MEDICATION
- Analgesics:
- Morphine sulfate: 2–10 mg per dose (peds: 0.1–0.2 mg/kg IV/IM/SC q2–4h) IV/IM/SC
- Fentanyl: 1–4 μg/kg (peds: 1–4 μg/kg IV) IV
- Sedatives:
- Lorazepam: 1–2 mg IV
- Midazolam: 2.5–5 mg (peds: 0.07 mg/kg) IV
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Strangulated hernias require immediate surgical intervention.
- Incarcerated hernias require admission for urgent surgical intervention.
- Intestinal obstruction
- Peritonitis
- Vomiting/dehydration
- Severe pain
Discharge Criteria
After successful reduction has been achieved and patient asymptomatic
Issues for Referral
Referral to surgery with instructions to return if recurrent persistent pain, fever, vomiting
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
General surgery referral
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Failure to recognize signs and symptoms of an incarcerated or strangulated hernia
- Forcing reduction of incarcerated hernia
- Reintroducing strangulated bowel back into abdominal cavity
ADDITIONAL READING
- Derici H, Unalp HR, Bozdag AD, et al. Factors affecting morbidity and mortality in incarcerated abdominal wall hernias.
Hernia
. 2007;11(4):341–346.
- Nicks BA. Hernias: Treatment & medication. Available at
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/775630-treatment
. Updated on June 6, 2012. Accessed on February2013.
- Sanchez-Manuel FJ, Lozano-García J, Seco-Gil JL. Antibiotic prophylaxis for hernia repair.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev
. 2007;18(3):CD003769.
- Strange CD, Birkemeier KL, Sinclair ST, et al. Atypical abdominal hernias in the emergency department: Acute and non-acute.
Emerg Radiol.
2009;16(2):121–128.
- Wang KS, Committee on Fetus and Newborn, American Academy of Pediatrics, et al. Assessment and management of Inguinal Hernia in Infants.
Pediatrics
. 2012;130(4):768–773.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
Abdominal Pain
CODES
ICD9
- 553.00 Femoral hernia without mention of obstruction of gangrene, unilateral or unspecified(not specified as recurrent)
- 553.9 Hernia of unspecified site without mention of obstruction or gangrene
- 550.90 Inguinal hernia, without mention of obstruction or gangrene, unilateral or unspecified (not specified as recurrent)
ICD10
- K40.90 Unil inguinal hernia, w/o obst or gangr, not spcf as recur
- K41.90 Unil femoral hernia, w/o obst or gangrene, not spcf as recur
- K46.9 Unspecified abdominal hernia without obstruction or gangrene
HERPES SIMPLEX
Benjamin Mattingly
•
Benjamin Wilks
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Viral disease characterized by recurrent painful vesicular lesions of mucocutaneous areas
- Lips, genitalia, rectum, hands, and eyes most commonly involved
- Infection is characterized by 2 phases:
- Primary
, in which virus becomes established in a nerve ganglion;
- Secondary
, involves recurrence of disease at the same site
- Incubation period is ∼4 days from exposure
- Viral shedding occurs from 7–10 days (up to 23 days) in primary infection and 3–4 days in recurrent infections
- Neonatal infections can occur in utero, intrapartum (most common), or postnatal
- Occur in 1/3,500 births per year in the US
- Human-to-human transmission
- 60–90% of population is infected with herpes simplex type 1 (HSV-1) or type 2 (HSV-2)
- More common in blacks than whites in ages <40 yr
- Females affected more than males
ETIOLOGY
- HSV-1 or HSV-2 are DNA viruses of the Herpesviridae family
- Viral transmission may occur via respiratory droplets, contact with mucosa or abraded skin with infected secretions:
- Recurrent mucosal shedding of HSV may transmit the virus
- Rate of recurrence varies with virus type and anatomic site
- Both viruses infect oral or genital mucosa:
- Most common for HSV-1 to cause oral infections and HSV-2 to cause genital infections
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Many primary infections go unrecognized and can only be detected by an elevated IgG Ab titer
- Clinically, infection presents with grouped 1–2 mm vesicles on an erythematous base
- Vesicles may be filled with clear or cloudy fluid or may appear as frank pustules
Orofacial infection:
- Primary infection:
- Gingivostomatitis or pharyngitis:
- Ulcerative exanthem involving gingival and mucous membranes
- Fever, malaise, irritability, headache, myalgias, cervical adenopathy
- Primary infection symptoms typically last 2--4 weeks unless secondarily infected and heal without scarring
- Inability to eat owing to pain is a risk for dehydration
- Recurrent infection (recrudescence):
- Usually involves lips, specifically the vermillion border
- Commonly incited by sunlight, heat, stress, trauma (chapping, abrasions), or immunosuppression
- Prodrome of itching, tingling, throbbing, or burning followed by erythema, papule/vesicle, ulcer, crust, and healing
- Transmission can occur in the absence of recognizable lesions
- Fewer constitutional symptoms
- Many individuals have a rise in Ab titer and never experience recurrence
- HSV-1 oral infections recur more often than genital HSV-1 infections. HSV-2 genital infections recur 6 times more frequently than HSV-1 genital infections
Skin infection:
- History of exposure to HSV-1 or HSV-2
- Abrupt onset of fever, edema, erythema, and localized tenderness
- Herpetic whitlow:
- HSV-2 more common than HSV-1
- Infection of pulp and lateral aspect of finger with single or multiple vesicles
- May occur from autoinoculation with primary oral or genital infection or from direct inoculation from occupational exposure
- Can last 3–4 wk
- Recurrence possible
- In young children, it is associated with HSV-1 inoculation through thumb sucking during gingivostomatitis
- Traumatic herpes:
- Can occur following cosmetic procedures of face, surgical and dental interventions, sun exposure, or burns
- Herpes gladiatorum:
- Mucocutaneous infection of athletes involving chest, face, and hands transmitted through traumatized skin (often wrestlers)
- Eczema herpeticum:
- Association between atopic dermatitis and HSV infection
- HSV-1 more common than HSV-2
- Occurs in children and young adults with atopic dermatitis
- Secondary staphylococcal infection commonly occurs
- Higher risk if on steroids or infected with HIV
- Varicelliform eruption with spread to surrounding skin
- Fever, headache, and fatigue
- HSV-associated erythema multiforme:
- Usually presents on palms and soles
- Lasts 2–3 wk
Eye:
- Most common cause of corneal blindness
- Caused by extension of facial lesions or direct inoculation
- Acute onset of pain and photophobia
- Periauricular adenopathy, blurry vision, chemosis, and conjunctivitis
- May be unilateral or bilateral
- Dendritic lesions of cornea noted on fluorescein exam
- Different from herpes varicella zoster as dermatome not involved
- Hutchinson sign:
- Vesicles on tip of nose may indicate ocular disease
- Involvement of nasociliary nerve
CNS/encephalitis: