Hand Foot and Mouth Disease

Common viral illness characterized by vesicular eruptions on the hands, feet, and oral mucosa, often accompanied by fever

Aetiology

Caused by Picornaviridae family (Enteroviruses), most commonly:
  • Coxsackievirus A16 (most typical, mild)
  • Enterovirus 71 (EV71) (more severe; neurological complications possible)
  • Coxsackie A6 (can cause atypical more severe rash)
Transmission:
  • Fecal-oral route (most common)
  • Respiratory droplets
  • Contact with vesicle fluid or contaminated surfaces
Highly contagious, especially during the first week.

Pathophysiology

  • Virus enters via oropharyngeal mucosa.
  • Replicates in lymphoid tissue of the GI/respiratory tract.
  • Viremia → dissemination to skin and mucosa.
  • Produces vesicular lesions and sometimes systemic complications.

Clinical Presentation

Prodrome:
  • Low-grade fever 1-2 days
  • Malaise
  • Sore throat
  • Decreased appetite
Exanthem (skin lesions):
  • Vesicles on palms and soles, sometimes buttocks and extremities
  • Non-pruritic, may be tender
  • Lesions progress from macules → papules → vesicles → crust
notion image
Enanthem (oral lesions):
  • Painful vesicles/ulcers on tongue, buccal mucosa, hard & soft palate
  • Causes drooling, refusal to eat or drink
Course: Symptoms usually resolve within 7–10 days

Investigations

Primarily clinical based on age and characteristic lesion distribution.
Investigations rarely required but may include:
  • PCR from throat/stool/vesicle fluid (when needed in severe/atypical cases)
  • Serology not routinely used

Management

HFMD is typically self-limiting.
Supportive treatment:
  • Adequate hydration (important due to painful oral ulcers)
  • Antipyretics (paracetamol/ibuprofen)
  • Topical oral anesthetics for mouth ulcers (avoid benzocaine in young children)
  • Good hygiene to prevent spread
Hospitalization indications:
  • Dehydration
  • Neurological complications
  • Severe pain or inability to swallow
  • Signs of respiratory/cardio instability
There is no specific antiviral therapy for routine cases.