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B3: Childhood Exanthems & Mumps

B3:  Childhood Exanthems & Mumps

Childhood Exanthems & Mumps

Miscellaneous Viral Pathogens

Exanthems may be seen with multiple viral pathogens, including

  • enteroviruses (echoviruses, coxsackieviruses)
  • Adenovirus
  • EBV
  • Dengue virus and other hemorrhagic fever viruses, etc.

  • Differential diagnosis includes other infectious etiologies (e.g. bacterial), allergic reactions or allergy-mediated disease, collagen-vascular diseases, etc.

    To what extent definitive diagnosis is pursued is a clinical decision.

    HHV

    HHV-6 (Roseola)

    Significant reactivation disease

    AV therapy

    No treatment for Roseola

    No vaccine

    "Secondary cases uncommon except instituational settings"

    10-15 days

    Mainly fall, early spring

    Febrile seizures in infants

  • How would you describe it?
  • Where is it located? Where does it move?
  • How long does it last?
  • 2-48 hrs

    Neck, trunk

    Face, extremities

    Rose-pink

    Discrete irregular macules

    High Fever (103/104)

  • Infant/child has several days of high fever
  • Can appear toxic
  • Few abnormal findings on physical
  • Paramyxo

    Mumps

    Note: Mumps is communicable from 7 days prior to 9 days after the illness develops.

    Question: What can you say about seasonality?

    Age: 5-15

    Highest incidence rate

    16-18 days

  • EIA
  • Complement fixation
  • Lemon juice

  • Causes increased salivation and pain
  • Separates Mumps from Adenopathy

  • Light bulb = Buzz word
  • Possible complications

    (Rare) Pancreatitis

    (Rare) Oophoritis

    Orchitis and/or epidydmitis

    Symptomatic meningoencephalitis

    CSF pleocytosis

    Swelling of salivary glands

    May see erythema and edema of Stensen's (AKA Parotid) duct

    Earache or facial pain

    Persists for a week

    Viruria

    Spread to target tissues may include:

  • Salivary glands
  • CNS
  • Kidneys
  • Testes/ovaries
  • Pancreas
  • Measles (Rubeola)

    AKA

  • 5-day measles
  • Hard measles
  • Ribavirin

    Vitamin A

    Supportive

    Note: communicable from 5 days prior to 4 days after onset of exanthem

    Questions:


  • Seasonality?
  • Does it follow a cycle?
  • 1-3 year cycles

    Mainly winter & spring

    Age: Young children > 6 mo.

    90% attack rate

    in those who are exposed and susceptible

    Incubation period

    7-18 days

    Usu. 10 days

    Saliva, oral secretions

    saliva/oral secretions to respiratory tract or conjunctiva

    Immunofluorescence

    SSPE

    Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis

    Neurologic

    2-10 yrs after infection

    Otitis media

    Bacterial superinfection

    Encephalitis

    Pneumonia

    1-3 days later, one expects...

    Koplik spots

    pinpoint, gray-white or bluish-white spots w/ surrounding red halos on mucuous membranes, esp. buccal mucosa

    Light bulb = Buzz word

    Exanthem: erythematous blanching maculopapular eruption that appears first on the hairline and exhibits centrifugal spread.

    Question:

    Spread ultimately ends up where?

    Soles

    Palms

    Initially

    Conjunctivitis

    Coryza

    A cold

    Cough

    Followed by...

    ...followed by...

    During viremia, virus infects....

    WBC

    Fusion protein

    Neuraminidase

    Hemagglutinin

    Toga

    Rubella

    A.K.A.

  • German measles
  • 3-day measles
  • Live attenuated vaccine

    MMR

    Time

    Seasonality?

    Late winter, early spring

    Person

    Young school-aged in unvaccinated pop.

    Incubation Period

    2-3 wks

    Avg. 16 days

    Oral secretions

    Viral culture

    Clinical pres. NOT ENOUGH

    Most common complication

    Arthralgia / arthritis

  • More common in women
  • Spread of the virus to susceptible pregnant women and their fetuses, resulting in ______...
  • Congenital rubella syndrome

    Growth retardation

    Hepatosplenomegaly

    Deafness

    Eye defects

    Cardiac defects

    Enanthem

    Enanthem: eruption on mucous membrane

    Forscheimer spots

    Exanthem

    Fine maculopapular eruption

    Pink-red

    Discrete

    Begins on face

    Similar to measles

    Mild illness

    Esp. posterior cervical and postauricular

    UR symptoms

    Low-grade fever

    Risk damage to fetus during pregnancy

    Acute illness benign

    Respiratory tract invasion

    Local replication

    Parvo

    Parvovirus B19

    A.K.A.

  • 5th Disease
  • Erythema Infectiosum
  • Treatment

    I.V. Ig beneficial

    No specific AV

    Prevention

    No Vaccine

    Epidemiology

    Transmission

    Respiratory?

    Diagnosis

    Lab

    Serology

    PCR

    Clinical presentation

    Clinical

    Complications

    Immunocompromised

    Persistent anemia

    Persistent infection

    Patients w/ hemoglobinopathy

    Aplastic crisis

    Profound anemia

    Infection of fetus

    Hydrops fetalis and death

    Papular-Purpuric Gloves and Socks Syndrome (PPGSS)

  • Acrally distributed erythema, edema, and petechial purpura (may have enanthem)

  • Immune responses against ParvoB19 appears AFTER onset of skin eruption (different from slapped cheek)
  • Slap-cheek

    Confluent, indurated rash

    Mild illness initially

    Other possibilities

    Itching

    Mild leukopenia, anemia

    Arthralgias / Arthritis

    Lymphadenopathy

    Splenomegaly

    Myalgia

    Headache

    Malaise

    Fever

    Characteristics

    Pathophysiology

    Replication

  • Replication is followed by..?
  • Where is the primary site of replication?
  • Nucleus of immature erythrocyte

    Viremia

    ssDNA

    Icosahedral