INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- 20 mL/kg of 0.9% NS IV fluid bolus for dehydration
- IV access for neurologic and cardiac involvement
- Cardiac monitoring
- Temporary pacemaker for heart block
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Remove tick:
- Disinfect site.
- With blunt instrument, grasp tick close to skin and pull upward with gentle pressure.
- Medications:
- Aspirin as adjunctive therapy for cardiac involvement
- NSAIDs for arthritis or arthralgias
- Vaccine (Lymerix) for prevention of disease:
- A recombinant surface protein
- For persons in high/moderate risk areas
- For travelers to endemic areas
- 3 doses (0–1 mo–2 mo)
- Stage I:
- Amoxicillin, doxycycline (for those ≥8 yr of age), or cefuroxime (21 days)
- Azithromycin (14–21 days)
- Parenteral therapy in pregnant patients
- Stage II:
- Oral therapy for isolated Bell palsy and mild involvement:
- Amoxicillin with probenecid (30 days) or doxycycline (avoid if pregnant or ≥8 yr old; 10–21 days)
- Parenteral therapy for more severe involvement (meningitis, carditis, severe arthritis):
- Ceftriaxone, cefotaxime (14–21 days), or penicillin G (14–28 days)
- Stage III:
- Parenteral therapy:
- Penicillin G, cefotaxime (14–21 days), or ceftriaxone (14–28 days)
MEDICATION
First Line
- Amoxicillin: 500 mg (peds: 50 mg/kg/24 h) PO TID for those <8 yr of age or unable to tolerate doxycycline.
- Aspirin: 80–100 mg/kg/d (peds: 50–100 mg/kg/d in 6 div. doses) PO; do not exceed 4 g/24 h (peds: Do not exceed 120 mg/kg/24 h or 4 g/24 h)
- Doxycycline: 100 mg PO BID for 14–21 days for children ≥8 yr and adults (except if pregnant)
- Ceftriaxone: 2 g (peds: 100 mg/kg/24 h) IV daily (1st line for late-term disease)
Second Line
- Azithromycin: 500 mg PO daily
- Cefuroxime axetil, 500 mg BID (all ages)
- Cefotaxime: 2 g (peds: 100–150 mg/kg/24 h) IV q8h
- Penicillin G: 20–24 million U IV q4–6h
- Probenecid: 500 mg PO TID
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Meningoencephalitis
- Telemetry/ICU admission for carditis
Discharge Criteria
Patients treated with oral therapy
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Duration of treatment for later organ involvement will be ≥30 days.
- Be aware of coinfections with
Anaplasmosis
and
Babesiosis.
ADDITIONAL READING
- American Academy of Pediatrics: Report of the Committee on Infectious Diseases
. 29th ed. Elk Grove, CA: Ill; 2012.
- Kowalski TJ, Tata S, Berth W, et al. Antibiotic treatment duration and long-term outcomes of patients with early lyme disease from a lyme disease-hyperendemic area.
Clin Infect Dis.
2010;50:512–520.
- Marques AR. Lyme disease: A review.
Curr Allergy Asthma Rep.
2010;10:13–20.
- Steere AC, Coburn J, Glickstein L. The emergence of Lyme disease.
J Clin Invest
. 2004;113(8):1093–1101.
CODES
ICD9
- 088.81 Lyme Disease
- 320.7 Meningitis in other bacterial diseases classified elsewhere
- 711.80 Arthropathy associated with other infectious and parasitic diseases, site unspecified
ICD10
- A69.20 Lyme disease, unspecified
- A69.21 Meningitis due to Lyme disease
- A69.23 Arthritis due to Lyme disease
LYMPHADENITIS
John Mahoney
•
Dolores Gonthier
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Lymph nodes may be swollen and tender as part of the systemic response to infection:
- Become engorged with lymphocytes and macrophages
- May be primarily infected
- Infection in distal extremity may result in painful tender adenopathy proximally
- Acute suppurative lymphadenitis may occur after pharyngeal or skin infection
ETIOLOGY
- Most frequently caused by bacterial infection
- Most common organisms in pyogenic lymphadenitis:
- Staphylococcus aureus
—including resistant strains such as community-associated methicillin-resistant
S. aureus
(CA-MRSA):
- CA-MRSA risk factors include prior MRSA infection, household contact of CA-MRSA patient, military personnel, incarcerated persons, athletes in contact sports, IV drug users, men who have sex with men
- Different antibiotic susceptibility than nosocomial MRSA
- CA-MRSA now sufficiently prevalent to warrant coverage in empiric treatment
- Suspect CA-MRSA in unresponsive infections
- Group A β-hemolytic
Streptococcus
- Cervical lymphadenitis:
- Usually pharyngeal or periodontal process
- Streptococcus and anaerobes
- Axillary lymphadenitis:
- Streptococcus pyogenes (group A β-hemolytic Streptococcus)
- Nosocomial MRSA
:
- Risk factors: Recent hospital or long-term care admission, surgery, injection drug use, vascular catheter, dialysis, recent antibiotic use, unresponsive infection
- Resistant to most antibiotics (see “Treatment”)
Pediatric Considerations
- Acute unilateral cervical suppurative lymphadenitis:
- Most common at age <6 yr
- Group A
Streptococcus
,
S. aureus
, and anaerobes are most common causes
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Painful swelling, inflammation/infection of lymph nodes
- Commonly presents simultaneously with acute cellulitis or abscess if pyogenic cause
- Axillary lymphadenitis:
- Fever, axillary pain, and acute lymphedema of arms and chest, without features of cellulitis or lymphangitis; ipsilateral pleural effusion may be present
History
- Occupation
- Exposure to pets
- Sexual behavior
- Drug use
- Travel history
- Associated symptoms:
- Sore throat
- Cough
- Fever
- Night sweats
- Fatigue
- Weight loss
- Pain in nodes
- Duration of lymphadenopathy
Physical-Exam
- Extent of lymphadenopathy (localized or generalized)
- Size of nodes:
- Abnormal size by site:
- General: >1 cm
- Epitrochlear: >0.5 cm
- Inguinal: >1.5 cm
- Presence or absence of nodal tenderness
- Signs of inflammation over node
- Skin lesions
- Splenomegaly
- Enlargement of supraclavicular or scalene nodes is always abnormal
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Acute regional lymphadenitis is clinical diagnosis
,
often part of larger syndrome (cellulitis)
- History and physical exam to reveal infectious source
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- WBC is not essential:
- Possible leukocytosis with left shift or normal
- CBC, Epstein–Barr virus (EBV), cytomegalovirus (CMV), HIV, and other serologies based on clinical findings
Imaging
US or CT in patients who do not improve or progress to suppuration
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
Consider percutaneous needle aspiration or surgical drainage in patients who do not improve or progress to suppuration
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Common infections:
- Adenovirus
- Scarlet fever
- Cat scratch disease
- Fungal
- Herpes zoster
- Unusual infections:
- Sporotrichosis (rose thorns)
- Diphtheria
- West Nile fever
- Plague
- Anthrax
- Typhoid
- Rubella
- Venereal infections:
- Syphilis
- Genital herpes
- Chancroid
- Lymphogranuloma venereum
- Other systematic infections causing generalized lymphadenitis:
- HIV
- Infectious mononucleosis (EBV or CMV)
- Toxoplasmosis
- Tuberculosis
- Infectious hepatitis
- Dengue
- Drug reaction:
- Silicone implants
- Malignancy
- Rheumatologic disorders
- Systemic lupus erythematosus
- Sarcoidosis
- Amyloidosis
- Serum sickness