Rare Forms of Exanthems in Pediatric Clinical Practice
https://doi.org/10.22627/2072-8107-2018-17-4-65-68
Abstract
The infant roseola, viral pemphigus, papular-hemorrhagic rash as a form of gloves and socks syndrome, and one-sided laterothoracic exanthema can be referred to the rare types of infectious rash in the pediatrician’s practice. These diseases, despite certain signs peculiar to everyone, are often not diagnosed during the initial admission to a pediatrician. The study describes the characteristics of each type of rash, the course of the disease, and discusses possible errors in the primary diagnosis of rare infectious rashes.
About the Authors
V. S. SobolenkovaRussian Federation
Victoria Sobolenkova, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Internal Medicine Propaedeutics, Pediatrician, Medical Institute Tula State University
Tula
S. Yu. Fedorov
Russian Federation
Sergey Fedorov, PhD, head of Department of Polyclinic Therapy, General Practitioner
Tula
N. S. Rudneva
Russian Federation
Natalya Rudneva, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Internal Medicine Propaedeutics, Medical Institute Tula State University, Head Doctor of the Tula Regional Clinical Dermatovenerologic Dispensary
Tula
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Review
For citations:
Sobolenkova V.S., Fedorov S.Yu., Rudneva N.S. Rare Forms of Exanthems in Pediatric Clinical Practice. CHILDREN INFECTIONS. 2018;17(4):65-68. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.22627/2072-8107-2018-17-4-65-68