0521779407-19 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:21
1322 Sarcoidosis Scabies
follow-up
During Treatment
■Assess clinical, biochemical and radiologic activity of disease (com-
mon markers: hypercalcemia, worsening lung function, liver func-
tion tests, ACE, progressive changes on CXR or CT)
complications and prognosis
Complications
■Blindness, pulmonary fibrosis, upper lung cavitations with myce-
toma, cardiac involvement leading to arrhythmias, sudden death,
CHF
Prognosis
■CXR stage as prognostic guide:
➣Stage I: remission of 55–90% of patients
➣Stage II: remission 40–70%
➣Stage III: remission 10–20%
➣Stage IV: remission 0%
➣Lofgren’s syndrome: 90% remission
■>85% of spontaneous remissions occur within 2 y of presentation
■10-fold increase in mortality with cardiac or neurosarcoid
SCABIES
KAREN GOULD, MD
history & physical
History
■close household contacts or sexual partners
■clinical manifestations delayed 3–4 weeks after first exposure
➣symptoms appear earlier with subsequent infestations
■epidemics seen in nursing homes, hospitals
Signs & Symptoms
■pruritic eruption with excoriations
■pruritus worse at night
■lesions often bilateral, usually involving finger web spaces, wrists,
penis
■linear burrows and small erythematous papules seen