Literature DB >> 22210934

Scabies: a review of diagnosis and management based on mite biology.

Alexandra K Golant1, Jacob O Levitt.   

Abstract

Scabies is a contagious parasitic dermatitis that is a significant cause of morbidity, especially outside of the United States. Scabies is diagnosed most often by correlating clinical suspicion with the identification of a burrow. Although scabies should be on the differential for any patient who presents with a pruritic dermatosis, clinicians must consider a wide range of diagnostic possibilities. This approach will help make scabies simultaneously less over- and underdiagnosed by clinicians in the community. Atypical or otherwise complex presentations may necessitate the use of more definitive diagnostic modalities, such as microscopic examination of KOH prepared skin scrapings, high-resolution digital photography, dermoscopy, or biopsy. Scabies therapy involves making the correct diagnosis, recognizing the correct clinical context to guide treatment of contacts and fomites, choosing the most effective medication, understanding how to use the agent properly, and following a rational basis for when to use and reuse that agent. Although the development of new therapeutic agents is always welcome, tried and true treatments are still effective today. Permethrin is the gold standard therapy, with malathion being an excellent topical alternative. Ivermectin is an effective oral alternative that is especially useful in crusted scabies, patients who are bed ridden, and in institutional outbreaks. Despite the availability of effective therapeutics, treatment failures still occur, mostly secondary to application error (ie, failure to treat the face and scalp or close contacts, failure to reapply medication) or failure to decontaminate fomites. Because increasing resistance to scabies treatments may be on the horizon, we propose that standard of care for scabies treatment should involve routine treatment of the scalp and face and re-treating patients at day 4 on the basis of the scabies life cycle to ensure more efficient mite eradication. Practitioners should attempt to treat all close contacts simultaneously with the source patient. To eradicate mites, all fomites should be placed in a dryer for 10 minutes on a high setting, furniture and carpets vacuumed, and nonlaunderables isolated for a minimum of 2 days, or, for those who wish to be rigorous, 3 weeks.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22210934     DOI: 10.1542/pir.33-1-e1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Rev        ISSN: 0191-9601


  8 in total

1.  Development of Conventional and Real-Time Quantitative PCR Assays for Diagnosis and Monitoring of Scabies.

Authors:  Samson S Y Wong; Rosana W S Poon; Sandy Chau; Sally C Y Wong; Kelvin K W To; Vincent C C Cheng; Kitty S C Fung; K Y Yuen
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2015-04-22       Impact factor: 5.948

2.  Scabies.

Authors:  Paul Johnstone; Mark Strong
Journal:  BMJ Clin Evid       Date:  2014-12-22

Review 3.  Cutaneous Manifestations of Selected Parasitic Infections in Western Pacific and Southeast Asian Regions.

Authors:  Vicente Belizario; John Paul Caesar Delos Trinos; Nikko Benjamin Garcia; Maureen Reyes
Journal:  Curr Infect Dis Rep       Date:  2016-09       Impact factor: 3.725

4.  [Importance of dermatopathology in the diagnosis of tropical and travel-associated skin diseases].

Authors:  P Elsner; S Metz; S Schliemann
Journal:  Hautarzt       Date:  2014-10       Impact factor: 0.751

5.  Scabies with Secondary Infection Resembling Kerion-Type Tinea Capitis.

Authors:  Imam Budi Putra; Nelva Karmila Jusuf
Journal:  Int J Gen Med       Date:  2021-01-15

6.  Assessing knowledge of scabies among physicians working in primary health care setting.

Authors:  Mohammed S Alsaidan; Yazeed J Alhaqbani; Abdulaziz M Alfaifi; Fahad G Alotaibi; Ahmad K Alsomari; Adel A Alzhrani; Sameer H Al-Ghamdi
Journal:  J Family Med Prim Care       Date:  2020-10-30

7.  Atypical crusted scabies in a patient with chronic liver disease caused by hepatitis B and D viruses.

Authors:  Mônica Santos; Gustavo Ávila Maquiné; Carolina Talhari; Antonio Pedro Mendes Schettini
Journal:  An Bras Dermatol       Date:  2018-03       Impact factor: 1.896

8.  Comparative Efficacy of Topical Pertmehrin, Crotamiton and Sulfur Ointment in Treatment of Scabies.

Authors:  Celestyna Mila-Kierzenkowska; Alina Woźniak; Ewa Krzyżyńska-Malinowska; Lucyna Kałużna; Roland Wesołowski; Wojciech Poćwiardowski; Marcin Owcarz
Journal:  J Arthropod Borne Dis       Date:  2017-03-14       Impact factor: 1.198

  8 in total

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