1 / 22

DENGUE HAEMORRAGIC FEVER AND DENGUE SHOCK SYNDROME MANAGEMENT

DENGUE HAEMORRAGIC FEVER AND DENGUE SHOCK SYNDROME MANAGEMENT. Dr. Rakhi M R. Dengue fever is an infection caused by dengue virus resulting in a self limiting febrile illness…. Suspicion index: Erythematous flush Dengue facies Suffused face Injected eyes Purplish lips

dex
Télécharger la présentation

DENGUE HAEMORRAGIC FEVER AND DENGUE SHOCK SYNDROME MANAGEMENT

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. DENGUE HAEMORRAGIC FEVER AND DENGUE SHOCK SYNDROME MANAGEMENT Dr. Rakhi M R

  2. Dengue fever is an infection caused by dengue virus resulting in a self limiting febrile illness…. • Suspicion index: • Erythematous flush • Dengue facies • Suffused face • Injected eyes • Purplish lips • Redden malar regions and ear lobules

  3. Classical Dengue Fever • A/c febrile illness of 2-7 days of duration with more than two of the following manifestations: • Headache • Retro orbital pain • Leucopenia • Tourniquet test positive • Hemorrhagic manifestations • Arthralgia or myalgia • Rash • Erythematous flush

  4. Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever • More seen in children • Infants – primary infection • Older children – secondary infection, this can occur even many years later. • Hemorrhage in DHF is due to • Vasculopathy • Prothrombin complex deficiency • Platelet dysfunction • Thrombocytopenia

  5. Diagnostic Features • Fever of a/c onset • Hemorrhagic tendencies • Positive tourniquet test • Petechiae, Ecchymosis, purpura • Hematemesis or malena • Thrombocytopenia – less than 1 lakh • Evidence of plasma leakage • Increased hematocrit by 20% • Decreased Hct by 20% after volume replacement • Pleural effusion and ascitis • hypoproteinemia

  6. Dengue Shock Syndrome • All the signs of DHF + signs of circulatory failure • Rapid and weak pulse • Narrow pulse pressure • Hypotension • Cold extremities • Restlessness

  7. Symptomatology of mild capillary leak • Weakness, irritability, anxiety, restlessness • Symptomatology of severe capillary leak • Oliguria, rt hypochondriac pain, BP fall • Symptomatology of congestive phase • Bounding pulse • Wide pulse pressure • CCF • Increased urine output

  8. Disease course

  9. DHF III and IV are considered as DSS

  10. Investigations • Hb, Hct, PLC • Limitations of Hct are pre existing anemia, severe bleeding, early volume replacement • TC, DC for leucopenia with relative lymphocytosis • CXR and USG Abdomen for serous effusions • Electrolytes – hyponatremia • Proteins – decreased • Mild elevation in SGOT, SGPT • PT, APTT – prolonged in DIC

  11. ABG – metabolic acidosis • ECG changes • Serology – Ig G and Ig M if possible (after 5-7 days of fever)

  12. Interpretations of dengue serology

  13. Differential diagnosis • Chicken guinea fever • Leptospirosis • Measles • Septicemia • Kawasaki disease

  14. MANAGEMENT • OP MANAGEMENT • Collect BRE, PCV, PLC. • Asses vital signs – PR, BP, CRT and watch for bleeding • Do tourniquet test • If vitals are stable, advice rest, Pmol, No aspirin/ brufen • Plenty of oral fluids/ ORS • Food acc to appetite • Monitor urine output • Keep body temp below 39°C • Give large amt of fluids

  15. Indication for admission • Restlessness/ Lethargy • Shock • Bleeding tendencies • Tachycardia • CRT>2 sec • Cool extremities and mottled skin • Oliguria • a/c abdominal pain • Positive tourniquet test • Hematocrit>35% or rising hct>20% • PLC<1 lakh

  16. Initial Rx in the ward or ICU • If increase in hct is more than 20%, initiate iv therapy (NS/ 5% dextrose) 6ml/kg/hr and in case of improvement 3ml/kg/hr for 3 hrs and discontinue over 6-12hrs. • If no improvement, change to 10ml/kg/hr and after improvement taper iv fluids gradually to 6-3ml/kg/hr

  17. No imp, unstable vitals Hct rise Hct falls Dextran or plasma 10ml/kg/hr Blood 10ml/kg/hr Improvement Reduce the IV from 10-6-3hrly and discontinue by 24-48 hrs

  18. DSS Mx • Initiate IV therapy 10-20ml/kg/hr and then continue the same protocol as above in tapering fluids • In case of no improvement give blood/ dextran as the case scenario dictates…..

  19. Indications for blood products • Blood transfusion • Significant blood loss • Persistent shock with falling Hct • FFP/ Cryoprecipitate – DIC • Platelets • Less than 50,000 with significant mucosal bleeding • Less than 20,000 with no significant mucosal bleeding.

  20. Criteria for D/S • Patient should be afebrile for atleast 24hrs • Passing urine normally • Having improved appetite • No respiratory disease • Stable Hematocrit • PLC>50,000

  21. THANK YOU

More Related