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DR5.1 | Scabies Treatment Planning — SDL Guide (Part 2)

Differential Diagnosis and Investigations

A diagnostic diagram compares scabies distribution and burrows with common itchy mimics and shows dermoscopy plus mineral-oil skin scraping microscopy for confirmation.

Scabies: Differential Diagnosis and Confirmatory Investigations

Panel A: Suspected scabies pattern: anterior body distribution, finger web spaces, wrists, genital involvement, burrow inset, excoriated papules, household contact clustering. Panel B: Main mimics: atopic dermatitis with flexural sites and no burrows; papular urticaria/insect bites on exposed sites; dermatitis herpetiformis on extensor surfaces with coeliac link and IgA deposits; prurigo/neurotic excoriations without burrows or contact history. Panel C: Investigations: dermoscopy showing delta-wing sign, mineral-oil skin scraping, microscopy showing mite, eggs and faecal pellets, with interpretation note that positive scraping confirms but negative scraping does not exclude scabies.

Because scabies is dominated by itch and excoriation, it is mimicked by several common dermatoses, and devising the right treatment plan first requires excluding these. Atopic dermatitis shares the intense pruritus but favours flexural sites (antecubital and popliteal fossae), spares the genitalia and web spaces, and lacks burrows and contact clustering. Papular urticaria and insect bites produce grouped itchy papules on exposed sites but again lack burrows and household spread. Dermatitis herpetiformis is intensely itchy and grouped over extensor surfaces but is associated with coeliac disease and shows IgA deposits on immunofluorescence. Prurigo and neurotic excoriations lack burrows and a contact history. The decisive investigations are therefore aimed at demonstrating the mite: dermoscopy of a suspected burrow, and microscopy of a skin scraping in mineral oil looking for the mite, eggs or faecal pellets. A positive scraping confirms the diagnosis, but a negative scraping does not exclude it because the mite burden is low — so treatment is often started on clinical grounds.

  • Atopic dermatitis: flexural, no burrows, spares genitalia/web spaces
  • Papular urticaria / insect bites: exposed sites, no burrows, no clustering
  • Dermatitis herpetiformis: extensor, coeliac link, IgA on immunofluorescence
  • Prurigo / neurotic excoriations: no burrows, no contact history
  • Investigations: dermoscopy (delta-wing sign); skin scraping microscopy (mite/eggs/scybala) — negative result does NOT exclude scabies

Treatment Plan for Scabies: Scabicides, ADRs, and Contact Management

comparison table of scabicides: drug name, concentration, mechanism, application instructions, ADRs, contraindications, availability/cost in India
comparison table of scabicides: drug name, concentration, mechanism, application instructions, ADRs, contraindications, availability/cost in India — click to enlarge

Provided image

Devising the treatment plan is the core of this competency, and a good plan has four parts: the right scabicide applied correctly, simultaneous treatment of all close contacts, environmental decontamination, and counselling about post-scabetic itch. The first-line scabicide for ordinary scabies is permethrin 5% cream, applied to the whole body from the neck downwards (including the head and neck in infants and the elderly), left on for 8 to 12 hours (usually overnight) and washed off, then repeated after 7 days to kill mites that hatch from surviving eggs; it is safe in pregnancy, lactation and infants over two months and is the preferred topical agent. The principal alternative is oral ivermectin at 200 micrograms per kilogram as a single dose repeated after 1 to 2 weeks — invaluable for outbreaks, institutional control, patients who cannot apply creams reliably, and crusted scabies. Older topical agents include benzyl benzoate 25% (effective but irritant, diluted for children) and sulphur 5-10% ointment (messy and malodorous but the safest option in neonates and pregnancy). Crucially, all close and household contacts must be treated on the same day even if asymptomatic, and bedding, towels and clothing used in the preceding 3-4 days should be machine-washed hot and dried or sealed in a plastic bag for 72 hours. Patients must be warned that itch can persist for 2-4 weeks after successful treatment (post-scabetic itch), managed with emollients, antihistamines and a short course of topical steroid — and that this is NOT treatment failure. Crusted scabies needs combined repeated oral ivermectin plus topical permethrin and a keratolytic, with isolation. The adverse drug reactions the competency demands you state are: permethrin — transient burning, stinging and irritation, occasional contact dermatitis; ivermectin — generally well tolerated but may cause headache, dizziness, nausea and pruritus, with caution in pregnancy and in children weighing under 15 kg where safety is not established; benzyl benzoate — significant burning and irritation, especially on broken skin and in children; sulphur — irritation, staining and odour.

A three-panel scabies treatment flowchart showing patient-group based selection of permethrin, ivermectin, sulphur, and alternative scabicides with contact treatment and environmental control measures.

Scabies Treatment Decision Flowchart

Panel A: Main decision pathway showing treatment by patient group: adults, children >=2 months, children <2 months, pregnant/lactating patients, poor compliance/outbreaks, crusted scabies, and immunocompromised patients.. Panel B: Scabicide comparison showing permethrin 5%, oral ivermectin 200 mcg/kg, benzyl benzoate 25%, and sulphur ointment 5-10% with indications and key adverse effects or cautions.. Panel C: Public health branch showing simultaneous treatment of close contacts and environmental measures including hot washing, drying or ironing, sealing non-washables, and avoiding close skin contact until treatment completion..
ScabicideStrengthFirst-line forKey ADRs / cautions
Permethrin cream5%Ordinary scabies (incl. pregnancy, infants >2 mo)Burning, stinging, irritation, contact dermatitis
Ivermectin (oral)200 mcg/kg, repeat 1-2 wkOutbreaks, crusted scabies, poor cream complianceHeadache, nausea, dizziness; caution in pregnancy, <15 kg
Benzyl benzoate25% (dilute for children)Alternative topicalMarked burning/irritation, esp. broken skin/children
Sulphur ointment5-10%Neonates, pregnancy (safest)Irritation, staining, malodour

SELF-CHECK

A 28-year-old woman in her first trimester of pregnancy presents with classic scabies; her husband has similar itching. Which treatment plan is most appropriate?

A. Oral ivermectin 200 mcg/kg single dose for her only

B. Permethrin 5% cream for her, applied overnight and repeated after 7 days, AND simultaneous treatment of her husband, with bedding/clothing decontamination

C. Lindane 1% lotion for the whole household

D. A potent topical corticosteroid until the itch settles

Reveal Answer

Answer: B. Permethrin 5% cream for her, applied overnight and repeated after 7 days, AND simultaneous treatment of her husband, with bedding/clothing decontamination

Permethrin 5% is the first-line scabicide and is safe in pregnancy and lactation; ivermectin is best avoided in pregnancy. Treating the index patient alone would fail — all close contacts (here the husband) must be treated on the same day, with environmental decontamination. Steroids treat itch, not the mite, and lindane is avoided due to neurotoxicity.

Self-Assessment: Scabies Treatment Scenarios

⚑ AI image — pending faculty review (auto-QA score 6/10; best of 3 attempts)

A four-panel educational diagram showing scabies treatment planning principles and three clinical scenarios involving pregnancy, crusted scabies in HIV, and simultaneous family treatment.

Scabies Treatment Scenarios: Applying the Four Pillars

Panel A: Scabies mite, burrow, choose scabicide, treat contacts same day, environmental decontamination, warn about post-scabetic itch. Panel B: Pregnant patient, household contacts, permethrin 5% cream, avoid oral ivermectin in pregnancy, bedding and clothing decontamination. Panel C: Crusted scabies, thick hyperkeratotic crusts, HIV/immunocompromise, isolation, repeated oral ivermectin, topical permethrin, keratolytic, ward contacts and staff. Panel D: Index child, family of four, simultaneous treatment, neck-down application, infant head and neck application when indicated, nail trimming, repeat dose instruction.

Use these scenarios to test whether you can convert the principles above into a concrete, defensible treatment plan for the patient in front of you, choosing the scabicide, planning contact treatment, and stating the adverse effects you would warn about. Work through each before reading any model answer, and for every case ask yourself the same four questions: which scabicide and why, which contacts must be treated, what environmental measures apply, and what will I tell the patient to expect afterwards. These mirror the four pillars of the treatment plan and are exactly what an examiner expects you to articulate. Pay particular attention to the patient-group modifiers — pregnancy, very young children, immunocompromise — because these are where the wrong default choice causes harm or treatment failure.

  • Scenario 1 — A pregnant woman in a household cluster: choose permethrin 5% (avoid ivermectin), treat all contacts the same day, decontaminate bedding, warn of post-scabetic itch.
  • Scenario 2 — An HIV-positive man with thick hyperkeratotic crusts and little itch: recognise crusted (Norwegian) scabies, isolate, give combined repeated oral ivermectin + topical permethrin + keratolytic, screen/treat all ward contacts and staff.
  • Scenario 3 — A family of four with an index child: treat all four simultaneously, give clear neck-down application instructions (head-and-neck in the youngest), repeat at 7 days, decontaminate the shared bedroom's linen.

CLINICAL PEARL

The two most common reasons scabies 'fails' to clear are entirely avoidable: not treating asymptomatic contacts, and the patient (or a junior doctor) mistaking normal post-scabetic itch — which can last 2-4 weeks after the mite is dead — for treatment failure and escalating to ever-stronger steroids. Always write the plan as a household prescription, not an individual one, and counsel up front that the itch outlasts the mite. If a genuinely treated patient is still infested at review, suspect re-infestation from an untreated contact or undiagnosed crusted scabies in the household.

Interactive practice: Multiple Choice

Interactive practice: Multiple Choice

Interactive practice: True / False

Interactive practice: Multiple Choice