Coxsackieviruses and Hand-Foot-and-Mouth

Coxsackieviruses are the major cause of hand-foot-and-mouth syndrome, an illness common in children around the world, especially in the summer & early fall.

Dr. Greene`s Answer:

How terrifying to live where a deadly virus runs unchecked through the children! In the modern world of international airplane travel, this terror could happen anywhere. Anytime.

Coxsackieviruses are the major cause of hand-foot-and-mouth syndrome, an illness common in children around the world — especially in the summer and early fall. Classically, this results in painful blisters in the mouth, on the palms and fingers of the hands, on the soles of the feet, and/or in the diaper area, appearing 3 to 6 days after exposure. Ouch! These blisters are filled with active virus and usually last for 7 to 10 days. Treatments (such as Tylenol, Motrin, and/or Benadryl) are given only to alleviate discomfort. Some children need stronger pain medicines (such as Tylenol with codeine) to help them eat. Children often tolerate soft, cool treats like Jell-O or milkshakes. Most of the time the children’s immune systems rally to defeat the virus, and the infection goes away without any serious complications. There is, however, a wide spectrum of other possibilities.

Symptoms of Coxsackieviruses

Many, if not most, children with coxsackievirus have no symptoms at all. Even so, the virus may be present in the saliva for 7 to 10 days and in the stool for months (making them contagious for months). Respiratory spread (others getting sick from breathing the same air) is usually limited to one week or less. However you look at it, though, I’m sorry to report that the contagious period is longer than 4 days, Jerri.

The most common route of spread is from child to child via stool-to-skin-to-mouth (or less commonly, saliva-to-hand-to-mouth). Houseflies help spread coxsackieviruses by carrying it on their feet and mouthparts. Coxsackieviruses survive long enough on toys and other objects to make these agents of spread as well.

CDC Recommendations for Children sith Hand-foot-andMouth Disease in Childcare Settings

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the United States has made recommendations for hand-foot-and-mouth disease in the child care setting:

  • “Make sure that all children and adults use good handwashing technique.” (I would add — especially after toileting and diaper changing and before eating!)
  • “Do not exclude ill persons, because exclusion may not prevent additional cases since the virus may continue to be excreted for weeks after the symptoms have disappeared. Also, some persons excreting the virus may have no symptoms. However, some benefit may be gained by excluding children who have blisters in their mouths and drool or who have weeping lesions on their hands.” (I would add that the rare child who is hospitalized with coxsackievirus should be isolated — with contact precautions.)

Coxsackieviruses belong to a large family called the enteroviruses (named for their tendency to thrive in the human intestine). The most famous member of this family is polio, which has caused childhood paralysis dating back from at least 1350 B.C. (Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Saunders 1992). There are more than two dozen specific species of coxsackieviruses, each causing a wide variety of symptoms.

Common Causes of Coxsackieviruses

The most common sickness caused by coxsackieviruses is a nonspecific febrile illness. Children have a fever which lasts an average of 3 days. Sometimes the fever leaves for 2 or 3 days and then returns. Sometimes this is the only symptom, but sometimes children also have a headache or a sore throat. Some children vomit at the beginning of the illness, or say, “My tummy hurts!” Sometimes they have one or two loose stools. Sometimes they have muscle pains, especially in the legs. Usually not much is found on physical exam or blood test. The illness usually lasts for between 24 hours and 6 days, but not always. You can see why this illness is called nonspecific!

Coxsackieviruses can cause the common cold. They can also cause croup, bronchitis, pneumonia, hepatitis, pancreatitis, arthritis, diabetes, meningitis, encephalitis, temporary or permanent paralysis, and viral myocarditis — to name some of the many possibilities. These infections can be extremely serious. Viral myocarditis, such as what you are now seeing in Malaysia, is an infection of the heart muscle. When coxsackievirus causes myocarditis, the fatality rate is high (International Journal of Cardiology, May 1996).

Treatment of Coxsackieviruses

Thankfully, the overwhelming majority of coxsackieviral infections are mild. Complete recovery is the rule, and serious disease is rare. The severity and symptom patterns of these infections tend to cluster in local outbreaks. In Singapore, for example, coxsackievirus was found to be the cause in a group of SIDS cases (Annals of the Academy of Medicine of Singapore, Nov 1994). Frighteningly, medicine has had very limited success in treating coxsackieviral infections.

I do have a few suggestions (in addition to excellent supportive care, restriction of physical activities, and classical medications for heart failure) for the rare child who is seriously ill:

Acyclovir (Zovirax) is an antiviral medicine that has been used extensively in the treatment of herpes and chickenpox. Although according to our understanding it shouldn’t work against coxsackieviruses, it does seem to help. In one study, significant improvement occurred within 24 hours of initiating therapy, and symptoms were gone within 5 days (Cutis, April 1996).

Given this broader usefulness than expected of at least one antiviral medicine, I suspect that some of the drugs developed to fight the AIDS virus may also be of use against coxsackievirus.

In Sweden, an antiviral drug called WIN 54954 (also called 5-(5-(2.6-dichloro-4-(5.5-dihydro-2-oxazolyl)phenoxy)pentyl)-3-methyl-isoxaz ole) has been shown to be effective specifically against coxsackieviral myocarditis — in mice. In one study, mortality rates dropped from 100% to 15% if therapy was started within one day of the beginning of the illness (Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1993 Supplement). It was even more effective when combined with an immune stimulant called LS 2616. Researchers are now interested in studying these treatments in humans with coxsackieviral myocarditis.

Another approach that has already had some success in humans is to give intravenous immunoglobulin. This contains antibodies to coxsackieviruses made by people who have effectively fought off the infection. One child was apparently dying from coxsackieviral meningitis and encephalitis. The child had a dramatic and complete recovery when given IV immunoglobulin (Journal of Neurologic Sciences, April 1995).

Other immunosuppressive therapies such as azathioprine, prednisone, and cyclosporine have also been used to treat coxsackievirus, but they have not been rigorously studied through research trials, so their efficacy is unclear at this time (Am J Health Syst Pharm, January 2008).

Exciting work has also been done with a Chinese herb called Astrogalus membranaceous. This herbal therapy has been shown in several precise, sophisticated and convincing studies to be helpful in treating and preventing coxsackieviral heart disease (Chung Hsi I Chieh Ho Tsa Chih, May 1994, Nov 1994, and August 1995) (Chinese Medical Sciences Journal, Dec 1993 and Sep 1995).

I hope that one or more of these suggestions proves helpful.

Earlier in this century, physicians stood helplessly by as bacterial infections ravaged millions. Antibiotics were a magnificent, life-saving, discovery (though often misused). My hope is that increasingly effective antiviral medicines will be among the great discoveries of the next decades, and that we will use them with wisdom when the situation warrants.

Dr. Greene is a practicing physician, author, national and international TEDx speaker, and global health advocate. He is a graduate of Princeton University and University of California San Francisco.

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  2. Rosson

    I work in China, my sister came to visit me and said she got a sore throat from a friend that developed on the flight over. While she was with me she began experiencing all of these symptoms and then went home about 3 days later. A couple days after being around her I experienced almost all of the “initial symptoms” on the list. A couple loose stools, a semi-sore throat (I have my tonsils out and I think that changes everything), and a kind of uncomfortable feeling in my stomach that came with a loss of appetite.

    About 3 days from the initial symptoms and within a 24 hour period my hands, feet, mouth, nose, scalp and thighs were covered in painful blister-like sores. They were not fully blisters, many just seem to be “raw” spots on my skin that are painful to the touch but do not carry any liquid beneath the skin. Others are constantly secreting a liquid that when dries turns yellow.

    Unfortunately the day this was the most serious was a day in which I had to travel in China. My sister had already gone back to the states and I had a full day of travel ahead of me. By the end of the day my feet were absolutely killing me. Upon removing my shoes and socks I found that many of the real spots and blisters had become open wounds. In order to sleep through the whole night I had to take aspirin and NyQuil.

    48 hours later the raw spots have continued to spread all over my hands and feet and although they have become much less painful they have not stopped spreading. On day 5 now I am beginning to feel like my immune system has begun to resolve my problems. My sore throat is now gone for the most part. Hopefully within the next 2 or 3 days it will resolve itself and my skin can start healing up.

    This virus is the weirdest thing I have ever experienced. I initially thought it was athletes foot which I get every now and then. I never would have thought that all of my symptoms would have been so inter-related and caused by a single virus.

    What has worked for me:
    Lukewarm showers. (I wish I could take a bath but the hotels here in China don’t usually have baths in the price range I’m staying in.)
    Wrapping my feet in toilet paper and then covering it all with a sock. Swap the toilet paper daily.
    NyQuil helped put me to sleep at night and Aspirin kept the pain down.

    What I have tried:
    Anti-fungal creams and powders. (None of these seemed to work).
    “CertainDry” anti-perspirant. (This was incredibly painful in the first 4 hours but afterwards seemed to be very successful. None of the blisters are secreting fluid and the pores are all closed).

    Where sores began to form first:
    Oddly my sores all broke out almost simultaneously however they were the worst in areas that had more rubbing/physical contact. For instance I use chopsticks to eat. The places I hold the chopsticks were the first places on my hands to have the blisters. Another example, the shoes I wear when I take a step the material pushes down right above the “knuckles” on my foot They immediately formed in these locations first. Others followed within 7-8 hours. Between the toes, scalp, fingers, nose, thighs, etc. Don’t know if any of this helps but I’m sure it may help someone trying to diagnose themselves.

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  3. dean thomas

    I am 26 and currently have Coxcackievirus. the most severe symptom is sore throat – but its like a fire in my throat and every swallow is terribly painful. its day5 and I just found that while I cant really eat anything, ice cream is a salvation for me – its like the messiah has come.

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  4. Kristy

    The Coxsackie viruses on their own, if it doesn’t cause death by heart attack, are not serious. That is true. I contracted coxsackie when I was an infant and from then until age 12 I got two cold sores per year on my chin or lip. From age 13 to 16 the virus lay dormant in me, no longer causing cold sores. But when I got mono at age 16 it reactivated the coxsackie virus and suddenly I was breaking out in coldsores. It wasn’t just one at a time but it was clusters, like when I first got it. I became so ill I could not get out of bed for a month and my mom had to take care of. Over the next year I slowly got better but I never recovered completely. Today I am functioning at much lower level than before I got the mono. I constantly feel like I have the flu and every time I exert myself my symptoms worsen so much so that I become bedridden for a few days. I sleep for as much as 16 hours at a time and wake up feeling hung over. My life has become constant misery because of coxsackie. The coxsackie virus combined with another (possibly others besides EBV, I don’t know) causes very serious disease.

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    • JES

      Coxsackievirus does not cause cold sores, those are a direct effect of EBV.

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