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- Rubella (german measles) - DermNet
Rubella is a viral disease characterised by rash, swollen glands and fever The disease is usually mild and of little significance unless you are pregnant Infection of a pregnant woman ( congenital rubella syndrome ) commonly results in miscarriage, stillbirth, or birth of an infant with major birth abnormalities
- Rubella rash image - DermNet
IMPORTANT NOTICE: DermNet does not provide a free online consultation service If you have any concerns with your skin or its treatment, see a dermatologist for advice
- Viral skin infections. Specific viral exanthems - DermNet
Rubella is spread through direct contact with nasal or throat secretions An infected person is contagious from 7 days before the rash appearing until seven days later The incubation period is between 12-23 days In 25-50%, rubella is asymptomatic Common symptoms include slight fever, sore throat, rhinitis and malaise
- Blueberry muffin syndrome - DermNet
The TORCH complex is a medical acronym used for these serious congenital infections: Toxoplasmosis, Other infections, Rubella, Cytomegalovirus, Herpes simplex virus The other infections are hepatitis B , coxsackie virus , syphilis , varicella-zoster virus and parvovirus erythrovirus B19
- Roseola (viral rash): Causes, Symptoms, and Treatment - DermNet
In some cases, a child may be infected with the virus and never develop the rash Less commonly, the rash may appear without a preceding fever In most cases, particularly if fever is low, the child is well In about 5–15% of young children, high fevers may trigger febrile seizures How is roseola diagnosed?
- Exanthems (reactive rashes) - DermNet
Rubella (rubella virus) Roseola (herpes virus 6B) Erythema infectiosum (parvovirus B19) Viral exanthems also include: Acute human immunodeficiency virus infection syndrome; Smallpox; Viral hepatitis; Infectious mononucleosis and aminopenicillin rash (Epstein-Barr virus) Papular purpuric glove and socks syndrome (parvovirus B19)
- TORCH infections - DermNet
Rubella Rubellacauses febrile illness with lymphadenopathy and a rash Congenital rubella syndrome is characterised by intrauterine growth restriction, intracranial calcifications, microcephaly, cataracts, cardiac defects, neurological disease, osteitis (inflammation of the bones), and hepatosplenomegaly
- Fever and a rash - DermNet
Is the rash localised or generalised? What is its distribution? Are mucosal sites involved? The severity of symptoms; Predominant morphology: is are there erythema, blisters erosions, pustules crusts, purple black areas? Fever and localised rash Painful red, hot skin Cellulitis Unilateral swelling induration; Spreads over hours to days
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