These are some of the diseases cured by Dr. Chakraborti - Skin Ulcers, Mouth Ulcers, Genital Ulcer, Herpes Infection, Siphilis, Gonorrhoea, AIDS, Beauty Spots, Leprosy
Dr.Tamal Chakraborty doctor
   Dermatology
... Trichotillomania
... Alopecia Areata
... Androgenic alopecia in women
... Androgenic alopecia (male)
... Kaposi sarcoma
... Basal cell carcinoma
... Angiokeratoma
... Malignant melanoma lentigo maligna
... Paget disease of the brest
... Keloids and hypertrophic scars
... Melasma
... Lentigo, juvenilr lentigo, solar lentigo
... Polymorphous light eruption
... Sun-damaged skin, photoaging
... Scleroderma
... Acute cutaneous lupus erythematosus
... Bullous pemphigoid
... Pemphigus vulgaris
... Dermatitis herpetiformis
... Head lice
... Scabies
... Schamgerg disease
... Stevens-Johnson syndrome
... Cutaneous drug eruptions
... Non-specific viral rash
... Hemangiomas of infancy
 
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Non-specific viral rash ...

 
Non-specific viral rash
Viral exanthems present as red maculars and papules.
They can appear on any skin surface including the palms and soles.
 

DESCRIPTION
A viral exanthem is a rash caused by a systemic viral infection; different viruses produce similar-appearing rashes.

HISTORY
Season, exposure history, and local and regional epidemiology assist with diagnosis.

  • Winter: respiratory viruses.
  • Summer and fall: enteroviruses.

PHYSICAL FINDINGS

  • Generalized erythematous macules and papules, and urticarial (non-polio enteroviruses, respiratory viruses) petechial rashes mimic more serious syste­mic infection such as meningococcemia, periorbital edema (Epstein-Barr virus), keratoconjunctivitis (adenovirus), papular acrodermatitis of childhood (Gianotti—Crosti syndrome)—monomorphic, discrete papules and vesicles coalescing on the face, extremities, buttocks.
  • Unilateral laterothoracic exanthem (asymmetric periflexural exanthem) occurs on lateral thorax, near axilla, and can spread to other hemithorax and extremities. Papular purpuric gloves and socks syndrome: petechial erythema on palms and soles (parvovirus B19).

TREATMENT
Supportive: bland emollients, group V and VI topical steroids.

 
Courtesy by : Thomas P. Habif, James L. Campbell Jr, M. Shane Chapman, James G. H. Dinulos, Kathryn A. Zug
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