Infectious mononucleosis Flashcards
Define infectious mononucleosis
Clinical syndrome caused by primary EBV infection – HHV4
What are the causes/risk factors of infectious mononucleosis?
• Close contact e.g. kissing, sharing eating utensils
What are the symptoms of infectious mononucleosis?
Incubation period is 4-8 weeks • Sore throat • Fever • Fatigue • Headache • Malaise • Anorexia • Sweating • Abdominal pain
What are the signs of infectious mononucleosis?
- Pyrexia
- Oedema/erythema
- White creamy exudate on tonsils
- Palatal petechiae
- Cervical/generalised lymphadenopathy
- Splenomegaly
- Hepatomegaly
- Jaundice
- Erythematous rash
- Widespread maculopapular rash with amoxicillin/ampicillin
What investigations are carried out for infectious mononucleosis?
• Bloods - FBC – leucocyctosis - LFTs – elevated transaminases • Blood film – atypical lymphocytosis • Paul-Bunnell monospot – heterophile antibodies
What is the management for infectious mononucleosis?
• Give information and advice:
- Advise on the use of paracetamol or ibuprofen to relieve pain and fever symptoms.
- Explain the expected course of the illness and reassure the person that symptoms usually last for 2–3 weeks. Tiredness is common and is often the last symptom to resolve.
- Advise the person:
That exclusion from work or school is not necessary.
- To return to normal activities as soon as possible. If they are tired, they should tailor their activities to what they can manage comfortably.
- To limit spread of the disease, by avoiding kissing and sharing eating or drinking utensils, and to thoroughly clean all items that may have been contaminated by saliva.
- To avoid contact or collision sports or heavy lifting for the first month of the illness (to reduce the risk of splenic rupture).
• Advise the person to seek urgent medical advice if they:
- Develop stridor or respiratory difficulty.
- Have difficulty swallowing fluids or have signs of dehydration, such as reduced urine output.
- Become systemically very unwell.
- Develop abdominal pain (may indicate splenic rupture).
- If a person has ongoing fatigue
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What are the complications of infectious mononucleosis?
- Ruptured spleen.
- Kidney inflammation.
- Hemolytic anemia.
- Nervous system problems, such as encephalitis, meningitis, and other conditions.
- Inflammation of the heart muscle.
- Heart rhythm problems.
- Obstruction of the upper airways.