Infectious Exanthematous Diseases in Childhood

Infectious exanthemas are infectious diseases with a characteristic rash. Exanthema is a sudden generalized eruption on the skin. Based on the nature of eruption, there are maculopapular, vesicular, and hemorrhagic rashes. Most infectious rashes of childhood are of viral origin, which resolve spontaneously within days or weeks without sequelae, and treatment is only symptomatic. Special attention should be paid to certain exanthematous infections during pregnancy that may compromise the development of fetus or cause an infection in the neonate.

Exanthematous diseases can be divided into classic exanthema and non-specific exanthema according to the pathogen and nature of the exanthema. Incidence of classical exanthema diseases are declining thanks to vaccination. On the contrary, there is an increase in diseases with uncharacteristic and inconstant exanthema which various infectious agents are involved.

Previously, the most common childhood exanthematous disease were named the first to sixth childhood diseases. This designation has survived to this day only in the fifth and sixth children's diseases.

In addition, classic exanthematous diseases include:
 * Chickenpox (varicella) and shingles;
 * Primary infection by HSV 1.2;
 * hand-foot-mouth disease;

Diseases accompanied by rash can further cause:
 * Virus
 * adenoviruses - rubeoliform rash (on the face, torso and limbs);
 * Cytomegalovirus - erythema or papular rash (on the trunk, limbs and palms);
 * coxsackie, echo - papules, vesicles, petechiae (face, torso) ;
 * Epstein-Barr virus - rubeoli/morbiliform (torso, limbs, face);
 * Hepatitis B virus - papules, urticaria (auricle, forehead), genralized form: Gianotti-Crosti syndrome;
 * HIV - rubeoli/morbiliform (face, torso);
 * Mumps (parotitis epidemica) - erythema, papules, vesicles, urticaria (face, torso, limbs);
 * Poxviruses - molluscum contagiosum, erythema (anywhere);
 * Influenza agents A, B, parainfluenza, RSV, rhinoviruses - erythema, papules, rubeoliform (face, torso, limbs)
 * Bacteria
 * Toxic shock syndrome, Arcanobacterium hemolyticum infection, yersinosis, mycoplasma and chlamydial infections, bacterial pneumonia, epyema, abscess pneumonia with septic rash, meningococcoemia, postsplenectomy sepsis (OPSI syndrome), bacterial endocarditis, lymphoma, lymphoma borreliosis, tularemia, rickettsiosis, ...

Diagnostics

 * Epidemiological history (occurence of infection in the area, season),
 * Personal history (past exanthematous infections, vaccinations, allergic manifestaions),
 * Current disease (prodromal symptoms, place of rash, nature and distribution of rash, presence of systemic symptoms, fever, administration of medication before rash),
 * Clinical manifestions,
 * Laboratory findings, serum antibody tests and direct identification of the agent.

Differential Diagnostics

 * Maculopapular Rashes
 * Scarlatiniform (up to 1 mm, scarlet fever pattern) - Scarlet fever and some Enterovirus diseases
 * rubeoliform (ca. 1-3 mm, rubella pattern) - rubella and sixth disease, infectious mononucleosis, diseases caused by adenoviruses, enteroviruses, transmissible respiratory viruses and primary HIV infection;
 * morbilliform (larger than 3 mm, measles pattern) - measles, adenoviral and enterovirus disease, infectious mononucleosis (toxoallergic rash after ampicillin administration), primary HIV infection and post-vaccination measles syndrome;
 * large spotted - fifth disease.


 * Vesicular Exanthemas
 * Chickenpox, HSV-1, HSV-2 infections and some enterovirus diseases (e.g. EV 71 or Coxsackie), hand-foot-mouth syndrome.


 * Hemorrhagic Exanthema
 * Life-threatening bacterial infections (e.g. N. meningitidis, group B and C streptococci, S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae)
 * Hemorrhagic fevers (ebola, Lassa, Marburg disease, Congo-Crimea, Bolivian, Argentine, and hemorrhagic fevers with renal syndrome)

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