Pediatric rashes

Measles (Rubeola)

Scarlet Fever

  • Caused by GAS
  • Prodrome of fever, sore throat, vomiting, abd pain followed by rash 1-2d later
  • Rash
    • Enanthem
      • Tonsils/pharynx are red and covered w/ exudate
      • Tongue may have initial exudate followed by erythema ("strawberry tongue)
      • Soft palate have bright-red spots
    • Exanthem
      • Starts on neck, axillae, groin, spreads to trunk and extremities
      • Red, finely punctate, sandpaper feel
      • Desquamation follows
  • Treatment (to reduce rheumatic fever / nephritis)
    • Penicillin VK 50mg/kg BID x 10d OR amoxicillin 40mg/kg/d in 2 divided doses x10d
    • If pen allergic: Azithromycin 10mg/kg on day 1, 5mg/g days 2-5

Rubella (German Measles)

Erythema Infectiosum (Fifth disease)

Roseola Infantum

Enteroviral Infections

  • Includes echovirus and coxsackie
  • Rubella-like appearance of rash w/ discrete maculopapular nonpruritic rash
  • No specific therapy; self-limited

Hand Foot Mouth Disease

  • Caused by coxsacke virus
  • Brief prodrome w/ low fever, anorexia, sore mouth
  • Oral lesions appear 1-2d later
    • Vesicles on erythematous base
    • Painful
  • Hand/foot lesions
    • Red papules that change to gray vesicles

Herpangina

  • Caused by coxsackievirus
  • Prodrome
    • Sudden onset of high fever, sore throat, malaise
  • Rash appears 24-48hr after prodrome
    • Vesicles 1-2 mm in size that rupture leaving shallow, painful whitish ulcers on soft palate/posterior pharynx
    • Similar to hand, foot, mouth disease but w/o skin lesions
  • Lasts 7-10d

Varicella

HSV

Infectious Mononucleosis

Henoch-Schonlein Purpura

Drug Rash

-sudden, usus morbilliform, often starts on face & trunk & spreads

See Also

Source

Tintinalli