| Literature DB >> 15286598 |
Debra Seguin1, Judith Stoner Halpern.
Abstract
The immediate and correct recognition of an infectious exanthema can be aided with a focused history and minor assessment. False alarms can consume health care resources and create unnecessary anxiety. Clinicians can use specific references to not only help with educating staff, but to ensure a more accurate diagnosis and trigger notification of appropriate infectious disease protocols. The authors recommend that al emergency departments have a process in place to immediately isolate suspicious cases until a more thorough medial workup can be performed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15286598 PMCID: PMC9533829 DOI: 10.1016/j.dmr.2004.06.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Disaster Manag Response ISSN: 1540-2495
Key points to identify in the triage of a febrile patient with a rash
| Key points to identify | |
|---|---|
| Chief complaint | • General health in last 7 to 21 days |
| • When fever started, relationship to rash, actual temperatures measured, and method used to obtain temperature | |
| • Risk for exposure to ill persons, those recently immunized | |
| • History of recent travel, camping, hiking | |
| • General immune status (ie, risk for immunocompromise) | |
| • History of immunizations | |
| • Allergies, especially eczema, psoriasis | |
| Associated symptoms | • Headache, backache, tender joints |
| • Significant lymphadenopathy | |
| • Nuchal rigidity | |
| • Photophobia | |
| • Oral lesions | |
| • Increased respiratory secretions | |
| Physical assessment | |
| Vital signs | • Fever, tachypnea, tachycardia |
| General appearance | • “Ill appearing” (has signs of systemic disease) |
| Skin and mucous membrane lesions | • Type, shape, arrangement, distribution |
Descriptions of skin lesions3., 6., 8.
| Lesion | Description | Size (in diameter) | Relationship to skin |
|---|---|---|---|
| Petechiae | Deposit of blood | <0.5 cm | Flat |
| Macule | Discoloration, color varies | <1 cm | Flat |
| Papule | Solid, color varies | <0.5 cm | Elevated |
| Plaque | Circumscribed, solid; often formed by confluence of papules | >0.5 cm | Elevated |
| Nodule | Solid | >0.5 cm | Elevated |
| Wheal | Firm, transient | Can vary | Elevated |
| Vesicle | Circumscribed, fluid filled | <0.5 cm | Elevated |
| Bulla | Circumscribed, fluid filled | >0.5 cm | Elevated |
| Pustule | Circumscribed, fluid filled with leukocytes | Can vary | Elevated |
| Erosion | Does not penetrate below dermal-epidermal junction and heals without scarring | Can vary | Depressed |
| Ulcer | Focal loss of epidermis and dermis, heals with scarring | Can vary | Depressed |
Clinical presentation, transmission, and treatment of smallpox9., 10., 11., 12., 13.
| Syndrome | Rash | Transmission |
|---|---|---|
| Fever of 101 °F or greater occurs 1-4 days before the rash appears. | Maculopapular rash progresses to vesicles, pustules, crusts, scar. | Generally, transmission takes direct and fairly prolonged face-to-face contact or direct contact with infected bodily fluids or objects (linens). |
| Concurrent with fever, at least 1 of the following occurs: prostration, headache, backache, chills, vomiting, or severe abdominal pain. The fever may drop with rash onset. | The lesions in smallpox tend to appear monomorphic (all one stage). | Not infectious until rash develops. |
| Classic smallpox lesions are deep seated, firm to touch, round, and well circumscribed vesicles or pustules; umbilicated appearance. | Infectious until all lesions have scabbed over. | |
| The rash distribution begins in the mouth and throat spreads to face, arms, and legs, then to hands/palms and feet/soles. | ||
| Within 24 hours of onset, rash usually spreads to cover the body. | ||
| As the rash appears, the fever usually abates and the patient “feels better.” | ||
| On the third day, the rash becomes raised lesions; by the fourth day, the lesions fill with a thick opaque fluid and often have a depression in the center. After approximately 5 days, a pustular rash develops. | ||
| By the end of the second week after the has rash appeared, most of the sores have scabbed over. |
Clinical presentation, transmission, and treatment of monkeypox2., 13., 15., 16.
| Prodrome | Rash | Transmission |
|---|---|---|
| Prodrome phase consists of patients typically experiencing low-grade fever, headache, nonproductive cough, chills, lymphadenopathy, and drenching sweats. | Rash does not occur in all patients. If rash develops it will develop within 1 to 10 days after prodrome. | Primary route of transmission from infected animal to human following close contact. Animals found to be carriers in United States are prairie dogs, Gambian giant rats. |
| Rash is popular that progresses through stages of vesiculation, pustulation, umbilication, and crusting. | Skin-to-skin transmission from an infected person's lesions has been documented. | |
| In some patients, early lesions have become ulcerated. |
Clinical presentation, transmission, and treatment of chickenpox9., 10., 14.
| Prodrome | Rash | Transmission |
|---|---|---|
| None or very mild fever. | Lesions are superficial vesicles, described as “dewdrops on a rose petal.” | Infectious until all lesions have scabbed over. |
| None or mild concurrent symptoms. | Most infectious in the 48-hour period before rash develops. |
Figure 1Centripetal pattern of skin lesion distribution commonly seen with chickenpox. (Source: Center for Disease Control and Prevention Smallpox Risk Evaluation Help available at )
Figure 2Centrifugal pattern of skin lesion distribution commonly seen with smallpox. (Source: Center for Disease Control and Prevention Smallpox Risk Evaluation Help available at )