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Scarlet Fever

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scarlet fever or scarlatina, an acute, communicable infection, caused by group A hemolytic streptococcal bacteria (see streptococcus streptococcus , any of a group of gram-positive bacteria, genus Streptococcus, some of which cause disease. Streptococci are spherical and divide by fission, but they remain attached and so grow in beadlike chains.
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) that produce an erythrogenic toxin. The disease is now uncommon, probably because antibiotic therapy has lessened the likelihood of spread. It occurs in young children, usually between two and eight years of age, and is spread by droplet spray from carriers and from individuals who have contracted the disease. The incubation period is from three to five days, and infectivity lasts about two weeks. Scarlet fever may be mild or severe, but it is rarely fatal if treated. Typical symptoms are sore throat, headache, fever, flushed face with a ring of pallor about the mouth, red spots in the mouth, coated tongue with raw beefy appearance and inflamed papillae underneath it (strawberry tongue), and a characteristic eruption on the body. The streptococcal bacterium that causes scarlet fever is identical to the streptococcal pharyngitis (strep throat) organism, the difference being the production of a toxin to which the patient is susceptible in the case of scarlet fever. Severe infections are occasionally complicated by rheumatic fever, kidney disease, ear infection, pneumonia, meningitis, or encephalitis. Mild scarlet fever requires only bed rest, antibiotics, analgesics or antipyretics, and symptomatic treatment. Antibiotics, immune serum, and antitoxin may be required for severe cases.

scarlet fever

 or scarlatina

Acute infectious disease caused by some types of streptococcus bacteria. Fever, sore throat, headache, and, in children, vomiting are followed in two to three days by a rash. The skin peels in about one-third of cases. After a coating disappears, the tongue is swollen, red, and bumpy (strawberry tongue). Glands are usually swollen. Complications frequently involve the sinuses, ears (sometimes with mastoiditis), and neck. Abscesses are common. Nephritis, arthritis, or rheumatic fever may occur later. Treatment involves penicillin, bed rest, and adequate fluid intake. Scarlet fever has become uncommon and much milder since the mid-20th century, independent of the use of antibiotics.


scarlet fever
an acute communicable disease characterized by fever, strawberry-coloured tongue, and a typical rash starting on the neck and chest and spreading to the abdomen and limbs, caused by all group A haemolytic Streptococcus bacteria

scarlet fever [′skär·lət ′fē·vər]
(medicine)
An acute, contagious bacterial disease caused byStreptococcus hemolyticus;characterized by a papular, or rough, bright-red rash over the body, with fever, sore throat, headache, and vomiting occurring 2-3 days after contact with a carrier.

Scarlet fever

An acute contagious disease that results from infection with Streptococcus pyogenes (group A streptococci). It most often accompanies pharyngeal (throat) infections with this organism but is occasionally associated with wound infection or septicemia. Scarlet fever is characterized by the appearance, about 2 days after development of pharyngitis, of a red rash that blanches under pressure and has a sandpaper texture. Usually the rash appears first on the trunk and neck and spreads to the extremities. The rash fades after a week, with desquamation, or peeling, generally occurring during convalescence. The disease is usually self-limiting, although severe forms are occasionally seen with high fever and systemic toxicity. Appropriate antibiotic therapy is recommended to prevent the onset in susceptible individuals of rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease. See Medical bacteriology, Rheumatic fever, Streptococcus


Scarlet Fever 

an acute infectious disease occurring mainly in childhood and manifested by fever, sore throat, and a rash. The first clinical description of scarlet fever was given in the 17th century by T. Sydenham, who also gave the disease its name.

The causative agent of scarlet fever is a β-hemolytic streptococcus, which belongs to Group A and forms a toxin. The infection is transmitted by infected persons or by carriers. It is mainly airborne, but occasionally occurs through contact with an infected person’s belongings. Scarlet fever is mainly a disease of children up to the age of six or seven. Its incidence increases in the autumn and winter months, and periodic rises in incidence are noted every four to six years. Persons who have recovered from the disease develop specific immunity, with relapse occurring in 1.5–4 percent of the cases. Immunity is determined by observing the skin’s reaction to an inoculated toxin (the Dick test).

The incubation period of scarlet fever averages two to seven days. The onset of the disease is acute and is marked by fever, lethargy, malaise, vomiting, and sore throat. The mucosa of the throat becomes bright red, and spots sometimes appear on the palatine tonsils. The superficial cervical lymph nodes swell and become painful. On the first or occasionally the second day of the disease, a bright-pink or red punctate rash appears on the entire body. The tongue acquires a grayish white coating, which disappears by the fourth or fifth day of the disease; the tongue then becomes bright red and granular (raspberry tongue). The disease continues for three to six more days. After the rash disappears, large portions of the skin peel off.

Scarlet fever may be mild, moderately severe, or severe. The severe form may be toxic, with pronounced symptoms of toxic affection of the nervous and cardiovascular systems.

It may also be septic, with severe inflammation of the throat and a tendency to develop suppurative foci. When the severe form is toxicoseptic, both sets of symptoms are combined. The mild form of the disease predominates, and complications, which are observed in the severe form, seldom occur. Such complications include purulent cervical lymphadenitis, otitis, inflammation of the accessory cavities of the nose and joints, affection of the heart, nephritis, and sepsis. With modern methods of treatment, fatality has been reduced to tenths or hundredths of 1 percent. A very mild form of the disease, lacking in many of the symptoms, is often observed.

Scarlet fever is treated with antibiotics; the toxic form is treated with antitoxic scarlet-fever serum. Various therapeutic means are used to treat complications. Infected persons are isolated for at least ten days; with severe forms of the disease or when living conditions are unfavorable, children are hospitalized. Preschoolers and pupils in the first two grades are permitted to return to school 12 days after the end of the isolation period. Healthy children who have been in contact with infected persons are quarantined for seven days. The premises occupied by infected persons are subjected to regular disinfection.

REFERENCE

Nosov, S. D. Detskie infektsionnye bolezni, 4th ed. Moscow, 1973.

S. D. NOSOV



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you came to see us," she said, with a guilty and at the same time confiding smile, "all Dolly's children had scarlet fever, and he happened to come and see her.
I advise you to be off as soon as you can, for scarlet fever is no joke, miss.
Lilly informed us that the aforesaid neighbor's hired boy was supposed to be down with scarlet fever.
 
 
 
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