FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Acute prostatitis:
- Patients who appear ill or toxic
- Hypotension
- Urinary retention
- Chronic prostatitis:
- Admission generally not warranted unless patient has signs or symptoms of acute prostatitis.
Discharge Criteria
- Acute prostatitis:
- Patient must be nontoxic.
- Able to take fluids and oral medications (analgesia and antibiotics)
- Urinate without difficulty
- Immunocompetent
- Relatively free of concurrent underlying disease
- Have appropriate follow-up care
- Chronic prostatitis: Appropriate follow-up care should be available.
Issues for Referral
Patient with either acute or chronic prostatitis should be referred to an urologist.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Obtain a good history to distinguish acute from chronic prostatitis, as longer antibiotic therapy may be warranted.
- Consider this diagnosis even in sexually active adolescent males.
- Acutely ill males with antibiotic treatment failure for prostatitis should be evaluated for abscess regardless of immunocompetence.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Hedayati T, Keegan M. Prostatitis.
eMedicine
. Available at
www.emedicine.medscape.com/article/785418
. Updated July 29, 2009.
- Pontari MA. Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome.
Urol Clin North Am
. 2008;35(1):81–89, vi.
- Schaeffer AJ. Chronic prostatitis and the chronic pelvic painsyndrome.
N Engl J Med
.2006;355:1690–1698.
- Takhar S, Moran G. Diagnosis and management of urinary tract infection in the emergency department and outpatient settings.
Inf Disease Clin of North America.
2014;28(1):1--168.
- Touma NF, Nickel JC. Prostatitis and chronic pelvic pain syndrome in men.
Med Clin North Am.
2011;95(1):75–86.
CODES
ICD9
- 601.0 Acute prostatitis
- 601.1 Chronic prostatitis
- 601.9 Prostatitis, unspecified
ICD10
- N41.0 Acute prostatitis
- N41.1 Chronic prostatitis
- N41.9 Inflammatory disease of prostate, unspecified
PRURITUS
Christine Tsien Silvers
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Unpleasant sensation that provokes a desire to scratch
- Mediated by unmyelinated C fibers in upper portion of dermis:
- Transmitted to dorsal horn of spinal cord
- Via spinothalamic tract to cerebral cortex
- Peripheral mediators (e.g., histamine and peptides such as substance P that release histamine) stimulate C fibers and induce itching
- Prostaglandins (PGE
2
, PGH
2
) lower threshold to pruritus
- Opiates cause pruritus by acting on central receptors
- No single pharmacologic agent effectively treats all causes of pruritus
- “Itch–scratch–itch” cycle:
- Itching triggers scratching
- Scratching damages skin and stimulates nerve endings, thereby producing even greater itching
ETIOLOGY
4 categories in proposed itch classification:
- Pruritoceptive: Generated in the skin from localized irritation or inflammation
- Neurogenic: Generated in the CNS due to circulating pruritogens
- Neuropathic: Due to CNS or PNS lesions
- Psychogenic
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Onset:
- Shortly after freshwater bathing in swimmer’s itch
- More intense at night with scabies
- Paroxysmal with multiple sclerosis
- With sudden changes in temperature in polycythemia vera
- Character: Paroxysmal, burning, pricking
- Time of occurrence, duration
- Severity; impact on quality of life
- With or without skin lesions
- Anatomic area (e.g., exposed skin only)
- Exacerbating or alleviating factors (e.g., water, heat, dryness, dampness, coolness)
- Medications
- New products (e.g., soap, cosmetics, laundry detergents, fabric softeners)
- Age
- Family history of atopic dermatitis or skin disease
- Personal history of allergies or asthma
- Pruritus in other family members
- Systemic or associated symptoms (e.g., night sweats, fever, tremors, weight loss, fatigue, jaundice, anemia, neurologic symptoms)
- Sexual history, history of HIV or AIDS
- Social: Occupation, hobbies, pets, travel
Physical-Exam
- Dermatologic:
- Absence of rash
- Diffuse or localized rash
- Location: Genitals, interdigital webs, axilla, wrists, etc.
- Generalized morbilliform eruptions
- Discrete weeping patches with vesicles
- Dry skin
- Jaundice
- Follicular (around the hair)
- Nonfollicular (e.g., insect bites, scabies)
- Primary lesions:
- Papular, pustular, urticarial, or polymorphic
- Secondary lesions:
- Excoriations
- Lichenification
- Hyperpigmentation
- Prurigo papules: Thickened papular areas of skin from constant rubbing
- Psychogenic: Constant rubbing in areas patient can readily reach
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Detailed history is key in the ED workup
- Physical exam to characterize skin lesions
- Look for evidence of systemic disease
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
Indications for specific studies (e.g., CBC and differential, ESR, CRP, BUN/creatinine, glucose, LFTs, TSH, free T4, HIV, RPR, cancer screening, CXR, abdominal ultrasound, CT/MRI) vary based on the clinical presentation and should be guided by clinical judgment.
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
- Skin scrapings for scabies and dermatophytoses
- Skin biopsy performed by dermatologist at follow-up visit
- Skin culture for bacterial, viral, or fungal infection
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
Dermatologic
- Xerosis (dry skin)
- Insect infestations:
- Scabies: Vesicles and burrows on intertriginous areas
- Pediculosis (lice)
- Insect bites: Localized clusters of papules
- Dermatitis:
- Atopic dermatitis
- Contact dermatitis (e.g., poison ivy contact)
- Nummular dermatitis: Round eczematous or vesicular eruption
- Drug induced (suspect when no rash):
- Opiates and derivatives
- Aspirin/NSAIDs
- Quinidine; amiodarone
- Certain antibiotics, antifungals, antimalarials
- Phenothiazines
- Estrogens, progestins, testosterone
- Statins
- Others
- Lichen planus: Lichenification, hyperpigmentation, skin thickening
- Urticaria
- Bullous pemphigoid
- Eosinophilic folliculitis
- Psoriasis
- Dermatitis herpetiformis: Burning itch
- Sunburn
- Aquagenic pruritus
- Fiberglass dermatitis
- Seborrheic dermatitis: Scaly plaques on sebaceous gland-bearing areas
- Swimmer’s itch, schistosome cercarial dermatitis, or schistosomiasis:
- Repeated freshwater exposure
- Itching starts as water evaporates
- Highly pruritic papules develop hours later
- Miliaria rubra (prickly heat)
Pregnancy Considerations
- Polymorphic eruption of pregnancy
- Pemphigoid gestationis
- Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy
- Atopic eruption of pregnancy
Infectious
- HIV
- Parasites:
- Ankylostomiasis/helminthiasis (hookworm)
- Onchocerciasis/river blindness (nematode)
- Ascariasis (roundworm)
- Trichinosis (roundworm)
Cholestatic
- Obstructive biliary disease
- Primary biliary cirrhosis
- Hepatic cholestasis secondary to drugs
- Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy
- Extrahepatic biliary obstruction
- Chronic hepatitis, especially hepatitis C
Hematologic
- Polycythemia vera
- Iron-deficiency anemia
- Paraproteinemia
- Waldenström macroglobulinemia
- Mastocytosis