Chikungunya

Revision as of 12:03, 31 October 2014 by Rossdonaldson1 (talk | contribs)

Background

  • Aedes mosquito transmitted virus, originally found in West Africa but cases in the Americas beginning in 2013
  • Frequently difficult clinically to differentiate from dengue fever

Clinical Features

Acute

  • Fever typically greater than 39deg
  • Polyarthralgias, bilateral and symmetrical
  • Rash- maculopapular
  • Myalgias
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Lymphocytopenia
  • Elevated LFTs
  • AKI
  • 3-7d incubation period

Chronic

  • May cause long-term symptoms, with long-term musculoskeletal pain from months to years post infection[1] with up to 60% of people reporting prolonged arthralgia three years following initial infection.[2]

Differential Diagnosis

Fever in traveler

Travel-related skin conditions

See also domestic U.S. ectoparasites

Workup

  • CBC w diff, Cr, LFTs
  • contact CDC for specialized testing; recommends tiger top tube

Management

Symptomatic treatment: acute symptoms usually resolve in 7-10d

Disposition

  • Normally able to be treated as outpatient, unless complication

See Also

External Links

Sources

CDC