23 - Viral Causes of Skin lesions/rashes
Rashes: 1st - 6th disease: 6 common exanthems of children
* Enteroviruses
Picornavirus family - table
* current classification of subgroups = HEV-A, -B, -C, -D
Varicella-Zoster
Alphaherpesvirus Primary infection = Varicella (chickenpox) Reactivation of infection = shingles or zoster - Usually only occurs 1x - Risk of zoster increases with age
Exanthema subitum
Also called roseola or 6th Disease *High fever, followed by a rash* - Small, slightly raised pink lesions; starts on the trunk Peak incidence in children 6-15 months old; almost always in children younger than 3 years
Rubella Complications
Arthralgia or arthritis - children rare -adult female up to 70% Thrombocytopenic purpura- 1/3000 cases Encephalitis 1/6,000 cases Neuritis rare Orchitis rare
Eczema herpeticum
Children with eczema Eczema makes it easier for HSV to spread to the skin
Evolution of chicken pox
Clear vesicles on a erythematous base pustules → ulcers → crusted lesions
Hand foot and mouth disease - caused by?
Coxsackie A16, occasionally enterovirus 71
Molluscum contagiosum - what is it? how do you get it?
DNA pox virus Skin-skin contact or exposure to contaminated fomites - Usually in children <5 - Sexually transmitted in adults
8-month-old boy high fever & a widespread blistering eruption on his face Scattered lesions - hands, upper chest, neck & inside his mouth viral culture was positive for HSV-1 his mother had a healing cold sore on her lower lip the eruption improved within 48 hours with parenteral acyclovir discharged on oral valacyclovir to complete a 10 day course of therapy
Eczema herpeticum
Measles - course of infection diagram
Enters respiratory tract, disseminates & returns to respiratory tract Koplik spots - in the mouth
A 9 year old girl developed asymptomatic red cheeks & a symmetric reticulated morbilliform eruption. The rash gradually faded over 6 weeks and brightened with sun exposure and vigorous sports activities
Erythema infectiosum (5th disease) "slap cheek" rash
10-year-old boy multiple flat topped greyish-brown papules Onset ~ 1 year earlier treated with a daily application of treinoin 0.05 % cream.
Flat warts
15-year-old girl asymptomatic eruption on the face, the neck and hands for a year treated with a daily application of treinoin 0.05 % cream
Flat warts
Herpetic whitlow
HSV Infection of the finger Virus enters through breaks in the skin Seen in: - nurses, physicians, dentists who treat patients with HSV - child with HSV who sucks his thumb
Herpetic gladiatorum
Herpes on the skin; again virus enters through breaks in the skin Seen in wrestlers; other contact sports
34 year old man recurrent cluster of itchy vesicles on the neck cleared without treatment within a week
Herpetic gladiatorum
4 year old boy recurrent vesicles & pustules on the left palm every 4-6 months & cleared over 7-10 days bacterial cultures - negative Tzanck smear - multinucleated giant cells oral acyclovir starting at the onset of recurrent infections
Herpetic whitlow
Erythema infectiosum (5th disease) - phases - diagram
Infectious phase - not too many symptoms, nonspecific/flu like; lytic Rash - noninfectious
4-year-old boy multiple 2-3 mm pearly papules, some with central umbilication lesions were generally asymptomatic a few were occasionally itchy
Molluscum contagiosum
Rubella - epidemiology
No longer considered endemic in the US - Most reported rubella in the U.S. since the mid-1990s has occurred among foreign-born Hispanic adults Majority of CRS since 1997 occurred in children of unvaccinated Hispanic women - Mothers mostly born in Latin America
Measles - susceptible population
Non-vaccinated individuals - Religious groups opposed to vaccination - Immigrants - Parents worried about ADRS to the vaccine Some states allow philosophical exemptions to vaccination - ↑# of unvaccinated children in schools School-entry vaccinations are not required for home-schooled children in many states
Measles - Epidemiology
Not endemic in the US - eliminated in the Pan-Am Health Organization Region in 2002 Cases still occur in US: - Importation cases or outbreaks linked to importation case (in communities with unvaccinated individuals)
Erythema infectiosum (5th disease) - description of virus
Parvovirus B19 DNA, icosahedral, naked Erythrovirus genus - may be called Erythrovirus B19 transcription, replication and assembly occur in the nucleus requires host cell enzymes and functions present in *mitotically active cells* tropism for *erythroid progenitor cells*
19 year old woman extensive confluent rough papules & plaques sides & bottoms of both feet 10 years duration
Plantar warts
Viral exanthems in children - general characteristics of infection
Respiratory pathogens which cause systemic infection - Measles, rubella, erythema infectiosum, exanthema subitum Localized infection that disseminates via lymphatics &/or blood - secondary viremia may occur - replication at secondary site Rash is the result of an immune response to the virus Incubation period during dissemination Symptoms, including rash, occurs after dissemination Viral shedding occurs before symptoms are obvious
10-month-old 3 day hisory of fever to 103 ºF axillary less active than usual but not ill otherwise fever resolved on day 4 developed a pink papular rash over his trunk & proximal extremities
Roseola
General characteristics of Enteroviruses
Spread fecal-orally & through respiratory secretions Most common in summer & fall Tend to be more common in children than adults - Constant exposure to multiple serotypes may induce cross-reactive antibodies Often asymptomatic; otherwise cold or flu-like illness, sometimes a rash
Zoster (shingles) - symptoms & duration
Symptoms - severe pain in the area of skin supplied by infected sensory nerves - vesicles on skin supplied by the affected nerves (trunk, head, neck) Duration = ~ 1 wk
Rubella - characteristics
Togavirus (RNA, icosahedral, enveloped) 30-60% of infections result in clinical disease
Human herpesvirus type 6 (HHV-6) - spread
Ubiquitous - Almost 100% seropositivity by age 2 years Replicates in salivary glands - spread via oral secretions Latent infection in T cells & monocytes - Can reactivate in immunosuppressed individuals
Rubella & CRS - worldwide
WHO - encouraging developing countries to include rubella vaccine in childhood vaccination schedule - Until 1990's - used mostly in developed countries - Countries need to maintain high vaccination coverage - Low coverage → ↓ virus circulation - Could ↑ age of exposure from childhood to childbearing years
Common warts
Wart is being treated with topical salicylic acid Results in irritation and erosion The black dots represent necrosis of blood vessels.
Molluscum contagiosum - lesion
White, pink or flesh colored dome-shaped papules; develops a central depression (umbilicated) - Painless; occurs in crops - Usually on chest, arms, legs & face - Self-resolving (months to years) except lesions can persist in individuals who are immunocompromised
Measles - rash
also - watery eye, runny nose
Erythema infectiosum (5th disease) - course of infection - diagram
arthralgia - more common in women
HPV - types of warts - chart
don't need to memorize subtypes
Rubella - course of infection - diagram
enters through respiratory tract disseminates fever, rash, lymphadenopathy (less severe than measles)
Viral pathogens of paramyxoviridae family
enveloped RNA
Tzanck smear
for herpes
Chicken pox - incubation period, symptoms, rash
incubation period = 14-21 days symptoms - fever, headache rash - pustules, vesicles, crusts - trunk, face, limbs, buccal & pharyngeal mucosa - crops of pocks over 2-4 days contagious during the incubation period, until pocks crust over
Erythema infectiosum (5th disease) - complications
persistent or recurring arthralgia, more often in females fetal infection - miscarriages - anemia in the fetus - fetal death due to congestive heart failure associated with severe anemia aplastic crisis in patients with chronic RBC disorders (sickle cell anemia)
Zoster (shingles) - complications
postherpetic neuralgia (persistent pain) disseminated infection (immunocompromised)
Complications of varicella
varicella pneumonia (adults) encephalitis (1:1,000 cases) disseminated varicella - neonates, immunocompromised individuals - lungs, liver, CNS, bone marrow invasive group A streptococci - necrotizing fasciitis
Erythema infectiosum (5th disease) - epidemiology
winter & spring most often seen in the 5-14 year age group about 25% of infections are asymptomatic ~65% of adults have antibodies to B19