Read Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult Online

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

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (149 page)

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ICD10
  • I46.9 Cardiac arrest, cause unspecified
  • O99.419 Diseases of the circ sys comp pregnancy, unsp trimester
CHANCROID
Norbert Elsner
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Sexually transmitted genital ulcerative disease:
    • Increased risk for HIV infection
  • A common cause of genital ulceration in Africa, southeast Asia, and Latin America:
    • Uncommon in US where herpes simplex virus (HSV) > syphilis >> chancroid, but likely underreported
ETIOLOGY

Causative agent:
Haemophilus ducreyi

  • Highly infectious bacterium
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Begins as a single erythematous papule or pustule:
    • Quickly erodes into painful chancres (1–20 mm)
    • Soft and friable with ragged, irregular borders
  • Primary ulcer usually excavated
  • Moist, granulation tissue at base
  • Purulent or hemorrhagic exudate
  • Location:
    • Male:
      • Penile shaft, glans, internal surface of foreskin, anus
    • Female:
      • Cervix, vagina, vulva, perineum, anus
  • Occurs 4–7 days (median) after exposure
  • Incubation period 3–10 days (range 1–35 days)
  • Inguinal adenopathy:
    • In ∼50% of men; less common in women
    • Appears 3–14 days after initial ulcer
    • Unilateral (usually)
    • Painful
    • Suppurative large nodes (buboes)
    • May rupture and form chronic draining sinuses
  • Dysuria, dyspareunia secondary to contact with lesions
  • Variants:
    • Phagedenic:
      • Secondary superinfection (especially fusospirochetal) and rapid extensive tissue destruction
    • Giant chancroid:
      • Very large single ulcer
    • Serpiginous ulcer:
      • Rapidly spreading, indolent, shallow ulcers in groin or thigh
    • Follicular:
      • Multiple small ulcers with perifollicular distribution
ESSENTIAL WORKUP

Clinical diagnosis based on appearance is often inaccurate, and lab tests difficult or unavailable, so consider:

  • CDC case definitions:
    • Definite: Positive culture of
      H. ducreyi
    • Probable: Typical signs, symptoms of chancroid + negative dark-field exam for
      Treponema pallidum
      + negative syphilis serology + negative culture for HSV (or clinical exam atypical for herpes)
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Gram stain unreliable (positive in 50–80%):
    • Gram-negative coccobacilli
      • Linear or “school-of-fish” pattern
  • Culture extremely difficult (positive in 0–80%); requires complex media:
    • Obtain specimen from:
      • Base of ulcer
      • Needle aspiration of inguinal node by placing needle through normal skin (to avoid formation of fistula)
  • Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay:
    • Sensitive and specific, but not widely available
  • RPR:
    • Coinfection with syphilis is common
    • Part of CDC guidelines for probable clinical diagnosis of chancroid
  • HSV culture:
    • Part of CDC guidelines for probable clinical diagnosis of chancroid
  • HIV testing
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Infectious:
    • Syphilis (
      T. pallidum
      ):
      • Chancre usually painless, indurated, clean
    • Herpes genitalis (
      HSV):
      • Vesicular, multiple, recurrent
    • Granuloma inguinale (donovanosis) (
      Klebsiella granulomatis
      ):
      • Ulcer margins elevated; + induration
    • Lymphogranuloma venereum (
      Chlamydia trachomatis
      ):
      • Often single lesion; tender, fluctuant, unilateral lymphadenopathy
  • Noninfectious:
    • Drug eruption
    • Less common:
      • Pyoderma gangrenosum
      • Behcçet disease
TREATMENT
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY

Usual precautions for patient exam and handling of specimens

ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES

Antibiotics:

  • Azithromycin: Single PO dose
  • Ceftriaxone: Single IM dose (pregnancy: 1st line)
  • Ciprofloxacin: PO × 3 days:
    • NOT for pregnant/lactating patients
  • Erythromycin base: PO × 7 days:
    • Pregnancy: 2nd line
  • Needle aspiration of suppurative nodes (>5 cm diameter):
    • To prevent chronic sinus drainage from spontaneous rupture
    • Use 18G needle through lateral intact skin.
    • May require repetition
  • Recommend concurrent HIV, syphilis, HSV testing,
    and
    follow-up testing in 3 mo if initially negative
MEDICATION
First Line
  • Azithromycin: 1 g PO × 1
  • Ceftriaxone: 250 mg IM × 1
Second Line
  • Ciprofloxacin: 500 mg PO BID for 3 days
  • Erythromycin base: 500 mg PO QID for 7 days
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Sexual abstinence or condom use until lesions healed
  • Clinical course:
    • Symptoms improve within 2 days of treatment
    • Ulcers improve within 3–7 days
    • Possible delayed resolution in those HIV-positive or uncircumcised
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Examine and treat sexual partners (regardless of presence/absence of symptoms) if contact within 10 days of symptom onset
  • HIV-positive patients require assured follow-up if using single-dose therapy (higher treatment failure rate)
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Initiate treatment if probable CDC case guidelines met; do not wait for culture results
  • Higher risk of treatment failure in HIV-infected patients
  • Presumptive treatment of sexual contacts
  • Treatment failure: Consider drug resistance, medication noncompliance, coinfection (syphilis).
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Sexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines 2010. Available at
    www.cdc.gov/std/treatment
    . Accessed March 1, 2013.
  • Chancroid.
    UpToDate Online
    . 2013;v21.2. Available at
    www.uptodate.com
  • Marx JA, Hockberger RS, Walls RM, eds.
    Rosen’s Emergency Medicine: Concepts and Clinical Practice
    . 7th ed. St. Louis, MO: Mosby; 2010.
CODES
ICD9

099.0 Chancroid

ICD10

A57 Chancroid

CHEMICAL WEAPONS POISONING
Patrick M. Whiteley
BASICS
DESCRIPTION

Chemical agents that affect CNS, pulmonary, cardiovascular, dermal, ocular, or GI systems when exposed to victims

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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