1 / 46

Childhood Infectious Diseases: Prevention, Symptoms, and Treatment

This chapter explores the four categories of childhood infectious diseases (viral, bacterial, fungal, parasitic) and covers their prevention, symptoms, and treatment options. It also highlights the importance of good hand washing and immunization.

gcaison
Télécharger la présentation

Childhood Infectious Diseases: Prevention, Symptoms, and Treatment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 20 Childhood Diseases and Disorders

  2. Infectious Diseases • Four categories: • Viral • Bacterial • Fungal • Parasitic • Some infections can be prevented by immunization

  3. Infectious Diseases • Many have incubation period • Symptoms: • Fever • Malaise • Coughing • Anorexia • Nausea and vomiting • Rash

  4. Infectious Diseases • Treatment varies with the disease • Often consists of: • Symptom relief • Good nutrition • Rest • Nonaspirin antipyretics • Good hand washing

  5. Viral Diseases • Usually symptomatic treatment • Invade host and can lay dormant • Reactivated by certain triggers such as stress

  6. Viral Diseases • Measles • Also known as rubeola • One of the most serious childhood diseases • Commonly spread by contaminated airborne droplets • Symptoms: • Fever • Runny nose • Red maculopapular rash • Koplik’s spots

  7. Measles/Rubeola Photo courtesy the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  8. Koplik’s Spots Photo courtesy the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  9. Viral Diseases • Rubella • Type of measles • Also known as German measles • In pregnant women may lead to birth defects • Less contagious than rubeola • Symptoms: • Lymph node enlargement, nasal discharge, joint pain, chills, fever • Children and women of childbearing age should be immunized

  10. Rubella Rash Photo courtesy the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  11. Viral Diseases • Mumps • Inflammation of parotid glands • Symptoms: • Chills • Fever • Ear pain • Swelling of parotid glands • Complication: • Orchitis and nerve conduction deafness

  12. Mumps Photo courtesy the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  13. Viral Diseases • Varicella • Also known as chickenpox or herpes zoster • Highly contagious • Symptoms: • Classic rash that develops into vesicles • Rash on face, trunk, and extremities • Poliomyelitis • Causes: • Polio virus • Immunization has reduced threat of disease

  14. Varicella Photo courtesy Robert A. Silverman, MD, Pediatric Dermatology, Georgetown University

  15. Viral Diseases • Influenza • Acute infectious respiratory disease • Occurs late fall through early spring • Symptoms: • Sudden high fever • Dry, hacking cough • Chills, headache, joint or muscle aches • Prevention: • Vaccination

  16. Viral Diseases • Common cold • Most frequently occurring disease • Causes: • Rhinovirus • Prevention: • Good hand washing

  17. Viral Diseases • Mononucleosis • Primarily affects children and young adults • Causes: • Epstein-Barr virus • Symptoms: • Fatigue, sore throat, fever, swollen lymph glands

  18. Viral Diseases • AIDS (covered in detail in Chapter 5) • Has now affected thousands of children • Cause: • HIV • Most cases result from maternal–fetal transfer • Children suffer symptoms and often are orphaned • Treatment: • Treatment focuses on prevention

  19. Bacterial Diseases • Causes: • Pathogens • E.g., Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Haemophilus, Clostridium • Symptoms: • Cough • Fever • Headache • Difficulty breathing • Sore throat • Treatment based on causative agent

  20. Bacterial Diseases • Pertussis • Also known as whooping cough • Symptoms: • Catarrhal • Paroxysmal spasm • Violent whooping coughing • Diphtheria • Severe inflammation of respiratory system • Was a leading cause of death in children • Rarely seen now due to vaccination

  21. Bacterial Diseases • Tuberculosis • Most commonly affects the respiratory system • But can be systemic to bone, brain, lymph nodes • Increasing number of cases in children • Tularemia • Also known as rabbit fever • Transmitted by bite of infected insect or direct contact with infected animal • Prevention is avoiding tick bites

  22. Bacterial Diseases • Impetigo • Contagious superficial pyoderma • Causes: • Staphylococcus • Group A Streptococcus • Prevention: • Good hand washing

  23. Bacterial Diseases • Acute tonsillitis • Infection of palatine tonsils located on posterior wall of nasopharynx • Cause: • Commonly group A beta-hemolytic streptococci • Symptoms: • Sore throat • Enlarged tonsils • Treatment: • Antibiotics • Tonsillectomy

  24. Bacterial Diseases • Otitis media • Acute bacterial infection of middle ear • Untreated, chronic infection develops • Symptoms: • Pain, fever, ear drainage • Treatment: • Antibiotics • Myringotomy with tympanoplasty

  25. Fungal Diseases • Affect skin or mucous membranes in children • Sometimes more common in infants • Usually not severe • But irritating • May need medical attention to prevent spread

  26. Fungal Diseases • Candidiasis • Also known as a yeast infection • Common in infants’ mouths and called thrush • In diaper area, called diaper rash • Cause: • Oral fungal infection • Prevention: • Thrush can be prevented by breast feeding; common in infants • Diaper rash treated by keeping the area clean and dry

  27. Fungal Diseases • Tinea (discussed in detail in Chapter 18) • Also known as ringworm • Group of diseases • Tinea capitis • Scalp • Tinea pedis • Feet • Tinea cruris • Groin and scrotum

  28. Parasitic Diseases • Caused by organism that feeds on another organism • Mostly found in places of poor nutrition, contaminated water, and low socioeconomic conditions • Only a few common in United States

  29. Parasitic Diseases • Giardiasis • Infection by caused by protozoa called Giardia lamblia • Young children are most often affected • Protozoa lodge in lining of the small intestine • Symptoms: • Diarrhea • Nausea • Cramping • Flatulence

  30. Parasitic Diseases • Pediculosis • Infestation with lice • Transmitted human to human by direct contact • Nits • Lice eggs • Epidemic among school children • Treatment with permethrin (more information in Chapter 18)

  31. Parasitic Diseases • Pinworms • Parasitic nematodes that infect intestines and rectum • Transmitted by ingestion or inhalation of eggs • Symptoms: • Anal itching; worms appear as tiny white threads • Roundworms • Found in soil • Parasites lodge in intestines • Spread by hand-to-mouth activity • Absorb nutrients from host

  32. Respiratory Diseases • Most common childhood diseases seen by physicians • Children very vulnerable due to continuous person-to-person contact • Infants most susceptible

  33. Respiratory Diseases • Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) • Abrupt, unexplained death of infant under age 1 • Symptom: • Only symptom is death of unknown cause in an infant • Croup (laryngotracheobronchitis) • Upper respiratory infection • Affects children ages 3 months to 3 years • Symptoms: • Inspiratory stridor

  34. Respiratory Diseases • Adenoid hyperplasia • Enlargement of pharyngeal tonsils • May require adenoidectomy • Asthma • Serious chronic respiratory disease in children • Symptoms: • Acute coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath • Cause: • Unknown • Triggers: Stimuli that cause attack

  35. Respiratory Diseases • Pneumonia • Infection of lung parenchyma • Symptoms: • Cough • Fever • Wheezing • Malaise • Treatment: • Antibiotics if bacterial • If viral, runs course in 5-7 days

  36. Digestive Diseases • Children may experience serious development problems due to lack of appropriate ingestion, digestion, absorption, or elimination • Fluid and electrolyte imbalance frequently more severe in children • May be caused by vomiting and diarrhea • Colic is a common symptom of digestive problems • Gastrointestinal pain, crying, irritability

  37. Digestive Diseases • Fluid imbalances • Vomiting or diarrhea can be serious • Dehydration • Life-threatening in children • Food allergies • Most often in children under age 1 • Most common allergies are cow’s milk and eggs • Many disappear after age 5 • If allergy develops after age 3, it usually continues into adult life

  38. Digestive Diseases • Eating disorders • Major problem among children • Especially adolescent females • Most common types: • Anorexia nervosa • Bulimia (discussed in detail in Chapter 21)

  39. Cardiovascular Diseases • Most cardiovascular diseases in children are related to genetic or developmental disorders (discussed in detail in Chapter 19)

  40. Musculoskeletal Diseases • Common in children due to high activity level • Range from soft tissue injuries and fractures to joint and bone deformities or degenerative muscle disorders

  41. Musculoskeletal Diseases • Legg-Calvé-Perthes (LCP) • Avascular necrosis of upper end of femur • Causes changes in bone growth • Untreated, it may lead to permanent deformity • Ewing’s sarcoma • Malignant neoplasm occurring before age 20 • Usually in long bones • More common in males • Quickly metastatic and highly malignant

  42. Blood Diseases • Leukemia • Malignancy of blood-forming cells in bone marrow • Most common disorder of blood and blood-forming organs in children • Symptoms: • Pallor, bleeding or bruising, fatigue, joint/bone/abdominal pain • Treatment: • Among the most curable diseases of childhood cancers • Chemotherapy

  43. Neurologic Diseases • Reye’s syndrome • Acute encephalopathy in children under age 15 who have had viral infection • Cause: • Unknown, there is a relationship between the disease and use of aspirin for febrile illnesses in children • Symptoms: • Nausea and vomiting • Liver enlargement • Lethargy • Seizures, coma, and in many cases death

  44. Eye and Ear Diseases • Have profound effects on child’s ability to learn and develop • Strabismus • Lazy or cross-eye • Deafness • Causes: • Genes • Trauma • Infections • Exposure to ototoxic drugs

  45. Trauma • Child abuse • Serious problem in United States • Often fatal • Emotional, physical, or sexual harm or neglect • Emotional abuse harder to diagnose than physical abuse • Sexual abuse occurring in epidemic proportions • Suicide • Third leading cause of death among young people • Prevention • Early intervention most important

  46. Trauma • Drug abuse • Illicit drug, alcohol, and tobacco use • Epidemic problem among children • Especially adolescents • Poisoning • Among top five causes of accidental death under age 10 • Most poisonings due to common substances found at home • E.g., cleaning products, medicines, plants

More Related