Severe Typhoid Fever Complicated by Superior Mesenteric and Splenic Vein Thrombosis

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Abstract

Typhoid fever (Typhoid or enteric fever) is still the most common bacterial bloodstream infection worldwide, caused by Salmonella typhi. The transmission route is indirect through passive vehicles such as contaminated water or food. Main clinical findings are a fever lasting more than three days, abdominal symptoms, leukocytosis, and anemia. Typhoid can cause a wide range of multi-organ complications. We report a particularly severe form of this infection complicated by superior mesenteric vein and splenic vein thrombosis, an extremely uncommon manifestation.

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Veronese, P., Pappalardo, M., Maffini, V., Rubini, M., Giacometti, A., Ruozi, M. B., … Dodi, I. (2023). Severe Typhoid Fever Complicated by Superior Mesenteric and Splenic Vein Thrombosis. Infectious Disease Reports, 15(4), 377–385. https://doi.org/10.3390/idr15040038

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