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Gen Med 2B

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Herpes Zoster (Shingles) Vesicles and pustules on erythematous base. Unilateral dermatome ... Herpes Zoster Opthalmicus, Acute Retinal Necrosis. Motor neuropathy .9 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Gen Med 2B


1

Herpes Zoster, Systemic Lupus Erythematous,
Monocular Vision Loss Connecting the Dots
  • Gen Med 2B

2
Herpes Zoster (Shingles)
  • Vesicles and pustules on erythematous base
  • Unilateral dermatome
  • Varicella virus infects DRG during chickenpox,
    remains latent
  • At risk population 50 immunocompromised
  • Common adverse effect of Azathioprine
    immunosuppression

3
Herpes Zoster
  • Clinical course
  • Prodrome Fever, dysesthesias, malaise, and
    headache (2-3 days before lesions)
  • Pain can precede rash by days to weeks. Deep
    burning sensation
  • Rash Dermatomal. Grouped vesicles/bullae evolve
    into pustular/ hemorrhagic lesions (3-4 days)
  • Lesions crust by day 7-10, no longer infectious
  • Complete resolution of rash by 3-4 weeks in
    Immunocompetent hosts

4
Herpes ZosterComplications
  • Postherpetic Neuralgia 7.9
  • Bacterial skin infection 2.3
  • Ocular complications 1.6
  • Herpes Zoster Opthalmicus, Acute Retinal Necrosis
  • Motor neuropathy .9
  • Viral (aseptic) Meningitis .5
  • Herpes Zoster Oticus .2
  • Ramsay Hunt Syndrome
  • Herpes Zoster associated Cerebral angiitis

5
Herpes Zoster Opthalmicus
  • VZV reactivation in Trigeminal ganglion
  • Frontal branch within V1
  • 50-72 with direct ocular involvement
  • HA, malaise, fever unilateral pain in affected
    area hyperemic conjunctivitis, lid droop
  • 2/3 develop corneal involvement (keratitis)
  • Iritis in 40? chronic vasculitis, atrophy,
    poorly reactive pupils

6
Anterior/Posterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy
  • Ischemic process affecting circulation of vessels
    feeding the optic nerve
  • Etiology Vasculitides (e.g. Postviral
    vasculitis, Lupus Vasculitis, Polyarteritis
    Nodosa, Giant Cell Arteritis) Vasculopathies
    (HTN, DM)
  • Subacute visual loss with malaise, HA, tender
    scalp and temporal arteries, jaw claudication,
    myalgia, and swelling
  • Earlier manifestations malaise, fever, weight
    loss, vague GI pain, anorexia
  • Poor recovery of vision

7
SLE Ocular Complications
  • Most common Keratoconjunctivitis Sicca
  • Retinal Vasculitis Optic neuritis
  • Blindness may develop over days to weeks
  • Scleritis
  • Anterior Uveitis

8
SLE Neurologic Complications
  • Cognitive defects, delirium, psychosis, seizures,
    headache, neuropathies
  • Less common Cranial Neuropathies, myelitis,
    meningitis
  • Thromboembolic events may lead to focal deficits

9

Varicella Zoster Viral Meningitis vs.
Encephalitis
  • Viral (Aseptic) Meningitis
  • Clinical Presentation
  • Fever, HA, malaise, myalgia, anorexia, Nausea,
    vomiting, diarrhea
  • HA frontal/retroorbital photophobia
  • /- Nuchal Rigidity
  • Absent Kernigs Brudzinskis signs
  • Etiology Enteroviruses (75-90)
  • CMV, EBV, HSV, VZV

10
CSF in Viral (Aseptic) Meningitis
11
Varicella Zoster Viral Meningitis vs. Encephalitis
  • Viral Encephalitis
  • Clinical Presentation
  • Brain parenchyma involved
  • Acute febrile illness, confusion, behavioral
    change, altered consciousness, focal/diffuse
    neurologic deficit
  • Mild lethargy ? coma
  • Hallucination, psychosis, seizures
  • Focal findings aphasia, ataxia, CN deficits
    (ocular palsy)
  • Etiology Most important organisms include
    HSV-1, VZV, and enteroviruses

12
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