Whipple's disease is a rare multisystemic infectious disorder affecting predominantly middle-aged men. Clinical manifestations are very variable with a very long, insidious, prediagnostic course. Weight loss, chronic diarrhea, arthralgias, and low-grade fever are characteristic features in most patients. Although gastrointestinal compromise is very common, atypical clinical forms are being increasingly recognized. Although a bacterial cause was strongly suggested for many years, the infectious agent was elusive until recently. The bacillus that was classified as an actinomycete was named Tropheryma whipplei and has singular characteristics. It presents affinity for the periodic acid-Schiff stain, but it is negative for Ziehl-Neelsen staining and has a characteristic trilamellar cell wall. Its genetic material has been recently sequenced, and culture was finally performed on a human fibroblast cell line. Pathological specimens show macrophage infiltration with mostly intracellula...