Scabies & Rickets Information
Name: Scabies
- Alternative names: Sarcoptes scabiei
- Definition: A contagious skin disease caused by a very small mite
- Causes, incidence, and risk factors: Scabies is found worldwide among
people of all groups and ages. It is spread by direct contact with infected
individuals and less often by sharing clothing or bedding. Sometimes whole
families are affected. The mites that cause scabies burrow into the skin
and deposit their eggs forming a characteristic burrow that looks like
a pencil mark. Eggs mature in 21 days. The itchy rash is an allergic response
to the mite. Mites maybe more widespread on a babies skin causing pimples
over the trunk, or small blisters over the palms and soles. In young children,
the head, neck, shoulders, palms and soles are involved. In older children,
hands, wrists, and abdomen are involved.
- Prevention: Avoid contact with infected persons, clothing bedding.
- Symptoms:
- itching, especially at night
- thin, pencil-mark lines on the skin
- rashes
- Abrasions of the skin from scratching and digging
- Signs and tests: Examination of the skin shows characteristic signs
of scabies.
- Tests include microscopic examination of skin scrapings taken from
a burrow.
- Treatment: The objective of treatment is to eliminate the infestation.
There is no known home remedy. Prescription creams and lotions are applied
all over the body. It may be necessary to treat the whole family or sexual
partners of infected individuals, even if no symptoms are present.
- Kwell lotion
- Elimite
- Change and launder all bedding and clothing.
- Itching (pruritus) may persist after treatment begins, but will disappear
if treatment continues exactly as your health care provider prescribes.
Itching can be minimized by cool soaks and calamine lotions. Acetaminophen
will provide comfort.
- Expectations (prognosis): Scabies are annoying but not a serious disease.
- Complications: A secondary skin infection can occur because of intense
scratching.
- Calling your health care provider: Call your health care provider if
you have symptoms of scabies, or if someone with whom you have close contact
(not necessarily sexual contact) has been diagnosed with scabies, or if
improvement is not seen 72 hours after starting treatment recommended by
your health care provider.
Name: Rickets
- Alternative names: renal osteodystrophy; pediatric osteomalacia; renal
rickets; vitamin D deficiency; deficiency - vitamin D; osteomalacia in
children
- Definition: A disorder involving softening and weakening of the bones
of children, primarily caused by lack of vitamin D and/or lack of calcium
or phosphate.
- Causes, incidence, and risk factors: Rickets is a disorder caused by
insufficiency or inefficient action of activated vitamin D in the body
during childhood. Vitamin D is a fat-soluble vitamin that may be absorbed
from the intestines or may be produced by the skin when the skin is exposed
to ultraviolet light (particularly sunlight). It is converted to its active
form by the body in 2 steps, occurring first in the liver and completed
in the kidneys. In its active form, vitamin D acts as a hormone to regulate
calcium absorption from the intestine and to regulate levels of calcium
and phosphate in the bones. Active vitamin D is assisted by the actions
of other body hormones.
- Because vitamin D is fat soluble, conditions that reduce digestion
or absorption of fats will decrease the ability of vitamin D to be absorbed
from the intestines. Sunlight is important to skin production of vitamin
D, and environmental conditions where sunlight exposure is limited may
reduce this source of vitamin D. Lack of vitamin D production by the skin
may occur with indoor confinement or working indoors during the daylight
hours, or it may occur in climates with little exposure to sunlight.
- When the body is deficient in vitamin D, it is unable to properly regulate
calcium and phosphate levels. If the blood levels of these minerals becomes
low, the other body hormones may stimulate release of calcium and phosphate
from the bones to the bloodstream.
- Rickets is a bone disease of children. It causes progressive softening
and weakening of the bone structure. There is a loss of calcium and phosphate
from the bone, which eventually causes destruction of the supportive matrix.
The parathyroid gland may increase functioning to compensate for decreased
levels of calcium in the bloodstream, resulting in even more loss of calcium
and phosphorous as it is reabsorbed from the bones. In severe cases, cysts
may develop in the bones.
- Rickets is fairly rare. It is most likely to occur during periods of
rapid growth where the body demands high levels of calcium and phosphate.
It is usually seen in young children 6 to 24 months old and is uncommon
in newborns.
- Nutritional causes of rickets occur with a lack of vitamin D in the
diet or with malabsorption disorders characterized by poor fat absorption,
including steatorrhea, sprue, and short bowel syndrome. A dietary lack
of vitamin D may occasionally occur in people on a vegetarian diet who
do not drink milk products or in people who are lactose intolerant (those
who have trouble digesting milk products). A dietary lack of calcium and
phosphorous may also play a part in nutritional causes of rickets. Rickets
from a dietary lack of these minerals is rare because calcium and phosphorous
are present in milk and green vegetables. A dietary lack of calcium causes
osteoporosis (an adult disorder causing brittle bones) more often than
it causes rickets.
- Hereditary rickets is a vitamin D-resistant form of rickets caused
when the kidney is unable to retain phosphate. It is an inherited, sex-linked
disorder.
- Rickets may also be caused by kidney disorders involving renal tubular
acidosis. The acidic condition of the body causes the calcium in the bones
to dissolve, leaving soft, weak bones.
- Occasionally, rickets may be caused in children with disorders of the
liver or biliary (liver secretion) system, when fats and vitamin D are
inadequately absorbed or when the vitamin D is not converted to its active
form.
- Renal osteodystrophy occurs in people with chronic renal failure. The
manifestation is virtually identical to that of rickets in children, and
that of osteomalacia or osteoporosis in adults.
- Prevention: Rickets may be avoided by maintaining an adequate intake
of calcium, phosphorous, and vitamin D. This may require dietary supplements
in people with associated gastrointestinal or other disorders.
- Renal causes of vitamin D should be treated promptly. Levels of calcium
and phosphorous should be monitored regularly in people with renal disorders.
- Symptoms:
- bone pain or tenderness
- arms, legs, spine, pelvis
- skeletal deformities
- bowlegs
- forward projection of the breastbone (pigeon chest)
- "bumps" in the rib cage ("rachitic rosary")
- asymmetrical or odd-shaped skull
- spine deformities (spine curves abnormally, including scoliosis or
kyphosis)
- pelvic deformities
- increased tendency toward bone fractures
- dental deformities
- delayed formation of teeth
- defects in the structure of teeth, holes in the enamel
- painful teeth, aching aggravated by sweets, or by cold/hot food or
drinks
- increased incidence of cavities in the teeth (dental caries)
- fever, especially at night
- restlessness, especially at night
- weakness, progressive
- decreased muscle tone (loss of muscle strength)
- decreased muscle development
- muscle cramps
- impaired growth
- short stature (adult is less than 5 feet tall)
- growth, slow (child 0-5 years)
- pectus excavatum
- sutures - separated
- Signs and tests: A musculoskeletal examination reveals tenderness or
pain of the bone itself, rather than joints or muscles. In some cases,
tetany (prolonged muscle spasm) may occur if serum levels of calcium are
low. Chvostek's sign may be positive (a spasm of facial muscles with tapping
over the facial nerve) indicating low serum levels of calcium.
- serum calcium and serum phosphorus may be low.
- Serum alkaline phosphatase may be high.
- Arterial blood gases may reveal metabolic acidosis.
- bone X-rays may show decalcification or changes in the shape/structure
of the bones.
- A bone biopsy is rarely performed but will confirm rickets.
- Other tests and procedures to determine cause may be performed, such
as:
- a PTH
- a calcium; urine
- a calcium (ionized)
- ALP (alkaline phosphatase) isoenzyme
- Treatment: The treatment goals are the relief of symptoms and the correction
of the cause. The replacement of deficient calcium, phosphorous, and/or
vitamin D causes symptoms to disappear. There may be a need to use the
biologically active form of vitamin D in people who have vitamin D-resistant
rickets or who have difficulty converting vitamin D to its active form.
Dietary sources of vitamin D include fish, liver, and processed milk. Exposure
to moderate amounts of sunlight is encouraged. The underlying cause must
be treated to prevent recurrence. Maintaining good posture helps to correct
skeletal deformities. Positioning or bracing may be used to reduce or prevent
deformities. A surgical correction of some skeletal deformities may be
necessary.
- Expectations (prognosis): The disorder may be corrected with replacement
of deficient minerals and vitamin D. Laboratory values and X-rays usually
improve after about 1 week, although some cases may be resistant and require
large doses of minerals and vitamin D.
- If rickets is not corrected while children are still growing, skeletal
deformities and short stature may be permanent, but if it is corrected
while the child is young skeletal deformities often reduce or disappear
with time.
- Complications:
- chronic skeletal pain
- skeletal deformities
- skeletal fractures, may be spontaneous (without a cause such as trauma)
- Calling your health care provider: Call your health care provider if
symptoms indicate rickets may be present.
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