Typhoid Fever

Systemic infectious disease caused by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi

Aetiology

  • Causative organism: Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi
  • Type: Gram-negative bacillus
  • Family: Enterobacteriaceae
  • Motility: Motile (flagella)
  • Antigenic structure:
    • O antigen (somatic)
    • H antigen (flagellar)
    • Vi antigen (capsular; virulence factor)
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Mode of Transmission

  • Fecal–oral route
  • Ingestion of contaminated:
    • Water
    • Food
  • Chronic carriers (gallbladder colonization) play a key role

Pathophysiology

  • Ingestion of bacteria
  • Survival through gastric acid
  • Invasion of intestinal epithelium (Peyer’s patches)
  • Uptake by macrophages
  • Hematogenous dissemination
  • Seeding of liver, spleen, bone marrow
  • Secondary bacteremia → systemic manifestations

Clinical presentation

Incubation Period

  • 7–14 days (range 3–30 days)

Clinical Stages

First Week
  • Gradually rising fever (“step-ladder” pattern)
  • Headache
  • Malaise
  • Relative bradycardia (Faget sign)
  • Constipation (more common in adults)
Second Week
  • Sustained high fever
  • Toxic appearance
  • Abdominal pain
  • Rose spots (faint salmon-colored macules on trunk)
  • Hepatosplenomegaly
  • Diarrhea (“pea soup” stool) may occur
Third Week
  • Severe illness
  • Intestinal complications:
    • Intestinal hemorrhage
    • Intestinal perforation
  • Delirium (“typhoid state”)
Fourth Week
  • Gradual recovery or complications

Investigations

Hematological and Biochemical Tests

(Supportive, not confirmatory)
Complete Blood Count (CBC)
  • Leukopenia (common)
  • Relative lymphocytosis
  • Mild anemia
  • Thrombocytopenia (occasionally)
Mechanism: Bone marrow suppression and reticuloendothelial involvement.
Liver Function Tests (LFTs)
  • Mild to moderate elevation of:
    • AST
    • ALT
  • Disproportionately high alkaline phosphatase
  • Mild hyperbilirubinemia (rare)
⚠️ Transaminases are not as high as in viral hepatitis.

Microbiological Diagnosis (Definitive Diagnosis)

Blood Culture — Gold Standard (Early Disease)
  • Best test in the 1st week of illness
  • Sensitivity: ~40–80%
  • Requires:
    • Adequate blood volume
    • Collection before antibiotics
Why it works early:
During the first week, bacteremia is highest.
Stool Culture
  • Becomes positive in 2nd–3rd week
  • Reflects intestinal shedding
  • Useful for:
    • Carrier detection
    • Epidemiological studies
Urine Culture
  • Positive in later stages (3rd week)
  • Lower sensitivity
  • Supportive only
Bone Marrow Culture — Most Sensitive Test
  • Sensitivity >90%
  • Positive at any stage of illness
  • Less affected by prior antibiotic use
Indications:
  • Strong clinical suspicion
  • Negative blood cultures
  • Prior antibiotic exposure
⚠️ Invasive → not routinely done.

Serological Tests

Widal Test → detected starting on 5th days of fever
Detects antibodies against:
  • O antigen (early, IgM)
  • H antigen (later, IgG)

Interpretation:

  • Significant if:
    • Fourfold rise in titer (paired sera)
    • Or high single titer in endemic areas (1/320 titer)

Limitations:

  • False positives (previous infection, vaccination)
  • False negatives (early disease)
  • Low specificity and sensitivity
⚠️ Not confirmatory—use only as supportive evidence.
Rapid Serological Tests
(e.g., Typhidot, Tubex)
  • Faster results
  • Detect IgM/IgG
  • Variable accuracy
  • Useful where cultures unavailable

Management

Antibiotic Therapy
  • First Line (Fluoroquinolones)
    • Ciprofloxacin 500mg BID PO (7-14 days)
    • Ofloxacin 400mg BID PO (7-14 days)
    • Norfloxacin 400mg BID PO (7-14 days)
  • Second Line (3rd generation Cephalosporins)
    • Ceftriaxone 3-4gr/days (3-5 days)
    • Cefixime 20mg/kg/days (7-14 days)
Supportive Care
  • Hydration, antipyretics, diet (high calorie/protein).
Monitor for Complications
  • Surgical and specialist involvement if needed.
Prevention
  • Hygiene, sanitation, possibly vaccine in select populations.

Complications

Intestinal

  • Ileal perforation
  • Massive GI bleeding

Extraintestinal

  • Encephalopathy
  • Myocarditis
  • Pneumonia
  • Cholecystitis
  • Osteomyelitis
  • Relapse
  • Chronic carrier state