Title: Common Viral Exanthemas (Measles, Chickenpox
1Common Viral Exanthemas (Measles, Chickenpox
Rubella)
- Dr SARIKA GUPTA (MD,PhD),Assistant Professor
2Measles-Etiology
- An acute viral disease
- Highly contagious
- Measles virus is a single-stranded,
lipid-enveloped RNA virus in the family
Paramyxoviridae and genus Morbillivirus - Humans are the only host of measles virus
- Maintenance of gt90 immunity through vaccination-
NO OUTBREAKS
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4Measles-Pathogenesis
- Necrosis of the respiratory tract epithelium an
accompanying lymphocytic infiltrate - Small vessel vasculitis on the skin on the oral
mucous membranes - Warthin-Finkeldey giant cells pathognomonic for
measles, formed by fusion of infected cells, with
up to 100 nuclei and intracytoplasmic and
intranuclear inclusions - Measles virus also infects CD4 T cells,
resulting in suppression of the Th1 immune
response
5Measles-Pathogenesis
- 4 phases
- Incubation period
- Prodromal illness
- Exanthematous phase
- Recovery
6Measles-Pathogenesis
7Measles-Transmission
- Through the respiratory tract or conjunctivae
- Following contact with large droplets or
small-droplet aerosols in which the virus is
suspended - Patients are infectious from 3-4 days before to
up to 4-6 days after the onset of rash
8Measles-Clinical Features
- High fever, an enanthem, cough, coryza,
conjunctivitis a prominent exanthem - Incubation period 8-12 days
- Prodromal phase mild fever, conjunctivitis with
photophobia, coryza, a prominent cough KOPLIKS
SPOTS - Koplik spots enanthem the pathognomonic sign
of measles - Appear 1 to 4 days prior to the onset of the rash
- Discrete red lesions with bluish white spots in
the center on the inner aspects of the cheeks at
the level of the premolars
9Measles-Clinical Features
- Koplicks spots spread
- to involve the lips,
- hard palate gingiva
- They also may occur
- in conjunctival folds
-
10Measles-Clinical Features
- Temperature rises abruptly as rash appears may
reach upto 40OC - Measles rash generalized, maculopapular,
erythematous, confluent - The rash begins on the face around
- the hairline behind the ears
- It then spreads downward
- to the neck, trunk, arms, legs
- feet over next 24-48 hours
11Measles-Clinical Features
- The rash fades over about 7 days in the same
progression as it evolved - Leaves a fine, browny, branny desquamation of
skin - Severity of disease related to the extent
confluence of rash - Rash may be absent in immunocompromised children
- Hemorrhagic measles (black measles) bleeding
from mouth, nose or bowels
12Measles-Clinical Features
- Diarrhoea more common in malnourished small
children - Severe cases generalized lymphadenopathy
including cervical mesenteric lymph nodes - Mild splenomegaly
13Measles-Diagnosis
- Almost always based on clinical and epidemiologic
findings (history of contact) - Fever of at least 3 days with at least one of
three C (cough, coryza, conjuctivitis) - Decreased total white blood cell count, with
relative lymphocytosis
14Measles-Diagnosis
- IgM antibody in serum appears 1-2 days after the
onset of the rash remains detectable for about
1 mo - Demonstration of a fourfold rise in IgG
antibodies in acute convalescent specimens
collected 2-4 wk later - Viral isolation from blood, urine or respiratory
secretions by culture or rt-PCR
15Measles-Differential Diagnosis
- Rubella-rashes fever are less striking
- Roseola infantum (exanthem subitum)- rash appear
as the fever disappears - Echovirus
- Coxsachie
- Adenovirus
- Infectious mononucleosis
- Scarlet fever-diffuse fleshy papular rash with
goose flesh texture
16Measles-Differential Diagnosis
- Meningococcemia-rashes are similar but NO
conjuctivitis cough - Kawasaki disease- no cough, elevations of
neutrophils and acute-phase reactants the
characteristic thrombocytosis - Drug fever
17Measles-Complications
- Due to the pathogenic effects of the virus on the
respiratory tract immune system - Risk factors for complications
- Children lt5 years of age adults gt20 years of
age - Severe malnutrition
- Vitamin A deficiency
- Immunocompromised persons
18Measles-Complications
- Pneumonia- giant cell pneumonia (direct viral
infection) or superimposed bacterial infection
(Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae
Staphylococcus aureus) - Croup, tracheitis or bronchiolitis
- Acute otitis media
- Sinusitis and mastoiditis
- Retropharyngeal abscess
- Activation of pulmonary tuberculoses
19Measles-Complications
- Diarrhea vomiting
- Appendicitis- obstruction of the appendiceal
lumen by lymphoid hyperplasia - Febrile seizures
- Encephalitis- 1-3/1,000 cases of measles
postinfectious, immunologically mediated process,
not due to a direct viral effect
20Measles-Complications
- Measles encephalitis in immunocompromised
patients-from direct damage to the brain by the
virus - Thrombocytopenia
- Myocarditis
- Bacteremia, cellulitis toxic shock syndrome
- Measles during pregnancy-high maternal morbidity,
fetal wastage stillbirths congenital
malformations in 3 of live born infants
21Measles-SSPE
- Fatal degenerative disease of central nervous
system - Chronic complication of measles
- Result from a persistent infection with an
altered measles virus that is harbored
intracellularly in the CNS for several years - Usually after 7-10 year the virus apparently
regains virulence attacks the cells in the CNS - Change in personality, gradual onset of mental
deterioration myoclonus - Measles vaccination protects against SSPE
22Measles-Treatment
- SUPPORTIVE
- Maintenance of hydration, oxygenation comfort
- Antipyretics-comfort and fever control
- Vitamin A supplementation-reduced morbidity and
mortality from measles - Single dose of 200,000 IU orally for children
1 yr of age (100,000 IU for children 6 mo1 yr
of age and 50,000 IU for infants lt6 mo of age)
23Measles-Prevention
- Isolation- from 7 days after exposure to 4-6 days
after the onset of rash - Vaccine or immunoglobulin- vaccine is effective
in prevention or modification of measles only if
given within 72 hr of exposure. Immune globulin
may be given up to 6 days after exposure to
prevent or modify infection. - Immune globulin-for susceptible household
contacts younger than 6 months of age, pregnant
women immunocompromised persons - Immunization during an outbreak-immunize infant
as young as 6 months of age additional dose at
12-15 months of age
24Rubella
- Rubella (German measles or 3-day measles)
- Mild exanthematous disease of infants children
- Major clinical significance- fetal damage as part
of the congenital rubella syndrome - Etiology Rubella virus RNA virus of genus
Rubivirus under family Togaviridae - Humans are the only known host
25Rubella-Epidemiology
- Transmission-through oral droplet or
transplacental route - Virus is shed in nasopharyngeal secretions 7 days
before exanthem upto 7-8 days after its
disappearance - Rubella susceptibility among women of child
bearing age in India- 4-43
26Rubella-Pathogenesis
- Infection virus replication in the
respiratory epithelium spreads to regional
lymph nodes - viremia viral shedding from the
nasopharynx - Cellular tissue damage in the infected fetus
tissue necrosis, reduced cellular multiplication
time, chromosomal breaks production of a
protein inhibitor causing mitotic arrests - Most distinctive feature of congenital rubella
chronicity - Ongoing tissue damage and reactivation
27Rubella
- Risk factor for severe congenital defects stage
of gestation at the time of infection - Maternal infection during the 1st 8 wk of
gestation most severe widespread defects - Risk for congenital defects 90 for maternal
infection before 11 wk of gestation, 33 at
11-12 wk, 11 at 13-14 wk 24 at 15-16 wk - After 16 wk of gestation defects uncommon
28Rubella-Clinical Features
- POSTNATAL INFECTION
- Incubation period 14-21 days
- Prodrome low-grade fever, sore throat, red eyes
with or without eye pain, headache, malaise,
anorexia lymphadenopathy (suboccipital,
postauricular anterior cervical lymph nodes) - Rash begins on the face neck as small,
irregular pink macules that coalesce it spreads
centrifugally to involve the torso extremities,
where it tends to occur as discrete macules
29Rubella-Clinical Features
- Rash fades from the face as it extends to the
rest of the body so that the whole body may not
be involved at any 1 time - The duration of the rash is generally 3 days it
resolves without desquamation
30Rubella-Clinical Features
- About the time of onset of the rash, examination
of the oropharynx- reveal tiny, rose-colored
lesions (Forchheimer spots) or petechial
hemorrhages on the soft palate - Subclinical infections are common (25-40)
- Polyarthritis or arthralgia-common in adult
females - Lab findings Leukopenia, neutropenia mild
thrombocytopenia
31Rubella-Differential Diagnosis
- Mild form of measles
- Scarlet fever
- Roseola infantum
- Enteroviral infections
- Drug fever
- Infectoius mononucleosis
- Erythema infectiosum
32Rubella-Diagnosis
- Supportive history of exposure or consistent
clinical findings - Rubella specific IgM enzyme immunosorbent assay
(4-72 days) - Fourfold rise in IgG in sequential sera
- Rubella virus culture from nasopharynx blood by
tissue culture system or PCR - WHO definition of PROBABLE infection fever,
maculopapular rash, lymphadenopathy or
arthralgia/arthritis - WHO definition of CONFORMED infection probable
case with IgM positivity within 28 days of onset
of rash
33Rubella-Complications
- Postinfectious thrombocytopenia
- Arthritis- classically involves the small joints
of the hands - Encephalitis-a postinfectious syndrome following
acute rubella a rare progressive
panencephalitis manifesting as a
neurodegenerative disorder years following
rubella - Guillain-Barré syndrome, peripheral neuritis
- Myocarditis
34Congenital Rubella Syndrome
- Result of in utero fetal infection
- Classical CRS triad cataract, sensorineural
hearing loss congenital heart disease - Clinical manifestations
- Intrauterine growth restriction, postnatal mental
motor retardation - Bilateral/unilateral cataract, salt-and-pepper
retinopathy, microphthalmia - Nerve deafness
- Meningoencephalitis at birth
35Congenital Rubella Syndrome
- Patent ductus arteriosus, pulmonary artery
stenosis, VSD ASD, myocarditis - Hepatitis
- Dermal erythropoiesis (blueberry muffin lesions)
- Thrombocytopenic purpura
- Anemia
- Hepatosplenomegaly
- Microcephaly
- Interstitial pneumonitis
- Delayed manifestations Diabetes mellitus (20),
thyroid dysfunction (5)
36Rubella-Treatment
- No specific treatment available for either
acquired rubella or CRS - Supportive treatment- antipyretics and analgesics
- Intravenous immunoglobulin or corticosteroids-for
severe, nonremitting thrombocytopenia - Hearing screening- important, early intervention
improve outcomes
37Rubella-Treatment
- Management of exposed pregnant women
- Rubella antibody status is tested immediately
result positive mother is immune no
further action - Rubella antibody status negative repeat
samples after 1-2 weeks negative 1st
specimen positive test result in either the 2nd
or 3rd specimen seroconversion suggesting
recent infection termination of pregnancy
38Rubella-Treatment
- Management of congenital rubella syndrome
- Children with CRS may excrete the virus in
respiratory secretions up to 1 yr of age - Isolation contact precautions maintained unless
repeated cultures of urine and pharyngeal
secretions have negative results - Isolation at home my be required for 1 year
- Care of CRS infants require multidisciplinary
team - Prognosis poor
- PREVENTION by IMMUNIZATION
39Chickenpox (Varicella)
- Varicella is an acute febrile rash illness
- Caused by VZV which is a neurotropic human a-
herpesvirus - Secondary attack rate 90
- Transmission by airborne spread or through
direct contact with skin lesions - Varicella results from inoculation of the virus
onto the mucosa of the upper respiratory tract
tonsillar lymphoid tissue
40Chickenpox-Pathogenesis
41Chickenpox (Varicella)
- Transportation of virus in a retrograde manner
through sensory axons to the dorsal root ganglia
throughout the spinal cord
establishment of virus latent infection in the
neurons subsequent reactivation
- herpes zoster, a vesicular rash
that usually is dermatomal in distribution
42Chickenpox-Clinical Fetures
- Prodromal symptoms fever (moderate), malaise,
anorexia, headache occasionally mild abdominal
pain, 24-48 hours before the rash appears - These symptoms resolve within 2-4 days after the
onset of the rash - Varicella rash often appear first on the scalp,
face, or trunk - The initial exanthem consists of intensely
pruritic erythematous macules that evolve through
the papular stage to form clear, fluid-filled
vesicles - Clouding umbilication of the lesions begin in
24-48 hr
43Chickenpox-Clinical Fetures
- While the initial lesions are crusting, new crops
form on the trunk then the extremities - The simultaneous presence of lesions in various
stages of evolution is characteristic of
varicella - The distribution of the rash is predominantly
central or centripetal
Pearl on a rose patel
44Chickenpox-Clinical Fetures
- The average number of varicella lesions is about
300 (10-1500) - Hypopigmentation or hyperpigmentation of lesion
sites persists for days to weeks in some children - Severe scarring is unusual unless the lesions
were secondarily infected
45Chickenpox-Differential Diagnosis
- Vesicular rashes caused by
- Herpes simplex virus
- Enterovirus
- Rickettsial pox
- S. aureus
- Drug reactions
- Contact dermatitis
- Insect bites
46Chickenpox-Diagnosis
- CLINICAL
- Leukopenia during the 1st 72 hours after onset of
rash followed by a relative absolute
lymphocytosis - Elevated hepatic enzymes
- Specific diagnosis of VZV infection needed in
immunocompromised children
47Chickenpox-Complictions
- Mild thrombocytopenia, petechiae (common)
purpura, hemorrhagic vesicles, hematuria
gastrointestinal bleeding (rare) - Cerebellar ataxia, encephalitis, Guillian-Barre
syndrome, transverse myelitis - Pneumonia
- Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, hemolytic-uremic
syndrome - Arthritis
- Myocarditis, pericarditis
- Pancreatitis
48Chickenpox-Complictions
- Orchitis
- Secondary bacterial infections of the skin (group
A streptococci S. aureus) impetigo,
cellulitis, lymphadenitis subcutaneous
abscesses varicella gangrenosa- more invasive
skin infections
49Congenital Varicella Syndrome
- In infants born to women who have varicella
before 20 wk of gestation - Characterized by
- Cicatricial skin scarring in a zoster-like
distribution, limb hypoplasia - Neurologic abnormalities microcephaly, cortical
atrophy, seizures mental retardation - Eye abnormalities chorioretinitis,
microphthalmia cataracts - Renal abnormalities hydroureter hydronephrosis
- Autonomic nervous system abnormalities
neurogenic bladder, swallowing dysfunction
aspiration pneumonia
50Chickenpox-Complictions
- If a baby is born lt4 days after onset of maternal
varicella or upto 2 days before the onset high
risk for severe varicella a high mortality rate
51Chickenpox-Treatment
- Supportive treatment for fever itching
- Indications for acyclovir in children
- Malignancies
- BMT
- Chmotherapy or high dose steroid treatment
- HIV infection
- Severe vaicella
- Chronic skin disease
- Long term salicylate therapy
- Chlidren gt12 years
- Treatment should be initiated within 24 hr of
the onset of rash
52Chickenpox-Treatment
- Foscarnet is the only drug for the treatment of
acyclovir-resistant VZV infections (in children
infected with HIV)
53Chickenpox-Prevention
- Since persons with chickenpox are infectious for
1-2 days before the onset of rash isolation only
reduces the spread - Individual protection NECESSARY (vaccine)