1. [Rickettsiosis of the typhus fever type. Its joint appearance with a left-ventricular thrombus and single-vessel coronary disease].
- Author
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Sitzler G, Winter UJ, Peters G, Gheorghiu T, and Hilger HH
- Subjects
- Adult, Combined Modality Therapy, Coronary Disease therapy, Diagnosis, Differential, Drug Therapy, Combination, Exanthema diagnosis, Exanthema drug therapy, Germany ethnology, Heart Diseases therapy, Heart Ventricles, Humans, Libya, Male, Thrombosis therapy, Typhus, Epidemic Louse-Borne drug therapy, Coronary Disease diagnosis, Heart Diseases diagnosis, Thrombosis diagnosis, Typhus, Epidemic Louse-Borne diagnosis
- Abstract
A 44-year-old German fell ill in Libya, where he had been living for 10 years, with high fever, rigor and a nonitching centrifugally spreading macular rash, which had spared the head, hands and soles. In addition, a systolic cardiac murmur was heard. The Weil-Felix reaction had a titre rising within 3 days from 1:160 to 1:640, confirming the diagnosis of rickettsial disease, the total clinical picture indicating typhus. On treatment with chloramphenicol (1 g three times daily i.v.) the fever subsided within 5 days. On the ninth day treatment was changed to oral doxycyclin, 200 mg daily for 3 weeks. Echocardiography surprisingly revealed a floating thrombus, about 4 x 8 cm, attached to the hypo- and even akinetic apex of the left ventricle. In addition there was single-vessel coronary disease. Since the segmental contraction abnormality persisted after the typhus had been cured, a causal connection with the rickettsial disease is unlikely. The thrombus was removed at the time of a aortocoronary bypass operation: his course has been unremarkable since then.
- Published
- 1994
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