| Literature DB >> 34857407 |
Camila Arai Seque1, Milvia Maria Simões E Silva Enokihara2, Adriana Maria Porro2, Jane Tomimori2.
Abstract
This article will address the main aspects of skin manifestations associated with COVID-19, based on a review of the literature published to date. Since the beginning of the pandemic, more than 1,500 articles have been published on the subject. Regarding the pathophysiology, it is believed that the same mechanisms responsible for the disease in the main target organs also act in the skin, although they are not yet fully elucidated. The actual frequency of dermatological manifestations remains uncertain - it can range from 0.2% to 45%, being close to 6% in systematic reviews. Pioneering studies of large case series conducted in European countries and the USA provide the first information on the main skin manifestations associated with COVID-19 and propose classifications regarding their clinical presentation, pathophysiology, as well as their frequencies. Although there is yet no consensus, maculopapular eruptions are considered the most frequent presentations, followed by erythema pernio-like (EPL) lesions. Manifestations such as urticaria, vesicular conditions and livedo/purpura/necrosis are rare. The time of onset, severity, need for specific treatment and prognosis vary according to the clinical presentation pattern. The increasing histopathological description of skin conditions can contribute to the diagnosis, as well as to the understanding of the pathophysiology. Also, in the dermatological field, the relationship between COVID-19 and androgens has been increasingly studied. Despite all the generated knowledge, the actual biological meaning of skin manifestations remains uncertain. Therefore, the exclusion of the main differential diagnoses is essential for the correlation between skin manifestation and COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Dermatology; Skin
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34857407 PMCID: PMC8577992 DOI: 10.1016/j.abd.2021.08.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: An Bras Dermatol ISSN: 0365-0596 Impact factor: 1.896
Capsule with the main key points.
| Key points |
|---|
| The first report in the literature of a skin manifestation associated with COVID-19 occurred on 03/23/20. Since then, there have been more than 1,500 publications on the subject. |
| The frequency of skin manifestations ranges from 0.2% to 45%, being close to 6% in systematic review studies |
| The most frequently described manifestations are maculopapular eruptions, followed by the erythema pernio-like (EPL) lesions |
| Urticarial, vesicular and the livedo-purpura-necrosis spectra are less frequent |
| Skin lesions usually accompany the general symptoms. However, urticaria and vesicles may precede them, while EPL lesions and livedo-purpura-necrosis appear later. |
| The main differential diagnoses are drug reactions and other viral infections, which should be ruled out. |
Frequency of dermatological manifestations in COVID-19.
| Author | Country | Frequency | n | Type of evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guan et al. | China | 0.2% | 1099 | Not in-person (database) |
| Recalcati et al. | Italy | 20.4% | 88 | In-person by dermatologist |
| Matar et al. | France | 1% | 756 | Self-examination by telephone interview |
| Rerknimitr et al. | Thailand | 15% | 183 | Self-examination by telephone interview |
| Solak et al. | Turkey | 18.3% | 382 | Self-examination by telephone interview |
| Gaspari et al. | Italy | 1.4% | NA | In-person by dermatologist |
| Tammaro et al. | Italy | 1.5% | 130 | In-person by dermatologist |
| Tamai et al. | Japan | 4.3% | 69 | In-person by dermatologist |
| De Giorgi et al. | Italy/China | 7.8% | 678 | In-person (does not specify evaluator) |
| Rehktman et al. | USA | 11.8% | 296 | In-person by medical students |
| Méndez-Maestro et al. | Spain | 18.7% | 75 | In-person by dermatologist |
| Nuno-Gonzales et al. | Spain | 45.65% | 666 | In-person by dermatologist |
| Jamshindi et al. | NA | 5.95% | 1847 | NA |
NA, Not Available data.
Meta-analysis study.
Large national and international series on skin manifestations.
| Author | Country | n | Confirmed cases | Maculopapular eruption | Urticarial | EPL | Vesiculobullous | Livedo-purpura-necrosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Galvan-Casas et al. | Spain | 375 | 234 (62,4%) | 47% | 19% | 19% | 9% | 6% |
| Masson et al. | France | 277 | 25 (9%) | 9% | 9% | 75% | 15% | 4% |
| Freeman et al. | USA +31 countries | 716 | 171 (23,8%) | 45% | 16% | 18% | 11% | 6,4% |
| Manzano et al. | Italy | 200 | 120 (62%) | 25,7% | 10,2% | 24,6% | 15,5% | 9% |
| Visconti et al. | United Kingdom | 11544 | 694 (6%) | 41,2% | 30% | 23,1% | – |
EPL, Erythema pernio-like lesions.
Include morbilliform eruption, maculopapular and papular squamous erythema.
Include purpura/vasculitis, livedo reticularis/racemosa.
Include erythematous-papular and erythematous-vesicular eruptions.
Figure 1Exanthem in a patient with COVID-19.
Figure 2Vesico-bullous lesions in a patient with COVID-19.
Figure 3Livedo racemosa, purpura and necrosis of the extremities in a patient with COVID-19.
Main characteristics of skin manifestations associated with COVID-19.
| Dermatological picture | Frequency | Age range | Systemic picture | Lesion onset | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exanthem, rash, squamous papular, pityriasis rosea-like, erythema multiforme-like | 9%–47% | Adults | Mild | 0–14 days | |
| Violaceous macules on the extremities at mild temperatures | 18%–75% | Children and young individuals | Mild or asymptomatic | After 10–14 days | |
| Indistinguishable from other forms of urticaria, angioedema is rare | 9%–30% | Adults | Mild | Pre or 0–14 days | |
| Varicella-like | 9%–15% | Adults | Mild to moderate | Pré or 0–7 days | |
| Fixed livedo reticularis, livedo racemosa; purpura, vasculitis; necrosis of extremities | 4%–9% | Elderly | Severe | After 10–14 days |
In relation to the onset of general symptoms of COVID-19.
Dermatological conditions associated with COVID-19 - Case reports.
| Urticarial | Vasculites and purpuras | Pharmacoderma-like | Specific topographies | Others |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Urticaria | Leukocytoclastic vasculitis | Erythema multiforme | Ungual (red half-moon sign) | Pityriasis rosea-like |
| Urticarial vasculitis | IgA vasculitis | SDRIFE | Palmoplantar erythrodysesthesia | Grover’s disease |
| Angioedema | Eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis | TEN | Follicular eruption | Melkersson-Rosenthal syndrome |
| Granulomatosis with polyangiitis | AGEP | Unilateral exanthem | Gianotti-Crosti syndrome | |
| Schamberg Purpura | Unilateral livedo | Erythema annulare centrifugum | ||
| Purpura fulminans | Erythema nodosum | |||
| Annular lichen planus | ||||
| Sarcoid lesion | ||||
| Granuloma annulare | ||||
| Alopecia areata |
SDRIFE, dymmetrical drug related intertriginous and flexural exanthem; TEN, toxic epidermal necrolysis; AGEP, acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis.
Figure 4Histopathological findings of exanthem in a patient with COVID-19. (A), Leukocytoclastic vasculitis in the capillary vessels of the superficial dermis and erythrodiapedesis (Hematoxylin & eosin, ×100). (B), Capillary vessels containing intact and degenerated neutrophils partially destroying the wall, extravasated red blood cells, and the presence of eosinophilic amorphous material in the vascular lumen, suggestive of fibrin thrombus (Hematoxylin & eosin, ×400).