MacDonald K L, Cohen M L
Rev Infect Dis. 1986 May-Jun;8 Suppl 2:S117-21. doi: 10.1093/clinids/8.supplement_2.s117.
Identification of the characteristics that make certain travelers more likely to develop diarrhea, the most common illness affecting international travelers, can lead to prevention of the illness and to improved understanding of endemic diarrheal disease in developing countries. Travelers' diarrhea, a syndrome with a spectrum of clinical symptoms, is most frequently characterized by watery diarrhea, cramps, and nausea. The highest attack rates have been reported in travelers from the United States or northern Europe to less-developed, particularly tropical, countries. Among travelers from less-developed countries, diarrhea has been correlated with higher socioeconomic status. The findings that country of origin and socioeconomic status may affect the frequency of previous exposures to enteric pathogens suggest that persons with prolonged exposure acquire immunity and are at lower risk of developing travelers' diarrhea. Although few studies have shown a clear correlation between the eating of specific foods and the development of travelers' diarrhea, the syndrome has been associated with eating in public places.
确定某些旅行者更易患腹泻(影响国际旅行者的最常见疾病)的特征,有助于预防该疾病,并增进对发展中国家地方性腹泻病的了解。旅行者腹泻是一种具有一系列临床症状的综合征,其最常见的特征是水样腹泻、痉挛和恶心。据报道,从美国或北欧前往欠发达特别是热带国家的旅行者发病率最高。在来自欠发达国家的旅行者中,腹泻与较高的社会经济地位相关。原籍国和社会经济地位可能影响既往接触肠道病原体频率的研究结果表明,长期接触者获得了免疫力,患旅行者腹泻的风险较低。尽管很少有研究表明特定食物的摄入与旅行者腹泻的发生有明确关联,但该综合征与在公共场所就餐有关。