| Literature DB >> 31605670 |
Marlos Melo Martins1, Arnaldo Prata-Barbosa2, Antonio José Ledo Alves da Cunha3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To present the currently available evidence on transmission, clinical, diagnostic methods, treatment, and prevention methods of major arboviruses that occur in childhood. SOURCE OF DATA: Non-systematic review carried out in MEDLINE (PubMed), LILACS (VHL), Scopus, Web of Science, Cochrane, CAPES Portal, and Google Scholar databases for the past five years using the search terms arboviruses, dengue, chikungunya, Zika, Mayaro, and West Nile fever, as well as child, newborn, and adolescent. SYNTHESIS OF DATA: The main characteristic of arboviruses is the fact that part of their replication cycle occurs inside insect vectors, thus being classically transmitted to humans through the bite of mosquitoes (hematophagous arthropods), although non-vector transmission of these viruses is also possible in specific situations. These diseases remain a major public health challenge, due to the lack of specific antiviral treatment, the co-circulation of different arboviruses in endemic/epidemic regions, the lack of effective and safe immunizations for the vast majority of these viruses, and the great difficulty in vector control, especially in large urban centers.Entities:
Keywords: Arboviroses; Arboviruses; Chikungunya; Child; Crianças; Dengue; Newborn; Recém-nascidos; Zika
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31605670 PMCID: PMC9432121 DOI: 10.1016/j.jped.2019.08.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pediatr (Rio J) ISSN: 0021-7557 Impact factor: 2.990
Dengue classification in childhood.
| Dengue without warning signs | Dengue with warning signs | Severe dengue |
|---|---|---|
| Any child or adolescent living in an area of dengue risk with acute febrile illness, lasting two to seven days, with no apparent infectious focus and with at least two of the following criteria: | Any case of dengue in the defervescence period, showing at least one of the following signs: | Any case of dengue with at least one of the following manifestations: |
| 1. Nausea/vomiting | Intense and continuous abdominal pain (self-referred or at palpation); | Shock or respiratory failure secondary to capillary leakage; |
| 2. Rash | Persistent Vomiting; | Severe bleeding (hematemesis, melena, intracerebral hemorrhage) Severe organic impairment (TGO or TGP > 1,000 IU, altered level of consciousness, myocarditis, or inflammation of other organs) |
| 3. Headache/retro-orbital pain | Fluid accumulation (ascites, pleural effusion, pericardial effusion); | |
| 4. Myalgia/arthralgia | Postural hypotension and/or lipothymia; | |
| 5. Petechiae | Hepatomegaly >2 cm below the costal border; | |
| 6. Leukopenia | Mucosal bleeding; | |
| Lethargy and/or irritability; | ||
| Progressive increase in hematocrit levels |
Clinical presentation of the chikungunya in children vs. adults.
| Clinical characteristic | Children | Adults |
|---|---|---|
| Fever | Sudden onset, high (>38.9 °C, duration 1–8 days) | |
| Skin manifestations | Maculopapular rash (33–60%) | Maculopapular rash in the trunk and limbs (35–50%) |
| Pigmentary changes (42%) | Rare pigmentary changes | |
| Bullous rash/lesions in 38-48% of those younger than 6 months | Rare bullous rash/lesions or photosensitivity | |
| Mucocutaneous manifestations | Oral ulcers (rare) | Oral ulcers (16%) |
| Musculoskeletal manifestations | Myalgia, arthralgia (30–50%) | Symmetrical arthritis/arthralgia, more common in the distal joints (87–99%) |
| Common tenosynovitis | ||
| Common low back pain | ||
| Myalgia (60–93%) | ||
| Chronic articular manifestations | Arthralgias/arthritis persisting for two years (5–11%) | Persistent or recurrent arthralgias for one or more years in up to 57% of patients |
| Hemorrhagic manifestations | Purpura, ecchymosis (10%) | Nasal, gingival, and stomach bleeding and rare shock |
| Nasal, gingival, and stomach bleeding, and shock (up to 19% of newborns) | ||
| Neurological manifestations | Headache (15%) | Headache (40–81%) |
| Seizures, acute encephalopathy, meningoencephalitis (14–32%) | Encephalopathy, meningoencephalitis, acute flaccid paralysis, Guillain-Barré syndrome (<0.1%) | |
| Asymptomatic form | 35–40% (rare in those aged <2 years old) | 16–27% |
Modified from Ritz et al.
Common clinical and laboratory manifestations of yellow fever.
| Form | Signs and symptoms | Laboratory alterations |
|---|---|---|
| Mild/moderate | Fever, headache, myalgia, nausea, absent or mild jaundice | Thrombocytopenia |
| Moderate elevation of transaminases | ||
| Normal or slightly elevated bilirubin (predominance of direct bilirubin) | ||
| Severe | All of the above | Intense thrombocytopenia |
| Intense jaundice | Creatinine increase | |
| Hemorrhagic manifestations | Significant elevation of transaminases | |
| Oliguria | ||
| Decreased consciousness | ||
| Malignant | All symptoms of the severe form are intensified | All of the above |
| Disseminated intravascular coagulation |