Joint pain preceded or accompanied by skin rash or lesions • Generalized weakness • Nail bed changes (eg, dystrophic nail changes associated with psoriasis, atrophy of thefingertips, calcific nodules, digitalcyanosis, and tightening of the skin associated with scleroderma) ...
Differential diagnosis Other childhood exanthemata HFMD should be differentiated from other exanthemata seen in childhood. This may include papular urticaria, sand rash, chicken pox, atypical measles, exanthema subitum, herpes zoster, rubella and Kawasaki disease. Bullous rashes caused by CV-A6 or CV...
Gout is a disease cauising severe and sudden pain, tenderness, rash, edema and temperature rise in the joints. Although it appears generally in males, it can also be seen especially in postmenopausal women and it can rise in the joints except toe joint. It should be kept in mind for ...
The rash is usually asymptomatic, and it appears after the oral lesions. These manifestations must pose the differential diagnosis with shingles, chickenpox, Gianotti-Crosti syndrome, Orf nodules, and syphilis. As seen in the present study’s patients, atypical skin manifestations spread beyond the ...
His mother said that he 'just did not seem to be himself', had been off his food and generally miserable. She brought him to the surgery because she was worried about the rash that had developed on his hands and feet.DOI: 10.12968/pnur.2008.19.10.31248 年份: 2008 ...
Physical examination results were collected as healthy samples, and healthy cohorts are defined as results with normal body temperature, without lung wet sound, without skin rash, and entero- viruses negative. All of the samples were collected before drug treatment (3–5 days after the onset ...
(short name) Rash (word morphing) Herpangina Herpes Hodgkin Mycoplasma Legionella Vaccine Diarrhea Papule Infant (different stages) Infant (different stages) Daycare center Visits Oral cavity (synonym) Pharynx Vomiting Summer cold Child (mixed) Child (kanji) Young child Pediatric Toddler Kindergarten ...
Differential diagnosis Other childhood exanthemata HFMD should be differentiated from other exanthemata seen in childhood. This may include papular urticaria, sand rash, chicken pox, atypical measles, exanthema subitum, herpes zoster, rubella and Kawasaki disease. Bullous rashes caused by CV-A6 or CV...
supportive care with use of topical emollients and mupirocin ointment on any crusted or eroded areas was recommended, and the rash resolved without sequelae during the subsequent 2 weeks. generally, hfmd is a clinical diagnosis. it most frequently affects children younger than 5 years. it is ...
Although fever subsided within 3 days, the rash worsened and extended over the whole body, with some papules evolving into vesiculobullous lesions. The infant had been exposed to children with a similar illness 1 week before onset. PCR of vesicular swabs and stool samples taken on day 6 of ...