670 likes | 731 Vues
FEVER AND RASH. Prof. H. Herry Garna, dr., Sp.A(K), Ph.D. Infection – Tropical Disease Subdivision Department of Child Health, Faculty of Medicine Padjadjaran University, Hasan Sadikin General Hospital Bandung. Introduction.
E N D
FEVER AND RASH Prof. H. Herry Garna, dr., Sp.A(K), Ph.D Infection – Tropical Disease Subdivision Department of Child Health, Faculty of Medicine Padjadjaran University, HasanSadikin General Hospital Bandung
Introduction • Fever is often the first symptom noted by parents, common problem in clinic • Wide range of severity: self limiting disease life-threatening • Wrong first suspicion fatal outcome • It is more likely to be caused by infection, but any inflammatory, neoplastic, immunologic or traumatic event can generate fever
Introduction • Knowledge of differential diagnosis is very important • Diagnosis - Accurate anamnesis -Physical examination - Supporting examination
Differential Diagnosis • Past history of infectious disease and immunization • Type of prodromal period • Feature of the rash • Presence of pathognomonic or other diagnostic signs • Laboratory diagnostic tests
Differential Diagnosis • Feature of the rash * Category: - Macular or maculo-papular: Morbilli, rubella, roseolainfantum, scarlatina - Papulo-vesicular: Varicella, herpes zoster, variola * Character: discrete or confluent * Distribution, duration * The appearance associated with fever?
Etiologic Agents Infectious Diseases • Virus Classic viral exanthema: Measles, Rubella, Varicella Zoster Virus (VZV) Parvovirus, Roseola (HHV 6 and HHV 7) Others: HSV, EBV, HBV, Enterovirus, Dengue • Bacteria Scarlet fever, meningococcemia, typhoid fever Staphylococcal infection (sepsis, toxic shock syndrome)
Etiologic Agents • Mycoplasma • Rickettsia Noninfectious Diseases • Allergic: food, drugs, toxin, serum sickness • The etiology remains elusive: Kawasaki disease
Anamnesis • Demographic data • Appearance of rash • History of exposure • History of health before • History of disease in the family • Other complaint
Anamnesis Demographic Data • Age: neonate, infant, older children • Sex • Ethnic/race : Kawasaki disease ? • Season: winter or dry season or not specific • Certain geographic: endemic
Anamnesis Appearance of rash • Location and distribution • Expansion and evolution • Correlation between rash and fever in the period of high fever (morbilli) in the period of decreasing fever (roseolainfantum) • Pain or itching (drug eruption: itching)
Anamnesis History of Exposure • Contac t with similar disease (house, others) • Travel • Pet, insects • Medicine or other medical measures • Immunization
Anamnesis History of health before • History of disease before • Growth and development • History of recurrent disease History of disease in the family Autoimmun ?
Anamnesis Other complaint • Local complaint (specific organ) • Systemic complaint (multiorgan/multisystem diseases)
Physical Examination • General condition/severity of disease • Characteristic of rash • With enanthema • Other physical disorders
Physical Examination General condition/severity of disease • Meningococcemia, Staphylococcal toxic syndrome Characteristic of rash Macule, papule, maculo-papule • Vesicle, pustule, bulla • Petechiae or purpura • Erythroderma: diffuse or local
Nonblanching lesions • Petechiae, purpura, and echymosis • Difference size • Petechiae diameter <2 mm • Purpura 2 mm–1 cm • Echymosis diameter >1 cm
Physical Examination With enanthema • Mouth: Hand-foot-mouth disease? Buccal mucosa, palatum, pharyng, and tonsil • Genital mucosa Others • Arthritis, eye disorders, cardiac disorders • Hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, lymphadenopathy
Morbilli (Measles, Rubeola) Clinical Appearance • Incubation period: 10–12 days • Three stadia: prodromal—eruption— convalescents • Prodromal: 3–5 days 3 C (Coryza, Conjunctivitis, Cough), fever, Koplick’s spots • Eruption: high fever (40–40,5°C) Typical rash: - Maculo-papularerythromatous - Confluence-general - Start from backside of ear (head) body and upper arm lower extremities during 3 days whole of body
Morbilli • Endemic in developing countries • Effective immunization program cases decreasing prone to older age group • Lesion particularly at skin, mucous membrane, conjunctiva • Serous exudate, mononuclear cell predominant
Diagnosis • Anamnesis * Symptoms * History: contact, immunization • Clinical signs * Typical • Laboratory examination * Leukopenia * Relative lymphocytosis
Rash distribution from head to lower extremities Measles Koplick’s spots Conjunctivitis
Morbilli Complications • Acute otitis media (10–15%) • Pneumonia interstitialis (50–75% with radiologic abnormalities) • Myocarditis and pericarditis • Encephalitis (1/1,000 cases) 7–10 days after rash appearance (1/3 dead, 1/3 physical defect, 1/3 recover ) • Subacutesclerosingpanencephalitis (SSPE) (0,2–2 /100,000 morbilli, meanincubation 7 years) CFR almost 100% after 6–9 months
Complications • Persistent diarrhea • Exaserbation of tuberculosis (TBC) • Keratoconjunctivitis blindness • Secondary bacterial infection of skin • Noma
Rubella (German Measles) • Prodromal sign: +/- • Rash: short period 3 days • Typical sign: lymphadenopathypostauricular, suboccipital, posterior colli • Problems in pregnant women congenital rubella syndrome
Clinical Manifestations • Incubation period: 15—21 days • Mild prodromal sign: - mild fever - adolescent: more severe • Rash: maculopapular face centrifugal to neck trunk, extremities 24 hours all of body resolve in 3rd day
Congenital Rubella Syndrome • Depend on gestational age Abortus Stillbirth Congenital anomaly • Gravida 1–4 weeks: 61% 5–8 weeks: 26% 9–12 weeks: 8%
Congenital Rubella Syndrome • Opthalmologic: Cataract - Micropthalmia Glaucoma - Chorioretinitis • Cardiac: Septal defect - PDA • Neurologic: Meningoencephalitis Microcephaly Mental retardation • Auditoric: Sensorineural deafness
Exanthema Subitum (RoseolaInfantum) • Acute infection caused by human herpes virus 6 (some HHV 7) • Mostly in infant • Sporadic (sometimes epidemic) • Typical feature: - Severity of clinical sign unproportionally with degree of fever - Simultaniously resolve of rash and clinical sign
Clinical Manifestation • Incubation period: 7–17 days (mean 10 days) • Most common in 6–18 months old • Fever - abruptly high: 39,4–41,2°C - duration: 1–5 days (mostly 3–4 days) - convulsion can occur • Mild clinical sign: mild pharyngitis and coryza • Rash: not specific: macule/maculopapular, rose color chest extremities and neck face • Appear while temperature has return to normal • Disappear on 1–2 days with normal skin
Prognosis • Particularly good prognosis • Bad prognosis: Hyperpyrexia with persistent convulsion
Scarlet Fever - Scarlatina Clinical manifestation • Incubation period: 1–7 days (mean: 3 days) • Acute symptoms: high fever—headache— vomiting—chills • Signs: severe pharyngitis hyperemia— edema— exudate—dysphagia • Sometimes abdominal pain • Enlargement of lymph node
Scarlet Fever- Scarlatina Typical rash • Erythroderma diffuse (red sandpaper) • Reddish macule/papule blanching on pressure • Firstly on axilla, groin, and neck 24 hours all of body • Petechiae can occur • Rash at chin and forehead (confluence): circumoralpalor • Usually: palms and soles of feet
Scarlet Fever- Scarlatina • Tongue: white thick membrane (white strawberry tongue) • After several days : peeled off papule (red strawberry tongue) • Pintpointpetechiae in the flexures produce a linear purpuric pattern (pathognomonic)(Pastia’s lines)
Scarlet Fever (Scarlatina) • A beta-hemolytic Streptococcus group pyrogenic toxin (erythrogenic toxin) Desquamation occur from end of 1st week to 6th week of disease Diagnosis: History and physical examination Pharyngeal swab: bacterial culture Serologic: ASTO/ASLO/ASO Complete blood count: leukocytosis CRP increased or +: not specific
Scarlet Fever- Scarlatina Desquamation of rash after 1 week, especially in hand and foot
Complications • Local spread/per continuitatum: - Sinusitis – otitis media – mastoiditis - Retro/parapharyngealabcess - Brochopneumonia - Servical adenitis • Hematogenic spread • - Meningitis – osteomyelitis – arthritis (septic) • Non suppurative (late) complications - Acute rheumatic fever - Acuteglomerulonephritis
Dengue Fever (1) • Incubation period: 3–14 days • Fever: suddenly high • disappear: day-3 or 4 recover or • dicrease: day-3 atau 4 , and appear again • after 1–3 days camel saddle • Long of fever: 5–7 days
Dengue Fever (2) • Other complaint • Headache, retro orbital pain • Joint pain, back pain (backborne fever) • Weakness, malaise • Flushing: face, neck • Photophobia, cough
Dengue Fever (3) Skin rash Primary rash Rash: morbilliform (maculopapule): chest and joint fold Secondary rash After day-4, especially day-6 or day-7 Maculopapule/petechiae /purpura/mixed Confluence: usually hand and foot Sometimes itching
Dengue Fever (4) • Hemorrhage ? • Although not usual hemorrhage • - petechiae (skin) • - epistaxis • - gum bleeding, vomiting/with blood • - menorrhage
Pattern of Fever in Dengue Infection 40 oC 39 oC 38 oC 37 oC 36 oC I II III IV V VI VII VIII Primary rash Secondary rash
Dengue Virus Infection Petechia Flushing
Meningococcemia • Etiology: Neisseriameningitidis (meningococcus) • Clinical manifestations • Acute fever, suddenly high • Hemorrhagic manifestations: petechia, purpura (fulminant) • Progressive severe meningitis, sepsis, septic shock
Varicella/Chickenpox Clinical manifestations • Prodromal:1–2 days, mild fever • Papularerythromatous vesicle pustule crusta • Distribution of rash from body to face neck and extremities • Pruritus +++ • Mucous membrane • Spesific: several kinds of rash in the same time
Varicella/Chickenpox Complication • Pneumonia (rare in children, high mortality in immunocompromised hosts • Cerebellar ataxia (1/4.000: age <15 yr) (Develops 7 to 10 days into the disease, excellent prognosis) • Transveremyelitis, Guillain-Barre syndrome • Hemorrhagic: thrombocytopenia
Varicella/Chickenpox Complication • Superinfection - local: S. aureusor GABHS: cellulitis - systemic: GABHS: sepsis, necrotizing fasciitis, streptococcal toxicshock syndrome • Reye Syndrome Persistent vomiting, decreased mental status, liver dysfunction Associated with salicylate-containing products Avoid aspirin in varicella !!!