viral exanthems

35
Angad, JaL

Upload: cooper-wilkerson

Post on 31-Dec-2015

43 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

Angad , JaL. Viral Exanthems. RUBEOLA. (MEASLES). Measles. Etiology RNA virus of the genus Morbillivirus in the family Paramyxoviridae Epidemiology Prior to use of vaccine, peak incidence was among 5-10 y/o Transmission 90% of susceptible contacts acquire the disease - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Viral  Exanthems

Angad, JaL

Page 2: Viral  Exanthems

(MEASLES)

Page 3: Viral  Exanthems

Etiology RNA virus of the genus Morbillivirus in the

family ParamyxoviridaeEpidemiology

Prior to use of vaccine, peak incidence was among 5-10 y/o

Transmission 90% of susceptible contacts acquire the

disease Maximal dissemination occurs by droplet

spray during the prodromal period

Page 4: Viral  Exanthems
Page 5: Viral  Exanthems

Incubation Period: Last 10-12 daysProdromal stage: Last 3-5 days

characterized by low-mod grade fever, dry cough , coryza, photophobia & conjunctivitis. Kopliks spots appear by 2nd -3rd day

Rash - as exanthem progresses systemic symptoms subside

Page 6: Viral  Exanthems
Page 7: Viral  Exanthems

Self-limited infection in most patients Complications common in malnourished

children, the unimmunized & those w/ congenital immunodeficiency,and leukemia

Acute complications: otitis media, pneumonia (Hecht giant cell pneumonia), diarrhea, measles encephalitis, thrombocytopenia.

Chronic complication: subacute sclerosing panencephalitis.

Page 8: Viral  Exanthems

Based on Clinical pictureLaboratory confirmation is rarely needed

Measles IgM – detectable for 1 month after the illness but sensitivity is limited

Page 9: Viral  Exanthems

Prevention – MMR Acute Infection – treatment is

entirely supportive (antipyretics, bed rest, adequate fluid intake)

Secondary Bacterial Infection – administration of appropriate antibiotics

Page 10: Viral  Exanthems

(GERMAN MEASLES / 3 DAYS MEASLES)

Page 11: Viral  Exanthems

Common benign childhood infection manifested by a characteristic exanthem and lymphadenopathy

Etiology: RNA virus , genus Rubivirus, family Togaviridae

Epidemiology Humans are the only natural host of Rubella

virus Spread by oral droplet or transplacentally to

the fetus Peak incidence is 5-14 y/o

Pathogenesis: Not well understood

Page 12: Viral  Exanthems

Incubation Period: 14 to 21 days.Prodromal phase

Mild catarrhal symptoms In adolescents and young adults: anorexia,

malaise, conjunctivitis, headache, low-grade fever, mild URT symptoms.

Retroauricular, post cervical & postoccipital lymphadenopathy

An enanthem appears just before the onset of the rash (FORCHHEIMER SPOTS)

Page 13: Viral  Exanthems

• Skin Lesions• Petechiae on soft palate

• Enlarged lymph nodes

Page 14: Viral  Exanthems

Maybe apparent from clinical symptoms and PE

Usually confirmed by serology or viral culture

Latex agglutination, enzyme immunoassay & fluorescent immunoassay

Page 15: Viral  Exanthems

In most persons, rubella is mild Pregnant women infected during the 1st

trimester can pass the infection transplacentally

Congenital rubella syndrome Congenital heart defects Cataracts Microphthalmia Deafness Microcephaly Hydrocephaly

Page 16: Viral  Exanthems

Prevention – MMR Pregnant women should not be given live rubella virus vaccine and should avoid becoming pregnant for 3 mo after they have been vaccinated

Acute Infection – symptomatic

Page 17: Viral  Exanthems

FIFTH DISEASE

Page 18: Viral  Exanthems

EI is a childhood exanthem occurring with primary parvovirus B19 infection

Characterized by edematous erythematous plaques on the cheeks (“slapped cheeks”) and an erythematous lacy eruption on the trunk and extremities

Transmission: Spreads via droplet aerosol

Page 19: Viral  Exanthems
Page 20: Viral  Exanthems

Incubation Period: 7 to 28 daysChildren: Fever, malaise, headache,

coryza. Headache, sore throat, fever, myalgias, nausea, diarrhea, conjunctivitis, cough may coincide with rash.

Adults: Constitutional symptoms more severe, with fever, adenopathy, arthritis/arthralgias involving small joints of hand, knees, wrists, ankles, feet. Numbness and tingling of fingers.

Page 21: Viral  Exanthems

Diffuse erythema and edema of the cheeks with “slapped cheek” facies in a child

Page 22: Viral  Exanthems

Usually based on clinical presentation of the typical rash

Serologic test for B19PCR, nucleic acid hybridization

Page 23: Viral  Exanthems

“Slapped cheeks” lesions fade over 1 to 4 days. Eruption lasts for 5-9 days but can recur

Arthralgia is self-limited In patients w/ chronic hemolytic

anemias transient aplastic may occur Fetal B19 infection may be

complicated by nonimmune fetal hydrops secondary to infection of erythroid precursors

Page 24: Viral  Exanthems

No specific antiviral therapy

IVIG have been used to treat episodes of anemia and bone marrow failure

Page 25: Viral  Exanthems

EXANTHEM SUBITUM

Page 26: Viral  Exanthems

Exanthema subitum (sudden rash) is associated with primary HHV-6 and HHV-7 infection, characterized by the sudden appearance of rash as high-fever lysis in a healthy-appearing infant

Primary infection is acquired via oropharyngeal secretions

Pathogenesis of ES rash is not known

Page 27: Viral  Exanthems

Incubation period: 7 -17 daysHigh fever with morning remission

until the 4th day when it falls to normal coincident with the appearance of rash

Infant remarkably well despite high fever

In Asian countries, ulcers at the uvulo-palatoglossal junction (NAGAYAMA SPOTS) are common.

Page 28: Viral  Exanthems

Multiple, blanchable macules and papules on the back of a febrile child, which appeared as the temperature fell

Page 29: Viral  Exanthems

Based on age, history and PE findings

Serology, virus culture, Antigen detection and PCR

Page 30: Viral  Exanthems

Self-limited with rare sequelae

High fever maybe associated w/ seizures

HHV-6 & HHV-7 persist throughout the life of the patient

Page 31: Viral  Exanthems

Treatment is supportive (antipyretics, bed rest, adequate fluid intake)

Page 32: Viral  Exanthems
Page 33: Viral  Exanthems

RUBEOLA RUBELLA ROSEOLA

ERYTHEMA INFECTIOS

UM

Etiology Paramyxoviridae Togaviridae Virus (prob) Virus (prob)

Incubation Period

10 – 12 14 - 21 7 - 17 7 - 28

Epid All ages 6 -18 months All ages Rarely > 3 y/o

Rash Maculopapular Maculopapular Maculopapular Maculopapular

Distribution Begins face, spread rapidly

Begins trunk → arms & neck face- legs – 3d

Last for 24 hr ….

Prodrome 3 – 5 d low-mod fever, hackhing cough, coryza, conjunctivitis, kopliks after 2-3 days

Mild catarrhal , retroauricular, post cervical, post occipital lymphadenopathy

None None

Page 34: Viral  Exanthems

RUBEOLA

RUBELLA ROSEOLA

ERYTHEMA INFECTIOSUM

Fever pattern

↑ T abruptly as rash appears ↓ T when rash reaches legs & feet

Sudden onset ↑ T ↓ T on 3rd-4th d as rashes appear

Absent or low grade

Infectivity

Isolate- 7th d post exposure unti l 5 d after rash appeared

9th – 10th d post exposure (peak)

3rd day of fever and 1st day of rash

Rash Lateral neck, ears, hairline → back, abdomen, thigh → feet on 2nd

Absence of PE findings to explain fever , trunk and extremities

Rash 3 stages1.Slapped cheek2.Maculopapular on 3rd as face fades3.Lacy or reticulated appearance rash – fades central clearing pruritic lasts 2-39 days

Page 35: Viral  Exanthems