childhood diseases Flashcards

1
Q

what virus causes chicken pox?

A

varicella-zoster virus

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2
Q

what are the symptoms of chicken pox?

A

-rash of vesicles, papulues, pustules and scabs.

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3
Q

what are the systemic symptoms of chicken pox?

A

-fever
-malaise
-cervical lymphadenitis

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4
Q

can chicken pox cause oral lesions?

A

yes- may cause yellow/grey ulcers

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5
Q

what is a complication of chicken pox?

A

-those who have had chicken pox can develop a different disease in adults caused by the same virus- shingles.

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6
Q

what is shingles associated with?

A

immunodeficiency and can affect trigeminal nerve in the long term.

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7
Q

what are the symptoms of shingles?

A

-pain
-unilateral rash- vesicles that become scabs

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8
Q

what are the dental implications of shingles?

A

mandibular zoster
-can cause ipsilateral mouth ulcers on buccal and lingual mucosa

maxillary zoster
-can cause ipsilateral mouth ulcers on palate and vestibule

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9
Q

what is a rare complication of shingles?

A

Ramsay hunt syndrome
-facial palsy
-ear rash
-ipsilateral ulcers on soft palate

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10
Q

what is the tx for shingles?

A

-analgesics
-aciclovir

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11
Q

what oral disease can result from herpes simplex virus?

A

primary herpatic gingivostomatitis

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12
Q

what are the features of gingivostomatitis?

A

-painful oedema and erthyma of gingivae

-tiny vesicles on perioral skin, vermillion border and mucosa

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13
Q

what systemic symptoms can gingivostomatitis cause?

A

-fever
-malaise
-cervical lymphadenopathy

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14
Q

what can gingivostomatitis be mistaken for?

A

teething- common in age 6 month-6 years

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15
Q

what are the complications of gingivostomatitis?

A

-intra oral ulceration
-herpetic whitlow
-eye infections
-herpes labialis

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16
Q

what virus causes HFAMD?

A

coxackie virus

17
Q

what does HFAMD cause?

A

painful ulcers and vesicles in mouth and on hands and feet

18
Q

what are complications of HFAMD?

A

inflammation of brain and heart (encephalitis and myocarditis)

19
Q

what is mumps?

A

viral infection of the salivary glands caused by mumps virus

20
Q

what does mumps cause?

A

painful bilateral swelling of the parotid glands

21
Q

what is measles?

A

viral infection causes systemic symptoms and skin rash

22
Q

what are the clinical features of measles?

A

-koplik white/grey oral spots
-small red macules’s with white necrotic centres

23
Q

what is rubella?

A

highly infectious disease causing rash on face, behind ears, fever, sore throat, enlarged lymph nodes

24
Q

what is the danger of rubella?

A

it can seriously damage or kill the foetus

25
Q

what causes herpangina?

A

a coxackie virus

26
Q

what characterises herpangina?

A

vesicles on soft palate

27
Q

what are the symptoms of herpangina?

A

-fever
-malaise
-sore throat
-trouble swallowing

28
Q

what can febrile illness cause?

A

enamel hypoplasia

29
Q

what is enamel hypoplasia?

A

incomplete or defective formation of enamel- altering form and tooth colour

30
Q

why does enamel hypoplasia result?

A

due to disturbance or damage to ameloblasts during enamel matrix formation

31
Q

what is the most sensitive cell groups in the body?

A

ameloblasts

32
Q

what teeth can enamel hypoplasia affect?

A

primary or permanent- but only those developing at the time of illness

33
Q

give examples of illnesses that can lead to hypoplasia.

A

-measles
-chickenpox

34
Q

what does enamel hypoplasia look like on the tooth?

A

horizontal rows of pits on the tooth surface- most affected are permanent incisors and 1st molars

35
Q

what affects the severity of hypoplasia?

A

the extent of ameloblast damage/destruction

36
Q
A