A two-year-old Asian boy had a pruritic rash following resolution of a viral upper respiratory tract infection during the winter. The eruption first developed in his left axilla and then coalesced and spread down the left side of his thorax and upper part of his left arm (Figure 1). Our presumptive diagnosis was unilateral laterothoracic exanthem. We treated the eruption with moisturizers, calamine lotion and oral diphenhydramine, which partially relieved his itching. Four weeks later, the exanthem had nearly resolved (Appendix 1, available at www.cmaj.ca/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1503/cmaj.110315/-/DC1).
Unilateral laterothoracic exanthem, also known as asymmetric periflexural exanthem, typically affects children between one and five years of age in the winter and spring, although adults have also been affected.1 Most published reports involve white people.2 The eruption typically starts unilaterally in the axilla, but can spread centrifugally to become bilateral, making the term “unilateral” somewhat misleading.3 Despite accompanying pruritus in about 50% of patients, lichenification is not usually seen. A cause has not been definitively identified, but a close temporal relation to rhinitis, mild fever or diarrhea in 75% of patients suggests a viral link.2
Unilateral laterothoracic exanthem is commonly misdiagnosed as contact dermatitis. Its differential diagnosis is broad, including nonspecific viral exanthems, drug-related eruptions, miliaria, superficial fungal infections, scabies and atypical pityriasis rosea. The diagnosis is clinical, and laboratory investigations are generally not required. This uncommon exanthem is self-limited and usually resolves in four to six weeks with no sequelae. Treatment is symptomatic only.
Footnotes
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Competing interests: None declared.
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This article has been peer reviewed.