Definition of Disease, hand-foot-and-mouth
Disease, hand-foot-and-mouth: A viral syndrome
with a rash on the hands
and
feet and in the mouth. The internal rash (the enanthem)
consists of
blisters
and little ulcers that may involve not only the lining of
the mouth but
also
the gums, palate, and tongue. The external rash on the body
(the exanthem)
typically affects the hands (most commonly), feet and,
sometimes, the
buttocks. There may also be sore throat, irritability,
decreased appetite,
and fever.
The disease is caused by various viruses,
including several
types
of coxackievirus-coxsackieviruses A16 (most often), A5, A9,
A10, B1 and
B3, and enterovirus 71. The incubation period is short, on
the order of 4 to
6
days. The disease is most frequent in summer and fall. The
rate of clinical
expression in hand-foot-and-mouth disease is high with the
enanthem-exanthem
pattern evident in nearly 100% of preschoolers, nearly 40%
of school-age
children and about 10% of adults. The illness is
characteristically self-limited and is usually over and done within a
week when due
to its most
common
cause: coxsackievirus A16. In outbreaks due to enterovirus
71, the illness
may
be more severe with complications such as viral meningitis
and encephalitis
and paralytic disease. However, hand-foot-and-mouth
disease as a rule
tends
fortunately to be mild and self-limited.
The condition was
first reported
in
1956 in Australia and by the early 60s had emerged as a
common childhood
illness around the world. It is also called hand-foot-and-mouth
syndrome.
The
hyphens are sometimes dropped and it is termed hand, foot,
and mouth
disease
or syndrome.
Last Editorial Review: 10/27/1998 5:20:00 AM
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