg BID for 4 weeks Missouri: after typhoid 3 stool cultures needed for (child care, food handlers, medical personnel) 24 hrs apart to see if carrier - If so repeat every month till 3 consecutive negative cultures. For chronic carrier (> 1 year) must have 6 consecutive negative cultures collected 1 month apart to go back to work. Missouri Depart. Of Health and senior Services Communicable Disease Investigation and Reference Manual. Typhoid fever. 7/03. http://www.docstoc.com/docs/11383809/Spots-Typhoid-Fever © Docstoc® 2013. All rights reserved. CDC: “Boil it, cook it, peel it, or forget it” 2 vaccines – 50% effective at 3 years (85% initially) Parenteral Vi polysaccharide vaccine (efficacy 55%) (> 2 yoa. Repeat 2 yrs); Oral S. Typhi vaccine strain Ty21a (efficacy 51%) (> 6 yoa. Repeat 5 years) About 1/6 of cases in travelers came after < 2 weeks travel so recommended even for short travel. Neither 100% effective – no good against paratyphoid In U.S. 1994-99, ¾ of U.S. cases from travel; but only 4% vaccinated Though only approved for > 6, studies show 57% protection with oral vaccine in ages 2-5 Others on horizon http://talesfromindonesia.wordpress.com/2012/06/22/oftyphoid-pills-and-crazy-prices-or-the-things-we-do-for-immunity/ Typhoid is a serious illness caused by S. Typhi Typhoid can present many ways and mimic many other diseases. Diagnosis requires a high index of suspicion The most common test for Typhoid, the Widal test, is not reliable, is positive after one has a vaccine, and should not be relied on There is considerable drug resistance in typhoid. FLQs are the DOC except in S, SE Asia. Due to FLQ resistance, better choices there are Azithromax or a 3rd generation cephalosporin 1Brusch JL, Garvey T. Typhoid Fever. Emedicine medscape.com 2010. http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/231135-print. Brusch JL. “Typhoid Fever.” Medscape Reference. Accessed 1/22/2014 at http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/231135-overview Burkholder-Allen K, Rega P. “’Typhoid’” Mary Mallon. Accessed 1/22/2014 at http://www.docstoc.com/docs/161918129/%E2%80%9CTyp hoid%E2%80%9D-Mary-Mallon---errata-llc www.errata-llc.com/blog/files/Typhoid_Mary.ppt Christenson JC. “Salmonella Infections.” Pediatrics in Review accessed online in 11/2014. @ http://pedsinreview.aappublications.org/content/34/9/37 5 Division of Environmental Health and Communicable Disease Prevention. Missouri Department of Health and Senior services Communicable Disease Investigation Reference Manual . http://www.dhss.mo.gov/CDManual/Typhoidfever.pdf Ekdahl K, de Song, B, Andersson Y. Travel Associated Typhoid and Paratyphoid Fever. Medscape.com 2005. http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/511056_prin t Harrison’s Practice. Typhoid Fever. http://www.harrisonspractice.com/practice/ub/view /Harrisons%20Practice/141051/0/enteric_fever Hegazi AM. An update on: Typhoid Fever. http://www.imbabafevers.com/.../An%20update%20 on%20typhoid%20fever/Epidemiology%20of%20typhoi d%20fever.ppt 7Hohmann EL. Epidemiology, microbiology, clinical manifestations, and diagnosis of typhoid fever. UpToDate 2010. UpToDate reaccessed 1/22/2014 @ http://www.uptodate.com/contents/epidemiology-microbiologyclinical-manifestations-and-diagnosis-of-typhoidfever?source=search_result&search=typhoid&selectedTitle=1%7E7 7 Hohmann EL. Microbiology and epidemiology of Salmonellosis. UpToDate 2010. UpToDate reaccessed 1/22/2014 @ www.worldortho.com/dev/index.php?option=com_content &task=view&id=1778&Itemid=420 Hohmann EL. Pathogenesis of typhoid fever. UpToDate 2010. UpToDate reaccessed 1/22/2014 at http://www.uptodate.com/contents/pathogenesis-of-typhoidfever?source=search_result&search=typhoid&selectedTitle=3%7E7 7 Hohmann EL. Treatment and prevention of typhoid fever. UpToDate 2010. UpToDate reaccessed 1/22/2014 @ http://www.uptodate.com/contents/treatment-and-preventionof-typhoidfever?source=search_result&search=typhoid&selectedTitle=2%7E7 7 Kadhiravan, T. Drug-resistant Typhoid Fever – Implications for Clinical practice. Medicine Update 2007; pp. 584-586. http://www.apiindia.org/medicine_update_2007/98.pdf Kalra SP, Naithani N, Mehta SR, Swamy AJ. Current trends in the Management of Typhoid Fever. MJAFI 2003; 59:130135. Kumar R. Typhoid Fever. Power Point referencing World Health Organization 2003. N Engl. J Med, Vol 347,No.22. 11/28/2002. Magill AJ, et. Al. Hunter’s Tropical Medicine and Emerging Infectious Diseases. China: Saunders Elsevier, 2013. pp 568576 Mirza, SH. Multi-drug resistant Typhoid – A Global Review. Infections Disease Journal of Pakistan. Jan – March 2005: pp; 17-20. http://www.idspak.org/journal/2005/JanMarch/page17-20.pdf Missouri Depart. Of Health and senior Services Communicable Disease Investigation and Reference Manual. Typhoid fever. 7/03. Zahran RF. Typhoid Fever. http://www.slideworld.org/slideshow.aspx/Typh oid-Fever-ppt-2844722 Rosenberg J. “Typhoid Mary: The sad story of a woman responsible for several typhoid outbreaks. About.com accessed on 1/22/2014 at http://history1900s.about.com/od/1900s/a/typ hoidmary.htm Strickland, GT (ed). Hunter’s Tropical Medicine and Emerging Infectious Diseases, Eight Edition. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders Company, 2000. p 477