Rashes involve changes in the color, feeling or texture of your skin.
A rash is often due to dermatitis, meaning inflammation of the skin. Contact dermatitis is caused by things your skin touches, such as:
Seborrheic dermatitis is a rash that appears in patches of redness and scaling around the eyebrows, eyelids, mouth, nose, trunk, and behind the ears. If it happens on your scalp, it is called dandruff in adults and cradle cap in infants.
Age, stress, fatigue, weather extremes, oily skin, infrequent shampooing, and alcohol-based lotions aggravate this harmless but bothersome condition.
Other common causes of a rash include:
Eczema(atopic dermatitis) — Tends to happen in people with allergies or asthma. The rash is generally red, itchy, and scaly.
Psoriasis — Tends to occur as red, scaly, patches over joints and along the scalp. It is sometimes itchy. Fingernails may also be affected.
Impetigo — Common in children, this infection is from bacteria that live in the top layers of the skin. It appears as red sores that turn into blisters, ooze, then form a honey colored crust over all or part of the rash.
Shingles — A painful blistered skin condition caused by the same virus as chickenpox. The virus can lie dormant in your body for many years and re-emerge as shingles. It usually affects only one side of the body.
Childhood illnesses such as chickenpox, measles, roseola, rubella, hand-foot-mouth disease, fifth disease, and scarlet fever.
Medicines
Insect bites or stings.
Many medical conditions can cause a rash as well. These include:
Often, the cause of a rash can be determined from how it looks and its location and symptoms. Skin testing, such as a scraping, culture, or biopsy, may also be used to help with diagnosis. Sometimes, the cause of the rash remains unknown.
The rash usually responds well to treatment.
You are short of breath, your throat is tight, or your face is swollen.
Your child has a purple rash that looks like a bruise.
Contact your health care provider if:
You have joint pain, fever, or a sore throat.
You have streaks of redness, swelling, or very tender areas as these may indicate an infection.
You are taking a new medicine. Do not change or stop any of your medicines without contacting your provider.
You may have a tick bite.
Home treatment doesn’t work, or your symptoms get worse.
Skin redness or inflammation; Skin lesion; Rubor; Skin rash; Erythema
James WD, Elston DM, Treat JR, Rosenbach MA, Neuhaus IM. Cutaneous signs and diagnosis. In: James WD, Elston DM, Treat JR, Rosenbach MA, Neuhaus IM, eds. Andrews’ Diseases of the Skin. 13th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2020:chap 2.
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