Fever and Rash
Fever and Rash 
Presentation by:Marcellina Mian
Professor of Pediatrics
    * Macule: discolored spot (often, but not necessarily red; often, but not necessarily round); blanches
    * Papule: raised spot
    * Maculopapular: a papule rising from a macule, often red
    * Petechia: pinpoint purple/red bruise; does NOT blanch, often in clusters
    * Ecchymosis: red/purple bruise, variable size & shape 
Definitions
Case #1 
Maculopapular rash
Measles 
    * “Stepwise” high fever
    * Cough, coryza, and conjunctivitis
    * Rash (exanthem) starts on head & spreads to rest of body
    * Koplick spots (enanthem) prior to or at very beginning of rash
    * Complications: OM, diarrhea, encephalitis, pneumonia
Koplick Spots
Measles (Rubeola) 
    * Highly contagious
    * Most deadly of all childhood rash/fever illnesses
    * Spread by droplets or direct contact with nasal or throat secretions of infected persons
    * Incubation period: 8 -12 days
    * Prevention: immunization (MMR) just past one year & before kindergarden 
Case #2 
13-year-old male with:
    * fever x two days
    * generalized rash
On PE:
    * Well & comfortable
    * Maculopapular rash
    * Postauricular lymphadenopathy
Rubella (German Measles) 
    * Low grade fever
    * Rash:
          o starts on face & spreads down body, clearing in same pattern
          o Light red spots, fainter than measles
          o Lasts 1 - 3 days
    * Mild illness, may be missed
    * Adults & adolescents may have arthritis or arthralgia
    * Complications: encephalitis, neuritis & in pregnancy  Congenital Rubella Syndrome in baby
Congenital Rubella 
    * Rash
    * Cataracts
    * CHD (PDA)
    * Blindness
    * Neurosensory deafness
    * Microcephaly & mental retardation
Rubella 
    * Droplet transmission
    * Incubation period: 2 - 3 weeks
    * Prevention: Vaccination (MMR)
Case #3 
    * 15-month-old presents with several days of fever, & rash that looks like this:
Fifth Disease,  Erythema Infectiosum  
    * Parvovirus B19
    * Fever, malaise & headache may precede rash by up to 10 days
    * “Slapped cheeks” and “lacy, reticular” rash over body that may itch
    * No longer infectious once rash develops
    * Virus may also cause polyarthropathy syndrome, aplastic crisis, or hydrops fetalis
Hydrops Fetalis
Case #4 
    * 8-month-old female with fever to 40C for past 5 days
    * Baby does not look unwell
    * PE reveals no source of fever
    * U/A negative
    * WBC mildly elevated; mostly lymphocytes
    * D/C on acetaminophen
    * Next day mother calls to say baby has a rash
Roseola (Sixth disease, Exanthem subitum) 
    * Peak incidence 6-24 months
    * 20% of HHV-6 infections
    * Also HHV-7
    * Self-limited disease:
          o 3-7 days of fever
          o Rash follows defervescence
    * Febrile seizures in 10-15%
    * Occasionally, bulging fontanelle & encephalopathy
Case #5 
    * 3-year-old boy with fever & irritability x 6 days.
    * PE:
          o maculopapular rash
          o red eyes
          o strawberry tongue
          o cervical lymphadenopathy
Scarlet Fever 
    * Group A  Strep
    * Generalized rash:
          o Sandpapery
          o Circumoral pallor
          o Pastia’s lines
Pastia’s lines 
Circumoral pallor
Kawasaki Syndrome Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome 3 phases:
    * Acute: 1-2 wks, fever, etc
    * Subacute:  2-4 wks
          o After acute signs 
    * Convalescent:   6-8 wks
          o about 4th wk; when clinical signs disappear
          o Until ESR returns to normal
Kawasaki Syndrome Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome 
Acute Phase:
Subacute phase 
Associated findings: 
Kawasaki Syndrome: Coronary aneurysm 
Kawasaki Syndrome: Treatment 
Case #6 
Lyme disease in
Erythema chronicum migrans
    * Borrelia burgdorferi transmitted by:
    * Ixodes tick
          o Ehrlichia, babesia
Lyme Disease: early localized 
    * Erythema migrans:
Lyme Disease:  early disseminated 
Lyme Disease:  late disseminated 
Case #7 
Epstein Barr Virus 
Infectious Mononucleosis 
Case #8 
Scarlet Fever 
Case #9 
Neisseria meningococcemia 
Case #10 
HSV Stomatitis 
Whitlow
Case #11 
Hand-Foot-and-Mouth Disease 
    * Coxsackie A16 & Enterovirus 71
    * Oral lesions only: herpangina
    * Vesicles on an erythematous base, at posterior pharynx/soft palate
    * Commonly presents in spring & summer
    * Supportive care
Case #12 
    * 2-year-old child presents with fever for four days & rash for two days. 
    * His father, who is visiting from Mexico to harvest strawberries, brought him to a walk-in clinic.
Varicella 
    * Herpes virus, vaccine preventable
    * Incubation period: 14-16 days Prodrome: fever, constitutional symptoms, then rash starting on trunk & spreading to limbs (centrifugal)
    * “Dewdrop on a rose petal”
    * Vesicles in various states of evolution
    * Contagious until all lesions crust over
Fever and Rash.ppt

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