Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (343 page)

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Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Immunocompromise
  • Disseminated disease
  • HZO with cranial nerve involvement
  • Intractable pain
  • Isolation:
    • Airborne precautions for all patients with primary varicella or disseminated zoster, or immunocompromised patients with dermatomal zoster
    • Patients are infectious from 48 hr before appearance of rash until crusting of all lesions
Discharge Criteria
  • Most are managed as outpatients
  • Patients should be instructed that lesions may heal with scarring or leave depigmented areas
  • Recommend isolation from pregnant or immunocompromised persons until all lesions are crusted
  • PHN may require long-term follow-up and/or referral to pain specialist
Pregnancy Considerations

Usually treated as outpatients

Pediatric Considerations

Admit all neonates with zoster

PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Look for ocular involvement if rash involves the tip of the nose (Hutchinson sign)
  • Expose the skin of every patient with chest pain
  • Failure to consider the diagnosis in the absence of rash
  • Failure to warn patients of the risk of PHN
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Leung J., Harpaz R, Baughman AL, et al. Evaluation of laboratory methods for diagnosis of varicella.
    Clin Infect Dis.
    2010;51(1):23–32.
  • Liesegang TJ. Herpes zoster ophthalmicus natural history, risk factors, clinical presentation, and morbidity.
    Ophthalmology
    . 2008;115:S3–S12.
  • Opstelten W, Eekhof J, Neven AK, et al. Treatment of herpes zoster.
    Can Fam Physician
    . 2008;54:373–377.
  • Oxman, M.N., Levin MJ, Johnson GR, et al. A vaccine to prevent herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia in older adults.
    N Engl J Med.
    2005;352(22):2271–2284.
  • Schmader KE, Dworkin RH. Natural history and treatment of herpes zoster.
    J Pain.
    2008;9(1 suppl 1):S3–S9.
CODES
ICD9
  • 053.9 Herpes zoster without mention of complication
  • 053.29 Herpes zoster with other ophthalmic complications
  • 053.71 Otitis externa due to herpes zoster
ICD10
  • B02.9 Zoster without complications
  • B02.21 Postherpetic geniculate ganglionitis
  • B02.30 Zoster ocular disease, unspecified
HERPES, GENITAL
Kathleen A. Kerrigan

Jason L. Grimsman
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Genital herpes is a lifelong recurrent infection
  • ∼1 in 4 Americans older than age 30 are seropositive for herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2):
    • Most are asymptomatic
  • 1st episode/primary HSV infection:
    • 2–12 day incubation
    • Symptoms peak 8–10 days after onset
    • Lesions heal in 3 wk
    • Primary infection may have more prominent clinical syndrome and complications (e.g., encephalitis, meningitis, hepatitis)
    • Primary infection may also go unnoticed:
      • >50% of 1st recognized signs and symptoms are not primary infection
  • Recurrent HSV infection:
    • Average patient has 4 recurrences per year, by herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) recurs less than HSV-2
    • Virus reactivated from dorsal root ganglia
    • Triggered by local trauma, emotional stress, fever, sunlight, cold or heat, menstruation, or infection
    • Milder clinical syndrome and fewer lesions that usually heal within 10 days
  • Asymptomatic HSV infection:
    • Virus is shed intermittently and often transmitted by persons who are without lesions or symptoms
ETIOLOGY
  • 70–90% caused by a DNA virus HSV-2:
    • Remainder caused by HSV-1
  • Increasing prevalence of genital HSV-1 infection:
    • Higher rates of oral sex
    • Falling incidence of childhood (nonsexual) transmission owing to improved social conditions resulting in a larger pool of susceptible adolescents and adults
  • Primary genital infection by HSV-1 is similar to HSV-2 in symptoms and duration, but recurs much less frequently
  • Acquisition of HSV-2 in patients with pre-existing HSV-1 infection is less commonly associated with systemic symptoms:
    • Acquisition of HSV-1 in persons with pre-existing HSV-2 infection is rare
  • HSV vaccines unsuccessful to date, research is ongoing
  • High association with HIV and other STDs
ALERT
  • Contact isolation and universal precautions should be maintained
  • Patients with HIV coinfection have higher HIV viral levels in the blood and skin lesions during HSV recurrence
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Local pain and itching
  • Herpetic cervicitis, vaginitis, or urethritis may present with dysuria, urinary hesitance or retention, vaginal discharge, or pelvic pain
  • Herpetic pharyngitis or gingivostomatitis may occur with oral acquisition
  • Systemic symptoms like fever, headache, malaise, photophobia, anorexia, myalgias, and lymphadenopathy are more common with primary infection
History
  • 1–2 day prodrome of local tingling, burning, itching, or pain prior to eruption (can mimic sciatica)
  • Classically, lesions are noted on day 2 as macules and papules, then progress to vesicles, pustules, and then ulcerate by day 5
  • Skin lesions crust over; mucosal membrane lesions heal without crusting
Physical-Exam
  • Lesions on vulva, vagina, cervix, perineum, buttocks; penile shaft or glans
  • Grouped vesicles on an erythematous base
  • On moist mucosal surfaces, ulcers may predominate
  • Atypical features may include localized edema, erythema, crusts, or fissures
Pediatric Considerations
  • Neonatal infections are often disseminated or involve the CNS with high morbidity and mortality
  • Congenital HSV in the neonate without vesicles may mimic rubella, cytomegalovirus (CMV), or toxoplasmosis
  • Consider sexual abuse in children with genital HSV; culture lesions and test for other STDs in suspected cases
ESSENTIAL WORKUP

Diagnosis based on history and physical exam

DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Viral load in lesions of primary infection are greater than those seen in recurrence
  • Tzanck preparation and staining of fluid from lesions is insensitive and nonspecific
  • Viral culture of vesicle fluid or ulcer base positive in 80–95% of cases, decreasing sensitivity as lesions crust and heal:
    • 3–10 days for result
  • PCR 1.5–4 times more sensitive than viral culture; test of choice for CSF analysis in suspected CNS infection
  • Serologic tests not helpful in acute disease:
    • Highly sensitive and specific; detect anti-gG1 and anti-gG2 antibodies
    • Require 2 wk to >3 mo to detect seroconversion
    • Cannot distinguish acute from chronic disease
    • HerpeSelect HSV-1/HSV-2 ELISA:
      • Takes hour to days in lab
    • POCkit HSV2, bedside results in 10 min
Imaging

No imaging generally indicated

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Syphilis (Treponema pallidum)
  • Chancroid (Haemophilus ducreyi)
  • Lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV)
  • Granuloma inguinale (Klebsiella granulomatis)
  • Candidiasis
  • Behcçet syndrome
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL

Universal precautions should be maintained

INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY

Rarely required unless associated with systemic symptoms requiring hospitalization:

  • Disseminated infection
  • Hepatitis
  • Pneumonitis
  • Meningoencephalitis
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Treatment partially controls symptoms and lesions; does not eradicate latent virus nor affect recurrences after drug is discontinued
  • Episodic treatment of recurrences may shorten duration of lesions or ameliorate recurrences
  • Daily suppressive therapy in patients with frequent recurrences (6 or more per year) reduces frequency of recurrences by 75%
  • Famciclovir and valacyclovir are equally effective medications with less frequent dosing regimens, all interfere with viral DNA polymerase
  • Resistance to acyclovir in immunocompromised individuals is 5–10%:
    • Foscarnet 40 mg/kg IV q8h may be effective
  • Consider testing for concomitant STDs, those with an HSV outbreak are more likely to contract HIV
  • Consider bladder catheterization, either indwelling or intermittent, for women with difficulty urinating due to possible sacral nerve involvement
Pregnancy Considerations
  • Women with primary HSV infection during pregnancy should receive antiviral therapy:
    • High rates of neonatal morbidity in both symptomatic and asymptomatic patients
  • Suppressive antiviral therapy after 36 wk associated with decreased incidence of lesions at delivery:
    • Decreased cesarean delivery rates

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