• American family physician · Mar 2010

    Review

    The generalized rash: part II. Diagnostic approach.

    • John W Ely and Seabury StoneMaryM.
    • University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, 200 Hawkins Dr., Iowa City, IA 52242, USA. john-ely@uiowa.edu
    • Am Fam Physician. 2010 Mar 15; 81 (6): 735-9.

    AbstractAlthough it is important to begin the evaluation of generalized rash with an inclusive differential diagnosis, the possibilities must be narrowed down by taking a focused history and looking for key clinical features of the rash. Part I of this two-part article lists the common, uncommon, and rare causes of generalized rashes. In part II, the clinical features that help distinguish these rashes are described. These features include key elements of the history (e.g., travel, environmental exposures, personal or family history of atopy); characteristics of individual lesions, such as color, size, shape, and scale; areas of involvement and sparing, with particular attention to palms, soles, face, nails, sun-exposed areas, and extensor and flexor surfaces of extremities; pruritic or painful lesions; systemic symptoms, especially fever; and dermatologic signs, such as blanching, and the Koebner phenomenon.

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