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A 9-year-old black female, a recent emigree from Haiti, came to the Emergency Room because of a fever, headache, sore throat and mild cough. Her parents say that she has been sick for 2-3 days. You note that she has a runny nose and a mild conjunctivitis. Her temperature is 39, pulse rate 110 beats/min, blood pressure 90/60 mm Hg, and respiratory rate 42/min. You note that her pharynx is very red and that she also has some bright red spots with white centers on her buccal mucosa. Her chest is clear. You take a throat swab and send the child home instructing the parents to return with the child tomorrow when you will have the results of the throat culture.

Question 1 - Single Best Answer

The throat swab is most commonly used to diagnose?   Bugs Database

whooping cough
influenza
strep throat
measles
diphtheria

Question 2 - Single Best Answer

On the whole, would you agree with the decision to send this child home with no treatment or instructions for care?   Bugs Database

Yes, because even if she had a strep throat, tomorrow is soon enough to start treatment and viral diseases can't be cured
No, because she may not come back and miss treatment for a disease that could result in rheumatic fever
No, because she had a highly communicable disease that you should have recognized.
Both B and C have some merit

There are no beta hemolytic colonies seen on the blood agar plate the next day. The child does return and when you examine her again you notice a rash behind her ears and on her face. Careful examination of the rash shows that it is maculopapular.

Question 3 - Single Best Answer

The absence of beta hemolytic colonies on the blood agar plate means?   Bugs Database

the child does not have scarlet fever
the child does not have rheumatic fever
the child does not have Rocky Mt. Spotted fever
the child has measles
the child has German measles

Question 4 - Single Best Answer

The differential diagnosis for a child with a rash is quite large. Measles, German measles and Rocky Mt. spotted fever should be considered. What are some other agents that can cause a rash?   Bugs Database

B19, HHV3, Bordetella
chlamydia, Coxsackievirus, EEEV
hantavirus, flu virus, HHV3
Treponema pallidum, B19, Coxsackievirus

A good differential diagnosis for this child's disease would be measles, German measles, Rocky Mt. spotted fever, fifth disease, Coxsackievirus infection, secondary syphilis. You know its not scarlet fever because of the throat culture. A few parasitic diseases, that a recent emigrŽ could have, also have rashes.

Question 5 - Single Best Answer

You ask the parents if they have seen any ticks on the child or if she had been anywhere that she could have been bitten by a tick. This would bear on the diagnosis of which of the following?   Bugs Database

measles
secondary syphilis
fifth disease
Rocky Mt. spotted fever
Coxsackievirus infection

Question 6 - Single Best Answer

What in the world causes fifth disease?   Bugs Database

an adenovirus
a parvovirus
a poxvirus
a herpesvirus
a picornavirus

Question 7 - Single Best Answer

B19 usually causes a very mild disease. Two groups of people for whom it can be more serious, however, are?   Bugs Database

teenagers and pregnant women
pregnant women and sickle-cell anemics
alcoholics and asplenics
smokers and alcoholics
the sexually promiscuous and drug addicts

Question 8 - Single Best Answer

What should have alerted you to the possibility of measles?   Bugs Database

the conjunctivitis
the Koplik spots
the runny nose (coryza)
the cough
all of the above

Question 9 - Single Best Answer

Why is it so important to diagnose measles?   Bugs Database

it can be cured
the complications can be prevented
the child needs to be vaccinated against measles
pregnant women exposed to the child need to have abortions
all unvaccinated contacts need to be protected

Question 10 - Single Best Answer

How is measles normally prevented?   Bugs Database

DPT vaccine
MMR vaccine
killed viral vaccine
oral vaccine
prophylactic antibiotics

Question 11 - Single Best Answer

When is the MMR vaccine usually given?   Bugs Database

2, 4, 6, 15 months and 4-6 years.
2, 4, 15 months and 4-6 years.
2, 4, 6, 15 months
15 months and 11-12 years

Question 12 - Single Best Answer

Why is the MMR vaccine given so much later than the other childhood vaccines?   Bugs Database

the live viruses are dangerous until the children have some natural immunity
the vaccines don't work due to maternal antibody before this time
the immune system is not mature enough to make antibodies before this time
cellular immunity that is needed will not develop before this time

Question 13 - Single Best Answer

What is/are the complication(s) of measles?   Bugs Database

encephalitis
viral pneumonia
bacterial pneumonia
SSPE
all of the above

Question 14 - Single Best Answer

How can measles be confirmed?   Bugs Database

heterophile antibodies
anti-measles IgG
anti-measles IgM
growth of the virus in tissue culture
all of the above

A measles antigen detection test, that the clinical laboratory recently introduced because of the high incidence of measles among immigrants, tested positive for the measles virus. You send the child home but tell the parents to keep her isolated and quiet. Eight other children and four adults in the same house were given measles vaccine. One baby was given hyperimmune serum globulin. Twenty neighborhood children that had never been immunized were also immunized.

Question 15 - Single Best Answer

How is it that so many of this child's contacts were not vaccinated?   Bugs Database

the vaccine is only available in the USA and all the others were immigrants
the vaccine is optional and only purchased by the very rich
the lowest socioeconomic classes have the poorest vaccination rates
the perceived high incidence of reactions to the vaccine make it very unpopular

The sick child appeared to be recovering but after 10 days had a resurgence of fever, severe headaches, and seizures.

Question 16 - Single Best Answer

This new development?   Bugs Database

is normal in the course of measles
signals measles pneumonia
occurs in about 0.1% of measles cases
is most likely unrelated to the measles
is SSPE

The child was hospitalized and given supportive care. Although many children suffer neurological deficits after measles encephalitis, this child recovered and was left with no sequelae. She grew up and, fondly remembering the kindness of the doctors who cared for her, went to Medical School at the University of Florida. She later returned to her native country and became the first woman president of Haiti.


   

 Location: http://medinfo.ufl.edu/year2/mmid/a34aq.html
  Updated: October 6, 2005

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