Conference Coverage

Dengue disease is here and U.S. physicians need to get to know it


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM ICAAC 2015

References

For example, a prospective hospital-based study in which Dutch and Indonesian investigators utilized serial daily bedside ultrasonography with a hand-held imaging device found that gallbladder wall edema at enrollment had a 35% positive predictive value and a 90% negative predictive value for subsequent severe dengue (PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2013 Jun 13;7[6]:e2277. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002277).

The critical phase typically lasts from day 3 or 4 through day 6 of the illness. This is followed by the recovery phase, marked by reabsorption of extravasated fluid over the course of 48-72 hours, increased diuresis, and stabilization of hemodynamic status. The appearance of a highly pruritic and erythematous rash with small islands of normal skin is another common finding that indicates the patient’s condition will continue to improve. A temporary bradycardia is also quite common during the recovery phase, according to Dr. Narvaez.

He reported having no financial conflicts of interest regarding his presentation.

bjancin@frontlinemedcom.com

Pages

Recommended Reading

Society of Hospital Medicine targets antibiotic overprescribing
MDedge Internal Medicine
Genomic sequencing technology reveals weakness in malaria vaccine
MDedge Internal Medicine
Early diagnosis of primary amebic meningoencephalitis key to treatment
MDedge Internal Medicine
SDEF: Improved responses with newer topical onychomycosis treatments
MDedge Internal Medicine
New antifungals effective with shorter treatment course for tinea pedis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Number of TB-caused deaths fall, but disease still kills 1 million-plus
MDedge Internal Medicine
Louse-borne relapsing fever appears again in Europe
MDedge Internal Medicine
Zika virus adds to dengue and chikungunya threat in Brazil
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA approves new single-tablet HIV treatment
MDedge Internal Medicine
Promising nonvaccine approaches to controlling dengue
MDedge Internal Medicine