A CLASSIC CASE OF CHILDREN’S ROSEOLA

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11603/1681-2727.2024.3.14881

Keywords:

children’s roseola, human herpesviruses of the 6th and 7th types, sudden exanthema, sixth disease, rash in children

Abstract

Children’s roseola is a fairly common herpesvirus disease, mainly with an aerosol transmission mechanism, which most often affects infants and children under the age of three. It is characterized by an acute onset of fever, which, after normalization of body temperature, is replaced by a spotted-papular rash on the face and body, spreading to the extremities. The disease ends with the formation of permanent lifelong immunity. A case of illness in an 18-month-old child with classic manifestations of this widespread, but mostly benign disease is described.

Author Biographies

V. S. Kopcha, Ivan Horbachevsky Ternopil National Medical University of the Ministry of Health of Ukraine

MD, Professor of the Infectious Diseases and Epidemiology, Skin and Venereal Diseases Department

T. Z. Kubishyn, Zolochiv Central District Hospital

pediatric infectious disease doctor

References

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Published

2024-10-11

How to Cite

Kopcha, V. S., & Kubishyn, T. Z. (2024). A CLASSIC CASE OF CHILDREN’S ROSEOLA. Infectious Diseases – Infektsiyni Khvoroby, (3), 85–90. https://doi.org/10.11603/1681-2727.2024.3.14881

Issue

Section

Brief reports