## Correct Answer: D. Dengue Dengue is the correct diagnosis based on the classic triad of fever, arthralgia, and petechial rash combined with the pathognomonic laboratory findings. The key discriminator is **thrombocytopenia (platelet count 20,000/mm³) with a normal clotting time but prolonged bleeding time**, which is characteristic of dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF). Dengue causes immune-mediated platelet destruction and endothelial damage, leading to bleeding manifestations without coagulopathy. The hemoglobin of 9 g/dL reflects hemoconcentration and bleeding, while the normal WBC count (9000/mm³) rules out bacterial infections. Delhi is endemic for dengue, particularly during monsoon and post-monsoon months. The clinical presentation of fever for 3 days with hemorrhagic manifestations (petechial rash) and severe thrombocytopenia is the hallmark of dengue hemorrhagic fever. The normal clotting time excludes disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), which would show prolonged PT/INR. This patient requires immediate hospitalization, fluid management, and platelet transfusion if bleeding worsens—a critical management point in Indian clinical practice where dengue is a leading cause of hemorrhagic fever. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Scrub typhus** — Scrub typhus (Orientia tsutsugamushi) presents with fever, rash, and eschar at the bite site, but does NOT cause severe thrombocytopenia (platelet count typically >50,000/mm³). It causes leukocytosis, not normal WBC. Scrub typhus is endemic in the Himalayan foothills and northeastern India, not typically in Delhi. The bleeding manifestations and platelet nadir are incompatible with scrub typhus pathophysiology. **B. Typhoid** — Typhoid (Salmonella typhi) causes fever and rash (rose spots, not petechiae), but platelet counts remain normal or only mildly reduced. Typhoid does not cause the severe thrombocytopenia (20,000/mm³) seen here. WBC count in typhoid is typically low (leukopenia), not normal. The absence of gastrointestinal symptoms and the hemorrhagic manifestations make typhoid unlikely despite being endemic in India. **C. Malaria** — Malaria (Plasmodium species) causes fever and can present with thrombocytopenia, but the platelet count is usually >50,000/mm³. Malaria does NOT typically present with petechial rash or arthralgia as prominent features. The normal clotting time and absence of hemoglobinuria/jaundice make severe malaria less likely. Malaria would show parasites on blood smear, which is not mentioned in this case. ## High-Yield Facts - **Dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF)** is defined by fever, hemorrhagic manifestations, thrombocytopenia (<100,000/mm³), and hemoconcentration (Hct rise ≥20%). - **Platelet count <20,000/mm³ with normal clotting time and prolonged bleeding time** is pathognomonic for dengue—indicates immune-mediated platelet destruction, not DIC. - **Delhi dengue epidemiology**: peak incidence during monsoon (July–October) and post-monsoon (September–November); Aedes aegypti is the urban vector. - **Dengue warning signs** (require hospitalization): persistent vomiting, severe abdominal pain, bleeding, lethargy, liver enlargement >2 cm, rapid platelet fall. - **Management principle**: fluid resuscitation with isotonic crystalloids (avoid hypotonic fluids); platelet transfusion only if platelet count <10,000/mm³ or active bleeding. - **Dengue serology**: IgM ELISA positive from day 3–5 of illness; NS1 antigen positive from day 1–5 (most sensitive in acute phase in India). ## Mnemonics **DHF Triad** **F**ever + **H**emorrhage + **T**hrombocytopenia = Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever. Use when you see petechiae/bleeding + low platelets + fever in endemic areas. **Bleeding Time vs Clotting Time in Dengue** **BT prolonged, CT normal** = platelet problem (dengue). **Both prolonged** = coagulation factor problem (DIC, not dengue). Quick discriminator in exam. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair dengue with "normal WBC count" to trap students who expect leukocytosis in all febrile illnesses. Dengue classically shows normal or low WBC, unlike bacterial infections (typhoid, scrub typhus). The thrombocytopenia + normal clotting time combination is the real differentiator that rules out DIC-associated conditions. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian urban centers like Delhi, any patient presenting with fever + petechial rash + severe thrombocytopenia during monsoon season should be presumed dengue until proven otherwise. Early recognition and fluid management prevent progression to dengue shock syndrome (DSS), which carries 5–10% mortality in India if not managed aggressively in the critical phase (days 3–7). _Reference: Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology Ch. 43 (Dengue Virus); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine Ch. 189 (Dengue); Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine Ch. 7 (Vector-Borne Diseases)_
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