Etiology And Pathophysiology
- Caused by burrowing and toxic antigen release by female Sarcoptes scabiei var hominis mite.
- Transmitted predominantly via direct physical and sexual contact.
- Fomite transmission remains uncommon since mites die within 72 hours off human host.
- Adult female measures 0.4 mm, possesses four sets of legs, and features hemispheric body with transverse corrugations and dorsal spines.
- Gravid female exudes keratolytic enzymes, excavating shallow stratum corneum wells within 30 minutes.
- Tract extends 0.5 to 5.0 mm daily strictly along stratum granulosum boundary.
- Mite deposits 10 to 25 oval eggs alongside brown fecal pellets termed scybala.
- Eggs hatch within 3 to 5 days, releasing larvae that migrate rapidly to skin surface.
- Larvae molt into nymphs, achieving complete reproductive maturity within 2 to 3 weeks.
- Primary initial infestation exhibits 1-month latent asymptomatic phase while antigen sensitization occurs.
- Subsequent reinfestation triggers intense immunologic hypersensitivity reaction within mere hours.
Clinical Manifestations And Variants
- Primary pathognomonic lesion represents grey, threadlike, serpentine burrow terminating in minute papule.
- Characterized universally by intense, generalized pruritus worsening significantly at night.
- Typical older child distribution involves interdigital spaces, wrist flexors, anterior axillary folds, buttocks, umbilicus, and genitalia.
- Head, neck, palms, and soles remain characteristically spared in older immunocompetent patients.
| Clinical Variant | Diagnostic Morphology | Typical Anatomical Distribution | Target Pediatric Population |
|---|
| Infantile Scabies | Bullae, pustules, wheals, and diffuse eczematous eruption masking classical burrows. | Face, scalp, neck, palms, and soles consistently affected. | Infants and toddlers. |
| Nodular Scabies | Pruritic, red-brown or violaceous firm nodules representing pronounced hypersensitivity reaction. | Covered areas including axillae, groin, and male genitalia. | Children and sexually active adolescents. |
| Crusted (Norwegian) | Massive hyperinfestation featuring psoriasiform hyperkeratotic plaques, thick crusts, and dystrophic nails. | Scalp, face, neck, hands, feet, with dense subungual mite populations. | Immunocompromised, Down syndrome, institutionalized patients. |
| Canine Scabies | Tiny papules, vesicles, wheals lacking classic burrows due to host incompatibility. | Arms, chest, abdomen representing direct contact points with infested animal. | Pet owners exposed to Sarcoptes scabiei var canis. |
Complications And Differential Diagnosis
- Severe excoriations precipitate secondary pyodermas including impetigo, ecthyma, folliculitis, and cellulitis.
- Streptococcal superinfection potentially triggers acute poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis.
- Massive infestation in crusted variants causes significant peripheral eosinophilia and generalized lymphadenopathy.
- Histopathology of nodular scabies mimics malignant lymphoid neoplasms, demonstrating deep perivascular infiltrate containing atypical mononuclear cells, histiocytes, and plasma cells.
- Diagnostic confirmation requires microscopic visualization of mites, ova, or scybala from targeted epidermal scrapings.
Therapeutic Management Protocol
Environmental And Supportive Measures
- Treat all household contacts and caretakers simultaneously regardless of clinical symptom presence.
- Launder all clothing, towels, and bed linens utilizing hot water exceeding 130°F followed by high-heat drying.
- Isolate non-washable fomites in sealed plastic bags for minimum 72 hours.
- Post-scabietic pruritus frequently persists for weeks secondary to lingering retained mite antigens.
- Manage residual pruritus aggressively utilizing topical corticosteroids and systemic antihistamines.
- Canine variant remains self-limiting in humans; mandates prompt veterinary treatment of infested animal.
Specific Pharmacotherapy
| Medication Agent | Administration Protocol | Clinical Notes And Contraindications |
|---|
| Permethrin 5% Cream | Apply entire body neck down. Wash off after 8 to 14 hours. Repeat application in 1 week. | First-line gold standard therapy. Infant protocol mandates scalp and facial application. Safe for infants >2 months. |
| Oral Ivermectin | Single oral dose of 200 micrograms/kg. Repeat identical dose in 14 days. | Indicated for severe, crusted, or endemic institutional outbreaks. Contraindicated in children <15 kg or <5 years. |
| Crotamiton 10% Lotion | Apply topically twice daily for 14 consecutive days. | Recommended alternative specifically for neonates and infants <2 months. |
| Benzyl Benzoate 10-25% | Administer two to three sequential applications at 12 to 24-hour intervals. | Highly irritant preparation. Exacerbates pruritus and preexisting eczematous dermatitis. |
| Lindane 1% Lotion | Apply neck down, wash off strictly after 8 to 12 hours. | Carries significant risk of systemic neurotoxicity. Strictly contraindicated in infants <2 months, pregnancy, and breastfeeding. |