DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Seriously ill who require supportive care
- Vomiting and dehydration
- Encephalitis, meningitis
- Severe pancreatitis
- Isolate admitted patients
Discharge Criteria
- Virtually all patients
- Contagious until about a week after onset of symptoms
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Mumps virus is the only cause of epidemic parotitis.
- Vaccines are highly effective, and when correctly given confer 90% immunity. MMR should not be given to pregnant women or immunosuppressed or immunocompromised individuals.
- Mumps virus is endemic to many parts of the world and may pose a risk to travelers without immunity to mumps.
ADDITIONAL READING
- American Academy of Pediatrics. Mumps. In: Pickering LK, ed.
Red Book 2012: Report of the Committee on Infectious Diseases.
29th ed. Elk Grove Village, IL: American Academy of Pediatrics; 2012:514–518.
- Mumps. In: Atkinson W, et al., eds.
Epidemiology and Prevention of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases (The Pink Book).
12th ed. 2012:205–214.
- Mason WH. Mumps. In: Kliegman RM, Behrman RE, Jenson HB, et al., eds.
Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics.
19th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders Elsevier; 2011:1078–1081.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
www.cdc.gov/mumps
CODES
ICD9
- 072.0 Mumps orchitis
- 072.3 Mumps pancreatitis
- 072.9 Mumps without mention of complication
ICD10
- B26.0 Mumps orchitis
- B26.3 Mumps pancreatitis
- B26.9 Mumps without complication
MUNCHAUSEN SYNDROME
Sophie Galson
•
Richard E. Wolfe
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- A neurotic disorder in which the patient fakes signs or symptoms without tangible personal benefit other than to experience the sick role.
- Most dramatic form of chronic factitious disorder with a predominance of physical findings.
- The nature of the disorder resists rigorous study but possible risk factors include:
- Males
- Less severe factitious disorders are more common in women
- Unmarried
- Age in the forties
- Personality disorder
- A history of sadistic and rejecting parents
- A history of chronic childhood illness
ETIOLOGY
- Factitious disorder:
- 3 DSM-IV diagnostic criteria:
- Intentional production of physical or psychological signs
- Motivation to assume the sick role
- Absence of external incentives
- Predominance of symptoms rather than physical findings
- Classic Munchausen syndrome:
- Most severe and chronic form of factitious disorders
- Predominantly physical findings
- Clinical clusters:
- Self-induced infection
- Simulated specific illnesses with no actual disorder
- Chronic wounds
- Self-medication
Pediatric Considerations
- Munchausen by proxy:
- The patient’s illness is caused by the caregiver, not the patient
- The motivation for the caregiver’s behavior is to assume the sick role by proxy
- The caregiver inflicts injury or induces illness in their charge, usually a child
- Commonly parents (mostly mothers)
- May simulate injury and disease in a number of ways:
- Inflicts injury
- Induces Illness
- Fabricates symptoms
- Exaggerates symptoms of the child’s illness causing overaggressive medical interventions
- The perpetrator usually refuses to acknowledge the deception
- Cessation of the symptoms when the patient and caregiver are separated
Geriatric Considerations
Caregivers of elderly patients may also be perpetrators in Munchausen by proxy
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Inappropriate or bizarre use of the ED
- Frequent visits
- Numerous hospital admissions
- Peregrination: Travel from hospital to hospital
- Pseudologia fantastica:
- Intricate and colorful stories associated with the presentation
- Alteration of biographical information:
- Use of aliases
- Change date of birth by 1 digit
- Escalating demands for diagnostic testing and therapeutic interventions
- Hostility toward the health care providers when questioned
- Evasiveness regarding details of the presenting complaint
- The patient provides excessive medical documentation
- Masochistic acceptance of painful procedures
- The patient appears more comfortable than is likely considering the disease
- The patient demonstrates unusually strong medical knowledge
- Frequent homelessness and significant wandering between cities and states
- An absence of close interpersonal relationships
- Self-medication
- Abdominal complaints with history of repeated negative laparotomies (laparotomaphilia migrans)
- Witnessed intentional acts to fake illness:
- Inappropriate ingestion of medication to reproduce physical findings
- Injection of contaminants (feces, bacteria, sputum, corrosives)
- Self-induced wounds
- Swallowing blood to simulate a GI hemorrhage
- Self-phlebotomy
- Instrument tampering
Physical-Exam
- Fever:
- Factious from manipulation of thermometer
- Induced from injection of contaminants
- Self-induced wounds
- Chronic wounds
- Multiple scars
- Foreign bodies in wounds, ear canals, urethra
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Diligent detective work is needed:
- Retrieval of records from other hospitals
- Call on family members to discuss past history for inconsistencies and excessive use
- Call personal physician for background and to coordinate information
- Search patient’s room and belongings to establish the method of deception
- Conclusive proof of faking disease is needed to make the diagnosis
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Direct observation of the patient when obtaining tests to prevent faking results
- Commonly faked lab results:
- Hemoccult positive stool
- Hematuria (intentionally dripping blood into urine sample)
- Hypoglycemia (self-administration of insulin)
- Abnormal results from self-medication:
- Low hematocrit (ingestion of warfarin or self-phlebotomy)
- Elevated INR (ingestion of warfarin)
- Thyroid function tests (ingestion of thyroxine)
- Low serum glucose (injection of insulin or ingestion of sulfonylurea)
- Evidence of intent to fake illness:
- Testing stool for phenolphthalein may detect laxative abuse
- Serum C-peptide with high insulin levels:
- Low C-peptide: Exogenous administration of insulin
- Elevated C-peptide: Endogenous hypoglycemia or sulfonylurea ingestion
Imaging
Do not rely on imaging brought by the patient
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
Avoid unless clear objective findings indicate the necessity of a procedure
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- True illness:
- Primary illness unrelated to a psychiatric disorder
- Secondary to a comorbid condition associated with factitious disorders:
- Secondary to self-destructive acts in patients with dementia, psychotic disorders, or mental retardation
- Secondary to diagnostic and therapeutic procedures
- Malingering:
- Conversion disorder:
- Deficits of the voluntary motor or sensory neurologic system that are not consciously produced
- Somatization disorder (hysteria, Briquet syndrome):
- Symptoms that involve multiple organs, that varies over time, and are not consciously produced
- Other neurotic disorders:
TREATMENT