Hand, Foot, Mouth syndrome

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Hand Foot Mouth Disease.png

Hand, foot, mouth syndrome is an enterovirus disease characterized by aphthous stomatitis and rash on the acral parts of the body (palms of the hands and soles of the feet).

General characteristics[edit | edit source]

  • Originators: enteroviruses (mainly Coxsackie A16, Enterovirus 71, or Coxsackie virus B2 and B5).
  • Source and transmission: droplet and orofecal route.
  • Incubation time: 3–6 days.[1]
  • Seasonal occurrence: maximum occurrence in the summer months.
  • High contagion - siblings are often sick.

Clinical picture[edit | edit source]

Prodromes may be absent or non-specific symptoms may appear: fever(38 to 39 ° C), sore throat and abdomen. Subsequently, the disease itself manifests itself:

  • aphthous stomatitis - aphthae in the oral cavity;
  • rash on the distal limbs, palms, soles, dorsum of the hands and feet;
  • fever lasting approximately 2 days.

Exanthematous blisters appear more extensor areas than above limb flexors. The blisters then turn into crusts and erosion with a red rim can itch.

Differential diagnosis[edit | edit source]

In a patient with hand-foot-mouth syndrome, we also consider the following diseases:

Diagnosis, therapy, prognosis[edit | edit source]

We monitor clinical signs and examine them as confirmation enterovirus serology. Patients are usually treated for 10 days, the therapy is only symptomatic. The disease often goes without complications[1], theoretically, serous meningitis could occur.

Links[edit | edit source]

External links[edit | edit source]

Source[edit | edit source]

  • ROZSYPAL, Hanus. Basics of infectious medicine. 1st edition. Prague: Karolinum, 2015. 566 pp.  ISBN 978-80-246-2932-2

Reference[edit | edit source]

  • KELBLEROVÁ, Aneta. Infectious exanthematous diseases in childhood. Pediatrics for practice [online] . 2009, vol. 10, pp. 176-179, also available from < https://www.pediatriepropraxi.cz/ >. ISSN 1803-5264. 
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