FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Admission for impetigo alone is rarely necessary
- Patients with disease that is widespread, especially widespread bullae, or with larger areas of denuded skin, and dehydration, or refractory to outpatient therapy
- Toxic, ill-appearing, or immunocompromised patients require admission, as do neonates suspected of having sepsis
- Nephritis may already be present at time patients present for care if presentation is delayed >4–5 days
- More typically, nephritis, if seen, occurs 2–4 wk after a streptococcal skin infection
Discharge Criteria
- Patients should not be toxic appearing
- Patients/caregivers should be able to comply with the recommended treatment regimen
- Follow-up for re-evaluation
Issues for Referral
Periorbital edema, leg swelling, or hematuria or proteinuria should suggest poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis and referral to nephrologist
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- Follow-up with primary care physician should be arranged to assure resolution without complications
- Return for failure of lesions to respond
- Return for development of hematuria, periorbital edema, or leg swelling
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Treat with systemic antibiotics in the presence of bullous impetigo or if lymphadenopathy is present
- Increasing antibiotic resistance continues to limit ability to use historic standard antibiotic protocols
- Mupirocin resistance exists, should be suspected in failures to respond and switch to retapamulin
- Cultures and sensitivity must be checked for recalcitrant lesions
- Relapse, representing reinfection, may occur if other affected family members are not treated at the same time
ADDITIONAL READING
- Darmstadt GL, Osendarp SJ, Ahmed S, et al. Effect of antenatal zinc supplementation on impetigo in infants in Bangladesh.
Pediatr Infect Dis J.
2012;31:407–409.
- Koning S, van der Wouden JC, Chosidow O, et al. Efficacy and safety of retapamulin ointment as treatment of impetigo: Randomized double-blind multicentre placebo-controlled trial.
Br J Dermatol.
2008;158:1077–1082.
- Wolfson AB, Hendey GW, Ling LJ, et al., eds.
Harwood Nuss’ Clinical Practice of Emergency Medicine
. 5th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott; 2010.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Cellulitis
- Erysipelas
- Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis
CODES
ICD9
- 684 Impetigo
- 694.3 Impetigo herpetiformis
- 704.8 Other specified diseases of hair and hair follicles
ICD10
- L01.00 Impetigo, unspecified
- L01.01 Non-bullous impetigo
- L01.03 Bullous impetigo
INBORN ERRORS OF METABOLISM
David A. Perlstein
•
David H. Rubin
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Defect in the type, amount, and toxicity of metabolites that accumulate due to an inherited abnormal pathway in children; result in a variety of clinical findings; >400 human diseases are caused by inborn errors of metabolism
- Epidemiology:
- Incidence:
- Variable: 1:10,000–1:200,000 births
- Genetics:
- Common inherited metabolic diseases:
- Amino acid disorders
- Urea cycle defects
- Organic acidemias
- Defects in fatty acid oxidation
- Mitochondrial fatty acid defects and carnitine transport defects
- Mitochondrial disease
- Carbohydrate disorders
- Mucopolysaccharidoses
- Sphingolipidoses
- Peroxisomal disorders
- Protein glycosylation disorders
- Lysosomal disorders
- Rhizomelic chondrodysplasia punctata
- Pathophysiology:
- Related to defect in a metabolic pathway
ETIOLOGY
Diverse group of disorders involving genetic deficiency of an enzyme of an intermediary metabolite or a membrane transport system.
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Disorders may present with either a rapid decompensation or a chronic indolent course
- Neonates, initial presentation:
- Asymptomatic
- Hypothermia (mitochondrial defects)
- Hypotonia/hypertonia (peroxisomal disorders)
- Apnea (urea cycle defects, organic acidosis)
- Seizures (peroxisomal disorders, glucose transporter defects)
- Coma (numerous)
- Vomiting (numerous)
- Poor feeding, growth (numerous)
- Jaundice (galactosemia, Niemann–Pick C)
- Hypoglycemia (galactosemia, maple syrup urine)
- Dysmorphic features (lysosomal storage disorders, congenital adrenal hyperplasia, Smith–Lemli–Opitz)
- Older children, untreated:
- Failure to thrive (urea cycle defects)
- Dehydration (organic acidosis)
- Vomiting (urea cycle defects and others)
- Diarrhea (numerous)
- Food intolerance (lipid defects, amino acid defects)
- Lethargy (urea cycle defects)
- Ataxia (urea cycle defects)
- Seizures (numerous)
- Mental retardation (phenylketonuria and others)
History
Complete history of current and concomitant illness:
- Newborn screening
- Dietary
- Family
- Consanguinity
- Other
Physical-Exam
- Abnormal odor
- Altered mental status
- Tachypnea
- Abnormal facies
- Cataract
- Cardiomyopathy
- Hepatomegaly
- Splenomegaly
- Dermatitis
- Jaundice
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
Key is to consider in differential diagnosis:
- Deteriorating neurologic status
- Unexplained failure to thrive, with dehydration, persistent vomiting, or acidosis
- Shock unresponsive to conventional resuscitative measures
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Bedside glucose determination
- Electrolytes, BUN/creatinine, glucose
- CBC with differential
- Calcium level
- LFTs, fractionated bilirubin, PTT
- Arterial or venous blood gas
- Lactate and pyruvate level
- Uric acid
- Urinalysis
- Chemistries, as indicated:
- Ammonia level
- Quantitative serum amino acids
- Urine organic and amino acids
- Cultures:
Imaging
- CT scan of head for altered mental status
- CXR
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
Lumbar puncture
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Often misdiagnosed as sepsis, dehydration, failure to thrive, toxic ingestion, or nonaccidental trauma
- Infection:
- Sepsis
- Meningitis
- Encephalitis
- Metabolic:
- Reye syndrome
- Hepatic encephalopathy
- Hyperinsulinemia
- Hormonal abnormality
- Renal:
- Renal failure
- Renal tubular acidosis
- Toxic ingestion
- CNS mass lesions
- Nonaccidental trauma
TREATMENT