No antibody response in cutaneous manifestations associated with COVID‐19: An observational study of 64 cases with microbiological and clinical characterization
Autor: | Mar Ramírez-Lluch, Aura Bularca, María Purificación Ventura-Faci, Pablo Villagrasa-Boli, Alejandro Lapeña-Casado, Rafael Benito-Ruesca, Miguel Fernando García-Gil, Mariano Ara-Martín, Beatriz Aldea-Manrique, Isabel Martínez-Pallás, Juan Monte-Serrano |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
RT‐PCR Short Report Dermatology Antibodies Viral Asymptomatic Gastroenterology Sensitivity and Specificity SARS‐CoV‐2 Serology Short Reports COVID‐19 Internal medicine medicine Humans Seroconversion cutaneous manifestations biology business.industry SARS-CoV-2 COVID-19 General Medicine medicine.disease Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction serological test Real-time polymerase chain reaction Cross-Sectional Studies biology.protein Observational study medicine.symptom Antibody business Adverse drug reaction |
Zdroj: | Dermatologic Therapy |
ISSN: | 1529-8019 1396-0296 |
Popis: | Background: The microbiological diagnosis of skin lesions related to COVID‐19 is not well known. Objective: Perform a microbiological diagnosis in COVID19‐related cutaneous manifestations. Methods: A cross‐sectional study was performed with 64 patients with cutaneous manifestations associated with COVID‐19 who underwent serological and nasopharyngeal reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR) for SARS‐CoV‐2. Results: Out of the 64 patients, 6 patients had positive RT‐PCR, with all of them developing SARS‐CoV‐2 IgG and 4 of them had positive IgM + IgA. Of the 58 patients with negative RT‐PCR, 8 cases had positive IgM + IgA and only one of them had IgG seroconversion. Therefore, the infection was demonstrated in 7 cases (10.9%) and was doubtful in 7 other cases (10.9%) who presented negative RT‐PCR and presence of IgA + IgM without subsequent seroconversion of IgG. Fifty patients (78.1%) had negative serological tests. The most frequent cutaneous pattern was pseudo‐chilblain (48.4%) followed by maculo‐papular pattern (26.6%), urticarial lesions (10.9%), vesicular eruptions (6.3%) and livedoid pattern (4.7%). The maculo‐papular pattern showed the highest positivity in RT‐PCR (3 cases; 17.6%) and serologies (4 cases; 23.5%). Skin lesions developed after the systemic symptoms in most patients (19 cases; 61.3%). Conclusions: Microbiological confirmation tests may not be an effective diagnostic technique for COVID‐related cutaneous manifestations or that attributed lesions are not related to COVID‐19. Confounding factors such as adverse drug reaction, serological cross‐reactions with other viruses, the low production of antibodies in asymptomatic or mild forms of COVID‐19 or its rapid disappearance, increase diagnostic uncertainty. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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