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Pediatric infectious diseases Vaccination programs. Sallai Ágnes MD, Ph.D. Localizing symptoms. Skin Upper respiratory Lower respiratory Genitourinary Gastrointestinal CNS Skeletal Cardiovascular Hepatic. Characteristics in infants and children.
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PediatricinfectiousdiseasesVaccinationprograms Sallai Ágnes MD, Ph.D.
Localizing symptoms • Skin • Upper respiratory • Lower respiratory • Genitourinary • Gastrointestinal • CNS • Skeletal • Cardiovascular • Hepatic
Characteristics in infants and children • Neonates, infants: non-specific initial symptoms (irritability, lethargy, poor feeding) • Specific rashes • Sites of infection • Prevention: vaccination/ immunization
Group A Streptococcal infections • Acute pharyngitis • Impetigo • Cellulitis • Scarlat fever • Pneumonia • Septic arthritis • Osteomyelitis • Meningitis
Tonsillopharyngitis streptococcica • Treatment: Penicillin for 10 days • Other bacteria: S. aureus, H. influenzae positive in throat microbiological cultures are not pathogenic. - Antibiotic treatment is not necessary! • Aminopenicillin antibiotics are not recommended – possible infectious mononucleosis
Complications • Abscess of the cervical lymphnodes • Peritonsillar abscess • Sepsis • Late: rheumatic fever, acute diffuse glomerulonephritis
Scarlet fever(Group A Streptococcus, erythrogenic toxin, fine papular exanthem)
Scarlet fever • Skin: diffusely erythematous („sandpaper rash) • Petechiae on the soft palate, on the upper abdomen and trunk • Circumoral pallor • Desquamation on the face: end of the first week, then generalized • Strawberry tongue
Erysipelas • Superficial inflammation of the skin • acute cellulitis and lymphangitis • Streptococcus pyogenes, Staphylococcus aureus • Complication/ infants: sepsis
Impetigo • Papule, vesiculation, then it breaks • Denuded area, covered by a honey- colored crust
Cellulitis (phlegmone) • Inflammation of the subcutaneous connective tissue – may lead to abscess • Streptococcus pyogenes, Staphylococcus aureus, Haemophilus influenzae (<2 yrs) • Therapy: penicillin + clindamycin
Infectious diseases with rash • Stadium incubationis: in general - no symptom • Stadium prodromum: non-specific symptoms • Stadium floritionis
Measles (Rubeola) • Paramyxovirus, RNA virus • Rash: retroauricular, temporal region, then on the face, spreads over most of the body in 24 hours - maculo-papulous exanthemes (Koplik spots on the buccal mucosa opposite the lower molars) • Complications: otitis media, interstitial pneumonia, encephalitis, cerebellitis, subacute sclerotizing panencephalitis
Rubella • Togavirus, RNA • maculopapular rash • Painful lymphadenopathy: • retroauricular, cervical, occipital region: Theodor - Klatsch symptom • Peeling • Congenital rubella syndrome
Congenital rubella syndrome • Infection of seronegative mother during pregnancy • Risk of fetal infection • I. trimenon: 75-90% • II. trimenon: 20-40% • III.trimenon: 25-50% • Fetal lesion • 1-8. gest. week: 80% • 9-12. gest. week: 30% • 13-20. gest. week: 10% • Rubella vaccination is prohibited during pregnancy!
Congenital rubella syndrome • Gestation • 14-60. days: embryopathy – cataracta, microphthalmia, hearing loss, congenital heart disease, microcephalia, thymus hypoplasia
Roseola (exanthema subitum)(Human Herpesvirus-6, maculopapular rash)
Infectious mononucleosis(Epstein-Barr virus, enanthema=pharyngeal petechiae)
Lyme disease(Borrelia Burgdorferi, erythema chronicum migrans)
Immunization scheduleHungary - 2016 • BCG Birth to 4 week • DTPa+IPV+Hib+PCV 2 mo • DTPa+IPV+Hib 3 mo • DTPa+IPV+Hib+PCV 4 mo • PCV 12 mo • MMR 15 mo • DTPa+IPV+Hib 18 mo • DTPa+IPV 6 yr • MMR 11 yr (6. school yr) • dTap 11 yr (6. school yr) • Hepatitis B 12 yr (7. school yr) PCV: pneumococcal conjugate vaccine , a: acellular, i: inactivated
Types of vaccines • Live attenuated viruses (measles, mumps, rubella, varicella, polio) • Inactivated viruses (polio, hepatitis B, influenza) • Inactivated bacteria (pertussis, diphtheria, tetanus, H. influenzae type b, pneumococcus)
Non-mandatory vaccines(but recommended) • Polysaccharid vaccines • Meningococcus A, B, C, W-135, Y serotypes • Hepatitis A, A+B • Human papillomavirus (HPV) – 12 yr (girls: 7. school yr) • Influenza • Tick - borne encephalitis • Rotavirus (from 6 weeks till 6-8 mo) • Chickenpox (varicella) - > 1 yr • RSV (premature babies)
Antibiotic prophylaxis to prevent endocarditis I. • For all patients with significant cong. heart defect (unoperated, palliated or repaired) • Rheumatic valve lesions • Prosthetic heart valves • Mitral heart prolapse • Subaortic stenosis • Transvenous pacemaker leads • Previous endocarditis • NOT indicated: isolated secundum ASD, repaired sec. ASD and VSD 6 mo after patch placement, ligated PDA 6 mo after repair
Antibiotic prophylaxis to prevent endocarditis II. • During dental / respiratory procedures : oral amoxicillin, 50 mg/kg 1 hr before • During gastrointestinal / genitourinary procedures: oral amoxicillin or parenteral ampicillin + gentamicin, iv. 30 min before • For patients allergic to penicillin: clindamycin, 20 mg/kg
Oral-dental procedures requiring endocarditis prophylaxis • Extractions • Periodontal procedures • Dental implant placement • Root canal surgery beyond the apex • Subgingival placement of orthodontic bands but not brackets • Prophylactic cleaning of teeth / bleeding is anticipated • Intraligamentary local anesthetic injections
AIDS • Occurrence is rare in children • 80% intrauterine, intra partum, breast feeding, 10-15% blood and blood products, 5% unknown origin • Risk of children of HIV infected mother: 20-40%
AIDS / clinical forms • Rapidly progressing: intrauterine infection • Repeated, severe infections with classical and opportunistic pathogens (Pneumocystis carinii, Cryptosporidium, Candida, HSV, EBV, CMV) • Failure to thrive, enlargement of parotid gland, lymphadenopathy, cortical atropy, demyelinisation of the brain, death at the age of 3 yrs • BCG sepsis!
AIDS / clinical forms • Slowly progressing form: intra partum, post partum infection • Frequent and severe infections after latency (1-2 yrs) • Lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis, hypergammaglobulinemia • Death before the age of 6 yrs in 60%
AIDS / prevention • Antiviral treatment of infected mother during pregnancy • Isolation of newborn baby from infected mother • No breast feeding • BCG vaccination is prohibited!