T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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105.1 | Roseola | RDVAX::DIEWALD | | Mon May 11 1992 18:32 | 15 |
|
My son had roseola a few months ago. He had a very hi temp of 103-104 for
3 days. The strange thing was that he was quite happy. He still ate and
drank and played. On the fourth day the fever was gone and he developed a
slight rash all over and was very very cranky. This lasted for a couple of
days and then he was fine. From what I read and got from the doctor, this
is typical of roseola. They are happy even with the high temp, and then as
soon as it drops they get very cranky for a few days.
I used liquid ibuprofen which took the fever down 2 to 3 degrees! It requires
a prescription so ask your doctor about it.
Hang in there.
Jill
|
105.2 | | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Tue May 12 1992 10:12 | 6 |
| Ryan had it as a baby - maybe 12-15 months old?. The temp didn't get
that high - as a matter of fact, I didn't know he had roseola til I
took his clothes off at the doctor's office and found the little red
speckles all over his body. Typically the fever precedes the spots, and
the spots are gone in a few days.
|
105.3 | And on the fifth day... | CIVIC::HALL | | Tue May 12 1992 14:09 | 13 |
| Ashley had it at about 1 1/2 - we were very worried because she ran a
high fever for four days - Pedi checked her for a variety of things.
At night her temp would climb to 104 - we gave her lukewarm baths -
sometimes two a night which would bring the fever down a few degrees.
Finally, on the fifth day, she was covered head to tow with little pink
spots - they only lasted about 3 hours - we were really relieved to see
that it was Roseolla!
No side effects at all, and her fevers have never climbed that high
again.
Judy
|
105.4 | ? | ROYALT::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Tue May 12 1992 14:20 | 7 |
| Well, we've had our share of rashes and such with our kids, but
I've never run into this one... what is it?
Thanks,
- Tom
|
105.5 | | PROXY::HOPKINS | All one race - Human | Tue May 12 1992 14:26 | 7 |
|
>> what is it?
It's also sometimes referred to as "baby measles" but isn't really
measles.
Marie
|
105.6 | My son had it... | WMOIS::PLANT_D | | Tue May 12 1992 14:31 | 18 |
| HI,
My son had it a few years ago. He was probably around 2 years as well.
He had a very high temp (103-104). It wouldn't break. All our doctor
said was to give him luke warm baths, tylenol, and let it run it's
course. I don't remember how long the temp last (7 days maybe??) then
a rash is suppose to appear.
My son did fine, he never did get much of the rash. In my case, it was
really nothing to worry about.
He was fussy and clingy but that is about it.
Hope she feels better!
|
105.7 | Real young Roseola | ICS::CWILSON | Charlene | Tue May 12 1992 14:48 | 26 |
| Sheryl,
My daughter has Roseola (so did I as a kid ironically), she was only 9
weeks old, I will never forget it. It was the day of her christening.
She had such a high temp, I thought our thermometer was wrong. 104 it
said. I called the pedi and when a kid is this young with that high of
a temp, they don't like it. I had to bring her in to the pediatric ward
as a direct admit at the hospital. She stayed there for 5 days and then
the fever finally broke and she had that little fine rash all over.
Then she was crabby for like 3 days when we got home just getting rid
of that rash.
It was scary to me, because they tried to get an IV in the poor little
thing and couldn't. Took them 4 hrs and they finally got it in to a
leg.
Usually it is not that big of a deal for older kids. Every age is
affected differently. I also had it as a newborn. I am expecting
again, so you can bet I will be watching for it this time.
Good luck. Just keep giving your little one lukewarm/cool baths and
even a rag on the ol' forehead if they'll tolerate it and plenty of
baby tylenol or a brand of that sort.
Charlene
|
105.8 | Diagnosing Roseola | CSTEAM::WRIGHT | | Wed May 13 1992 13:58 | 35 |
| I had never heard of Roseola before I read this note, but now I'm
wondering if it is what my son has right now! Would appreciate any
comments.
Last Wednesday and Thursday my 18 month old had a fever (about 101), so I
took him to the pediatrician. She said he had a slight ear infection
and prescribed an antibiotic that he had been on successfully in the
past. The fever went away within 24 hours of being on the antibiotic
plus Tylenol. Well, on Monday he broke out with a rash on his neck,
stomach, back, and thighs. The rash looked like little red bumps. He
was also very fussy. I took him back to the pediatrician and she said
that he must be having a reaction to the antibiotic, so she prescribed a
different one. By today (Wendesday) the rash is gone.
Now I'm starting to wonder if it was Roseola and not a reaction to the
antibiotic, as my pediatrician thought. What's making me wonder is the
thought that if he had a reaction to the antibiotic, wouldn't it have
shown up within a day or two of being on that antibiotic, instead of
4 days later? I guess I'm wondering if my pediatrician just made a
quick/easy guess by blaming it on the antibiotic. From other people's
notes about Roseola, I guess the rash would have gone away in a couple
of days anyway, regardless of the switch to another antibiotic.
I know this probably doesn't matter now, anyway, but I just feel like
I need to know what he had. I'm taking him back to the pedi next week
for a follow-up and will probably mention this then. I don't want to
"accuse" her of a misdiagnosis, but still...... I'm surprised she
didn't raise it as a possibility.
By the way, does the Roseola rash itch or not?
Jane
|
105.9 | More on Roseola | ICS::CWILSON | Charlene | Wed May 13 1992 14:09 | 5 |
| I don't believe the rash itches. But he would have had a high fever for
like 4 days straight, then the rash. Did he have the temp for that
long? Has he been super cranky?
|
105.10 | small red dots? | TRACTR::MAZUR | | Wed May 13 1992 15:30 | 14 |
| Hi Jane,
My daughter's rash looked like little pinkish/red pimples and
they were seperate, not in clusters -- they were on her tummy
last night and this morning they were gone!
I'm taking Alexa to the pedi today cuz now she sounds like
she's got a terrible cold coming on...so I'm going to discuss
the rash with the doctor and see what she says. I'll let you
know.
Hang in there!
Sheryl
|
105.11 | | GOOEY::ROLLMAN | | Thu May 14 1992 09:30 | 7 |
|
I read somewhere recently that Marlee Matsomething (the actress who started
in Children of a Lesser God and is on USA TV now as a lawyer or cop or something)
became deaf because of roseola.
Anyone know anything about hearing loss because of roseola?
|
105.12 | Roseola is flat | TRACTR::MAZUR | | Thu May 14 1992 10:17 | 9 |
| re: .10
I took my daughter to the pedi yesterday and there were a few
remaining "dots" on her abdomen and the pedi said that they were
not the roseola rash. The Roseola rash is flat she said, not raised.
Just an FYI...
|
105.13 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Thu May 14 1992 10:32 | 15 |
| Uncontrolled fever can cause all kinds of neurological damage, including
hearing loss. So, it is likely that the FEVER caused the problem and not
the roseola per se.
Roseola rash is a flat rash and is well spread across the chest and upper
torso. It is not a spotty rash.
A typical roseola attack starts with 2 to 3 days of high fever with usually
no other symptoms. When the flat bright red rash comes out, the fever subsides.
There is no specific treatment, apart from plenty of fluids to avoid
dehydration, and a fever reducer such as acetaminophen (Tylenol (tm)).
Cool baths often make the child feel better. It typically is limited to
children in the 2-4 year old age group.
Stuart
|
105.14 | scarlet fever? | TAMARA::SORN | songs and seeds | Thu May 14 1992 11:48 | 5 |
| When my brother had roseola, they were concerned that it would lead
to scarlet fever because he had a heart murmur; anyone hear of this?
This was many many years ago...
Cyn
|
105.15 | Never heard of it but doesn't mean it can't be | PROXY::HOPKINS | All one race - Human | Thu May 14 1992 12:43 | 6 |
| RE. >>scarlet fever
Are you sure that's not reumatic (sp?) fever? Reumatic fever can cause
a heart murmer because of the high fever.
Marie
|
105.16 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Thu May 14 1992 16:06 | 12 |
| Again, this is another one of those cause and effect things. Murmurs are
due to a heart valve not sealing properly. This usually occurs because of
a physical defect with the valve, but it can occur with motor neurological
defects which in turn can be caused by unchecked fevers. Thus you can
develop a heart murmur, or goodness knows how many other neurological based
problems all from unchecked excessive fevers, be they from Roseola, Scarlet
Fever, Rheumatic Fever, the 'Flu, or a bacterial infection.
Rheumatic fever (which develops from a strep infection) can cause damage
to the heart muscle and is noted for it.
Stuart
|
105.17 | | CSSE64::BELFORTI | Keep in mind... One Day at a Time | Thu May 14 1992 16:21 | 10 |
| Stuart.. don't mean to argue, but when my daughter was 3 she had a
strep throat that developed into *Scarlet* fever. Sarah has a very
high tolerance for pain, so she never complained until the Strep had
gone full blown... she developed the rash 24 hours after complaining.
The Dr. said her throat had to have been sore for several days... but
she never complained.
Strep can turn into Streptococcal Heart disease, if not treated!
M-L
|
105.18 | Let's make sure we are talking apples and apples | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Thu May 14 1992 16:49 | 11 |
| I didn't say that strep and scarlet fever were unrelated ... In fact
Scarlet Fever IS a Strep type A infection. The bacterial toxins are
responsible for the rash ... Strep heart disease occurs when the
infection site starts in / spreads to the heart muscle and causes
damage there. This is not the same as the motor neurological defects
caused by high fevers obtainable from Roseola, Rheumatic Fever, Scarlet
Fever etc etc etc.
Strep and Roseola, which we were discussing are two different things.
Stuart
|
105.19 | Is this Roseola? | MACNAS::BHARMON | KEEP GOING NO MATTER WHAT | Fri Nov 20 1992 09:58 | 11 |
| This must be what Daniel has. He had a high temperature for four
days. We gave him Capol and luke warm baths. He also had a bit
of diarrhoea, was very cranky. His temperature has dropped and
he has come out with a flat rash, which does not seem to be giving
him any trouble, in fact he is nearily back to himself. If this
is Roseola, is it contagious. Is it safe to bring him out, well
wrapped up, as he seems to be feeling much better. He is 11 1/2
months old.
Bernie
|
105.20 | contagious until rash is gone | COMET::MONGER | | Fri Nov 20 1992 12:01 | 11 |
| Sounds like Roseola to me, my son had it at six months of age, and he
being my first, of course I was a paranoid mom who went to the ER.
He had the fever on the weekend and into the first part of the week,
so my follow up visit to the pedi on Monday, they said that's probably
what it was and to look for a rash any day. The ER didn't do anything
except try to bring the fever down. The pedi said he was contagious
until the rash was gone. Justin's rash lasted 3 days, but I've heard
that others only have it for a day. I'd probably try to stay on the
safe side and stay home til it was gone...just my opinion.
Von
|
105.21 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Fri Nov 20 1992 16:09 | 4 |
| That's classic roseola symptoms ...
FYI ... the noter mentioned the medicine Capol ... this is the
English equivalent of Tylenol syrup.
|
105.22 | Better | MACNAS::BHARMON | KEEP GOING NO MATTER WHAT | Mon Nov 23 1992 05:03 | 5 |
| Thank God! Daniel is much better. The rash has gone. I kept him
indoors all weekend. He is now back to himself.
Bernie
|
105.23 | Roeaola | BRAT::FULTZ | DONNA FULTZ | Fri Dec 09 1994 08:23 | 6 |
|
IS this contageous?
Thanks
Donna
|
105.24 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | imagine | Fri Dec 09 1994 08:34 | 1 |
| Yes
|
105.25 | asking | BRAT::FULTZ | DONNA FULTZ | Fri Dec 09 1994 08:54 | 14 |
|
Why I am wondering is that can Adults get it or it's only children?
I saw my niece on Sunday and she broke out into a terrible fever
yesterday(thursday)(104) they brought her to the doctors and that
what he said she had. He said it was 3 days coming three days
three days going..
I'm just worried about Nina and that I don't infect her.
Donna
|
105.26 | not sure | MONKC::TRIOLO | | Fri Dec 09 1994 09:23 | 5 |
|
I was told only kids under 2 get it but I don't know if
adults are "carriers".
/V
|
105.27 | | PASTA::BERNSTEIN | | Sun Dec 11 1994 17:59 | 8 |
| I *think* (based on my family's experience) that
- full-blown roseola (several days of fever, followed by a rash)
only occurs in children under 2 yrs
- it is a virus, and those over 2 can catch it (symptoms for
my older son was 48 hrs of high fever, no rash)
- once you have had the virus, then you are immune
/Deb
|
105.28 | IMHO | SAPPHO::DUBOIS | Trust in God, but tie your camel | Mon Dec 12 1994 13:14 | 4 |
| Donna, definately check with your preferred pediatrician. In your situation,
you don't want to take too many chances.
Carol
|
105.29 | | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Mon Dec 12 1994 14:13 | 13 |
| Hmmmmmmm .... I was told that only kids under 1 can get it, that adults
can't get it or anything else from it. And that they are contagious
only when they have the fever, not before, and not after (when the rash
breaks out). FWIW - Jonathan had it (on his b.day I believe), but only
had the high fever part then (ooops! he was contagious!), had his b.day
party anyway, and no one got sick from a result of being with him.
Check w/ your Dr. though, or if you can't get them, there's always
Ask-a-Nurse in Manchester .... 626-2626 (I'm 90% sure that's it)
They're there ALL the time, and quite wonderful (and free, except for
the toll call).
Patty
|
105.30 | From a Pedi | BRAT::FULTZ | DONNA FULTZ | Tue Dec 13 1994 13:55 | 8 |
|
From a pedi.. Adults cannot get it. Only children under 3 can get it.
You can have more than once. It is only contageous when the child has
a temp and an Adult cannot transmit it to a child.
Donna
|
105.31 | Roseola | HYLNDR::ROY | | Sat Mar 18 1995 12:41 | 23 |
| I am glad I checked this notes file. Information on Roseola has been
very helpful. For the past 4 days our son who is almost 12 months has
had a high temp. He reached 106 one night! Many tub baths later and of
course a visit to the doctor the fever is gone, but since yesterday he
has been very very cranky. He does have what appears to be red flat
spots on his neck and chest area. Sounds exactly like roseola after
reading responses to this note. They verified thru blood and urine
tests that it was not bacterial (Urine-to check for unirary tract
infection).
He is doing much better, just looking forward to getting thru this
cranky phase. We were lucky he had no convulsions with the high fever.
He averaged 104 for a couple of days. When he was down to 102 it was a
relief.
We know those thermoscan thermometers only go to 105.9 before returning
error code 2 (patient temp. out of range!) I'll be glad if we never see
that again. I have enough with translating error codes at work...
Main thing was keep a close eye on him and keep the temp. down. They
gave us motrin which helped much more than tylenol.
-Roy-
|
105.32 | | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Mon Mar 20 1995 15:44 | 10 |
| Roy,
Sometimes in cases where you can't get the fever down, they'll
recommend motrin/advil (ibuprofen) *AND* tylenol at the same time.
They work differently, so it's not a problem to take them together.
And the combination can actually bring some relief to your child!
Glad things are getting better!
Patty
|
105.33 | Tylenol and Motrin = Good Combo! | IVOSS1::SZAFIRSKI_LO | IVF...I'm Very Fertile! | Mon Mar 20 1995 19:25 | 10 |
| When Chelsea had Roseola and her temp exceeded 104, we would give
her Tylenol and follow it with the Motrin and hour later. This
was with checking her temp after an hour after the Tylenol, if it
was above 102, the pedi said to dose her with the motrin. It would
always be the magic combo that brought her right down.
Those high temps are scarey...glad things are on there way back to
normal!
...Lori
|
105.34 | A new case in Central Mass. | SUBPAC::BJUBINVILLE | CMP-6 Equipment Engineering | Tue Jul 09 1996 23:03 | 26 |
|
My daughter just got off of a good case of Roseola. The
usual thing happened, 102 for two days, rash everywhere for
4 days.
Some inputs from her doctor who said new info came
through.
Contagious during the temp. part Roseola, not during
rash stage.
A derivative of the German Measles
Effects kids up to 2 years old and can't get them
twice (.1% chance of getting twice or over
2 years old, VERY rare, but it could happen!)
rash is NOT itchy and does NOT attribute to any
habits, including being fussy. If they are fussy
during the fever, that's normal. During the rash
stage, being fussy has nothing to do with it.
BJ
|