Pediatric Considerations
More likely to have a biphasic acute course:
- Viral-type syndrome for 1–2 days
- Symptom-free period of 2–5 days
- Then an abrupt onset of the major illness
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Clinical diagnosis
- Differentiate from other causes of acute paralysis.
- Notify public health officials when diagnosis suspected.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- CBC:
- WBC normal or mildly elevated
- Diagnosis confirmed by:
- Comparing acute with convalescent sera for antigen titers
- Isolation of virus from blood, CSF, stool, throat secretions (within week 1 of infection)
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
- Lumbar puncture/CSF analysis:
- Abnormalities typical of aseptic meningitis (increased lymphocytes and elevated protein)
- Poliovirus rarely isolated from the CSF
- Electrodiagnostics:
- Normal to slow motor function
- Sensory function intact
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Abortive poliomyelitis is similar to many viral illnesses.
- Nonparalytic poliomyelitis is indistinguishable from any viral, aseptic meningitis.
- Paralytic poliomyelitis:
- Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
- Guillain–Barré (not febrile, symmetric, not ill appearing)
- Acute transverse myelitis
- Spinal cord compression/infarction
- Multiple sclerosis
- Rhabdomyolysis
- Acute intermittent porphyria
- West Nile virus
- Diphtheria
- Botulism
- Tick paralysis
- Encephalitis
TREATMENT
ALERT
Rare fatal cases come from respiratory insufficiency, which requires prompt ventilatory support.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
Aggressive pulmonary toilet and early intubation mandated for respiratory insufficiency
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Supportive and symptomatic management
- Analgesics for severe muscle pain and spasm
- Bed rest to prevent augmentation or extension of paralysis
- Paralytic poliomyelitis tends to localize to a limb that has been the site of intramuscular injection or injury within 2–4 wk prior to the onset of infection:
- Avoid any unnecessary tissue damage in suspected cases
- No antiviral agents available
- Prevention
- Prevention
- IPV:
- Costly
- Painful
- No conferred immunity
- No VAP, which previously accounted for all poliomyelitis cases in US
- OPV:
- Accounted for only poliomyelitis seen in US (8–10 cases/yr)
- Incidence of VAP: 1/900,000 (immunocompromised: 1/1,000):
- Most at risk are the underimmunized young and their caretakers.
- Confers immunity to unvaccinated contacts by fecal–oral spread.
- Inexpensive
- No longer available in US
- Still remains the vaccine recommended by WHO Expanded Program on Immunization
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
All acute-phase paralytic poliomyelitis for strict bed rest and observation for respiratory symptoms:
- Isolate from nonvaccinated personnel.
Discharge Criteria
No evidence of nervous system involvement and no danger of contact with nonvaccinated population:
- Deterioration of muscle strength usually ends after 3–5 days
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Physical therapy:
- Only 1/3 of the people with acute flaccid paralysis regain full strength
- Lamotrigine may decrease pain, improve symptoms and quality of life.
- IV immunoglobulin (IVIg) may improve muscle strength, has not been proven to decrease pain or improve quality of life.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Most cases are asymptomatic, with symptoms ranging from viral illness to acute flaccid paralysis.
- IPV is the only vaccine available in US; however OPV is still the vaccine of choice for global eradication.
- Diagnosis is primarily clinical and is confirmed by virus isolation from blood, CSF, stool, or throat secretions.
- Treatment is supportive; all acute-phase paralytic poliomyelitis patients should be admitted for observation with close monitoring of the respiratory system.
- If the patient survives the acute stage, paralysis of respiration and deglutition usually recovers completely.
- Paralytic poliomyelitis may occur decades after initial infection and manifests with neurologic and non-neurologic symptoms.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Alexander L, Birkhead G, Guerra F, et al. Ensuring preparedness for potential poliomyelitis outbreaks: Recommendations for the US poliovirus vaccine stockpile from the National Vaccine Advisory Committee (NVAC) and the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med.
2004;158:1106–1112.
- American Academy of Pediatrics:
Report of the Committee on Infectious Diseases
. 29th ed. Elk Grove, Il; 2012.
- Bouza C, Muñoz A, Amate JM. Postpolio syndrome: A challenge to the health-care system.
Health Policy.
2005;71(1):97–106.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Imported vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis—United States, 2005.
MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep.
2006;55(4):97–99.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Updated recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) regarding routine poliovirus vaccination.
MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep
. 2009;58(30):829–830.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Tracking progress toward global polio eradication—worldwide, 2009–2010.
MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep.
2011;60(14):441–445.
- Howard RS. Poliomyelitis and the postpolio syndrome.
BMJ.
2005;330(7503):1314–1318.
- RopperAH, SamuelsMA. Chapter 33. Viral infections of the nervoussystem, chronic meningitis, and prion diseases. In:Ropper AH,Samuels MA, eds.
Adams and Victor’s Principles of Neurology
. 9thed. New York, NY:McGraw-Hill; 2009.
- Shahzad A, Köhler G. Inactivated polio vaccine (IPV): A strong candidate vaccine for achieving global polio eradication program.
Vaccine.
2009;27(39):5293–5294.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
- Botulism
- Encephalitis
- Guillain–Barré Syndrome
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Rhabdomyolysis
- Spinal Cord Syndromes
- Tick Bite
- West Nile Virus
CODES
ICD9
- 045.00 Acute paralytic poliomyelitis specified as bulbar, poliovirus, unspecified type
- 045.20 Acute nonparalytic poliomyelitis, poliovirus, unspecified type
- 045.90 Acute poliomyelitis, unspecified, poliovirus, unspecified type
ICD10
- A80.30 Acute paralytic poliomyelitis, unspecified
- A80.4 Acute nonparalytic poliomyelitis
- A80.39 Other acute paralytic poliomyelitis
POLYCYTHEMIA
David N. Zull
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Increase in hemoglobin (Hgb) above the normal range:
- Men: Hgb >17.5 g/dL, hematocrit (Hct) >52%
- Women: Hgb >16 g/dL, Hct >48%
- Symptoms are related to blood viscosity, which increases exponentially at Hct >60%.
ETIOLOGY
- Relative (apparent) polycythemia:
- Resulting from decrease in plasma volume
- Acute: Dehydration
- Chronic: Gaisbock syndrome (stress polycythemia): Obese, hypertensive, middle-aged smokers
- Primary erythrocytosis:
- Polycythemia vera (PV): A stem cell disorder characterized by panhyperplasia of all bone marrow elements leading to increased production of RBCs, WBCs, and platelets. Erythrocytosis is the most prominent feature:
- Mutation in the tyrosine kinase (JAK2), which acts in signaling pathways of the EPO-receptor, rendering those cells hypersensitive to erythropoietin
- Median age 60, 5% <40, peak in 70s
- Higher in Ashkenazi Jews and lower in Asians and African Americans.
- May progress to myelofibrosis or acute leukemia
- Secondary polycythemia:
- Central hypoxia increasing erythropoietin:
- Chronic pulmonary disease
- Sleep apnea (5–10% have high Hgb)
- Obesity hypoventilation syndrome (Pickwickian syndrome)
- Congenital heart disease (right-to-left shunt)
- High altitude (chronic)
- Smoker’s erythrocytosis
- Carbon monoxide poisoning (chronic)
- Chronic methemoglobinemia
- Renal-mediated causes of increased erythropoietin production:
- Renal cell carcinoma
- Renal artery atherosclerotic narrowing
- Focal glomerulonephritis
- Postrenal transplant with or without rejection
- Chronic hydronephrosis
- Polycystic kidney disease and renal cysts
- Inappropriate autonomous erythropoietin production:
- Hepatomas
- Cerebellar hemangioblastoma
- Wilms tumor
- Parathyroid carcinoma and adenoma
- Ovarian tumors
- Adrenal adenomas and carcinomas (pheochromocytoma, Cushing)
- Uterine leiomyomata
- Blood doping:
- Recombinant erythropoietin abuse
- Autologous transfusions
- Drug abuse:
- Chronic cocaine abuse
- Androgenic steroids
- Genetic disorders with polycythemia:
- High-affinity Hgb variants
- Bisphosphoglycerate deficiency
- von Hippel–Lindau syndrome
- Chuvash polycythemia
- Erythropoietin-receptor mutations
- Congenital methemoglobinemia
- Infections: