Bornholm disease | |
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Other names | Epidemic pleurodynia, epidemic myalgia, devils grip, Bamble disease |
Coxsackie B virus, the most common cause of Bornholm disease | |
Pronunciation |
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Specialty | Infectious diseases |
Symptoms | intermittent pleuritic chest pain, intermittent abdominal pain, fever |
Complications | rare complications include myocarditis, respiratory failure, hepatic necrosis with coagulopathy, and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC) |
Duration | between one day and one week |
Causes | Coxsackie B, Coxsackie A, Echovirus |
Diagnostic method | clinical diagnosis after ruling out more emergent causes of chest and abdominal pain |
Differential diagnosis | Acute appendicitis, cholecystitis, pancreatitis, pulmonary embolism, acute coronary syndrome, costochondritis, amongst others |
Prevention | Hand hygiene |
Treatment | NSAIDs, intercostal Lidocaine injections, symptomatic treatment |
Prognosis | Favorable |
Deaths | None reported |
Bornholm disease, also known as epidemic pleurodynia,[1] is a condition characterized by myositis of the abdomen or chest caused by the Coxsackie B virus or other viruses.[2] The myositis manifests as an intermittent stabbing pain in the musculature that is seen primarily in children and young adults.[3]
It is named after the Danish island of Bornholm in the Baltic Sea where an outbreak was one of the first to be described.