Discharge Criteria
- Mild to moderate disease without medications
- Moderate to severe disease with medications and urgent neurologic outpatient follow-up
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Discuss prevention strategies in disease management
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Diagnosis is often difficult; keep in mind other conditions commonly misdiagnosed as PD
- Sudden withdrawal of dopaminergic medications can result in parkinsonism-hyperpyrexia syndrome, a medical emergency
ADDITIONAL READING
- Chou KL. In the clinic. Parkinson disease.
Ann Intern Med
. 2012,157:ITC5-1–ITC5-16.
- Gazewood JD, Richards DR, Clebak K. Parkinson disease: An update.
Am Fam Physician
. 2013;15:267–273.
- Grinberg LT, Rueb U, Alho AT, et al. Brainstem pathology and non-motor symptoms in PD.
J Neurol Sci
. 2010;289:81–88.
- Kipps CM, Fung VSC, Grattan-Smith P, et al. Movement disorder emergencies.
Mov Disord
. 2005;20:322–334.
- Newman EJ, Grosset DG, Kennedy PG. The parkinsonism-hyperpyrexia syndrome.
Neurocrit Care
. 2009;10:136–140.
- Worth PF. How to treat Parkinson’s disease in 2013.
Clin Med.
2013;13:93–96.
CODES
ICD9
- 332.0 Paralysis agitans
- 332.1 Secondary parkinsonism
- 333.0 Other degenerative diseases of the basal ganglia
ICD10
- G20 Parkinson’s disease
- G21.9 Secondary parkinsonism, unspecified
- G21.19 Other drug induced secondary parkinsonism
PARONYCHIA
Gene Ma
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Disruption of the seal between the nail plate and the nail fold may allow entry of bacteria into the eponychial space.
- Inflammation of the nail folds surrounding the nail plate
ETIOLOGY
- Acute paronychia: Predominantly
Staphylococcus aureus
but also streptococci,
Pseudomonas
, and anaerobes
- Chronic paronychia: Multifactorial due to allergens and irritants in addition to fungal etiologies, predominantly
Candida albicans,
which commonly coexist with
Staphylococcus
species
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Pain, warmth, and swelling to the proximal and lateral nail folds, often 2–5 days after trauma
- Symptoms must be present for 6 wk to meet criteria for a chronic paronychia.
History
- Acute paronychia: Nail biting, finger sucking, aggressive manicuring or manipulation, and trauma predispose to development.
- Chronic paronychia: Occupations with persistent moist hands; dish washers, bartenders; also increased in patients with peripheral vascular disease or diabetes
Pediatric Considerations
Frequently anaerobic mouth flora in children from nail biting
Physical-Exam
- Begins as swelling, pain, and erythema in the dorsolateral corner of the nail fold bulging out over the nail plate
- Progresses to subcuticular/subungual abscess
- Green nail coloration suggests
Pseudomonas
- Nail plate hypertrophy suggests fungal source
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- History and physical exam with special attention to evaluating for concomitant infections such as felon or cellulitis
- Assess tetanus status.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- No specific tests are useful.
- Cultures are not routinely indicated.
- Tzanck smear or viral culture if herpetic whitlow suspected.
Imaging
Soft tissue radiographs if foreign body is suspected; routine films if osteomyelitis suspected
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
Digital pressure test (opposing the thumb and the affected finger) may help identify the margins of an early subungual abscess
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Felon
- Herpetic whitlow
- Trauma or foreign body
- Primary squamous cell carcinoma
- Metastatic carcinoma
- Osteomyelitis
- Psoriasis
- Reiter syndrome
- Pyoderma gangrenosum
- Onychomycosis
TREATMENT
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
Acute Paronychia
- Early paronychia without purulence may be managed with warm-water soaks 4 times a day with or without oral antibiotics; may also consider topical antibiotics and corticosteroids.
- Early superficial subcuticular abscess:
- Elevation of the eponychial fold by sliding the flat edge of a no. 11 blade (18G needle or small clamps may be used) gently between the proximal nail fold and the nail plate near the point of maximal tenderness
- A digital nerve block or local anesthesia may be necessary.
- Partial nail involvement:
- If the lesion extends beneath the nail, remove a longitudinal section of the nail.
- Petroleum jelly or iodoform gauze packing for 24 hr
- Runaround abscess:
- If the lesion extends beneath the base of the nail to the other side, remove 1/4–1/3 of the proximal nail with 2 small incisions at the dorsolateral edges of the nail fold and pack eponychial fold with petroleum jelly or iodoform gauze to prevent adherence.
- Extensive subungual abscess:
- Early paronychia without purulence present may be managed with warm soaks alone; beyond that, antibiotics are recommended if there is any apparent cellulitis, abscess, or systemic sign of infection.
- Trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole, dicloxacillin, and amoxicillin–clavulanate are appropriate first-line agents, with treatment regimens ranging from 5–10 days, depending on severity.
- Clindamycin or amoxicillin–clavulanate if associated with nail biting or oral contact
Chronic Paronychia
- Avoidance of predisposing exposures and irritants/chemicals
- Topical steroids should be considered first-line therapy, with or without broad-spectrum topical antifungal agent
- Consideration for antistaphylococcal regimen
- For recalcitrant cases:
- Eponychial marsupialization involving removal of a crescentic piece of skin just proximal to the nail fold, including all thickened tissue down to but not including germinal matrix
- Oral antifungal therapy
MEDICATION
First Line
- Amoxicillin–clavulanate: 875 mg PO BID for 7 days (peds: 25 mg/kg/d PO q12h)
- Trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim DS) BID for 7 days
- Dicloxacillin: 500 mg PO QID for 7 days (peds: 12.5–50 mg/kg/d PO q6h)
Second Line
- Clindamycin: 300 mg PO QID for 7 days (peds: 20–40 mg/kg/d div. q6h PO, IV, IM)
- Topical antibiotics: Polymyxin B/Bacitracin, there is a high incidence of hypersensitivity to neomycin,mucipurin topical (Bactroban), or gentamicin TID for 5–10 days (0.1%ointment)
- Topical antifungal/steroid combination: nystatin–triamcinolone BID–TID until resolution, no longer than 1 mo
- For all topical antibiotics apply a small amount to affected areas TID–QID
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
Admission is not needed for paronychia alone.
Discharge Criteria
- Patients with uncomplicated paronychias may be discharged with appropriate follow-up instructions.
- Patients with packings should be re-evaluated in 24 hr.
Issues for Referral
Chronic paronychias refractory to treatment
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Acute paronychias respond well to decompression with or without antibiotics.
- Chronic paronychias are largely a result of chronic exposure to allergens/irritants.
- Reiter syndrome and psoriasis can mimic paronychia.
- Recurrent paronychia should raise suspicion for herpetic whitlow.
- Assess for felons.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Dahdah MJ, Scher RK. Nail diseases related to nail cosmetics.
Dermatol Clin.
2006;24(2):233–239,vii.
- Jebson PJ. Infections of the fingertip. Paronychias and felons.
Hand Clin
. 1998;14:547–555, viii.
- Moran GJ, Talan DA. Hand infections.
Emerg Med Clin North Am
. 1993;11(3):601–619.
- Rigopoulos D, Larios G, Gregoriou S, et al. Acute and chronic paronychia.
Am Fam Physician
. 2008;77(3):339–346.
- Rockwell PG. Acute and chronic paronychia.
Am Fam Physician
. 2001;63(6):1113–1116.