Diaper Rash and Perianal Dermatitis




Patient Story



Listen




A 2-month-old baby girl was brought to the office with a severe diaper rash that was not getting better with Desitin. Upon examination, the physician noted a white coating on the tongue and buccal mucosa. The diaper area was red with skin erosions and satellite lesions (Figure 95-1). The whole picture is consistent with candidiasis of the mouth (thrush) and the diaper region. The child was treated with oral nystatin suspension and topical clotrimazole cream in the diaper area with good results.




FIGURE 95-1


Candida diaper dermatitis in an infant who has oral thrush. (Used with permission from Richard P. Usatine, MD.)






Introduction



Listen




Diaper rash is a general term used to describe any type of red or inflammatory skin rash that is located in the diaper area.




Synonyms



Listen




Diaper dermatitis, napkin dermatitis.




Epidemiology



Listen






  • Diaper dermatitis is the most common dermatitis of infancy.



  • Variability in prevalence of 4 to 35 percent among children in their first 2 years of life in different studies.1



  • Diaper rash is thought to be present in 25 percent of children presenting for outpatient visits.2



  • No differences in prevalence between genders or among ethnic groups.



  • One study showed an incidence of 19.4 percent in children ages 3 to 6 months.1



  • Higher incidence among formula-fed compared with breastfed infants.1



  • Condition typically begins around age 3 weeks, peaks at age 9 to 12 months, and then decreases with age until it resolves completely with toilet training.



  • Individual episodes last from 1 day to 2 weeks.



  • Aggravating factors include poor skin care, diarrhea, recent antibiotic use, and urinary tract abnormalities.



  • Perianal streptococcal dermatitis occurs in children between 6 months and 10 years of age (Figures 95-2 and 95-3).





FIGURE 95-2


Perianal dermatitis caused by group A β-hemolytic streptococci. (From Sheth S, Schechtman AD. Itchy perianal erythema. J Fam Pract. 2007;56(12):1025-1027. Reproduced with permission from Frontline Medical Communications.)






FIGURE 95-3


A positive rapid strep test taken from a swab of the perianal area of the infant in the previous photo. (From Sheth S, Schechtman AD. Itchy perianal erythema. J Fam Pract. 2007;56(12):1025-1027. Reproduced with permission from Frontline Medical Communications.)






Etiology and Pathophysiology



Listen






  • Primary diaper dermatitis—An acute skin inflammation in the diaper area with a multifactorial etiology.3 The main cause is irritation of thin skin as a result of prolonged contact with moisture including feces and urine. The multiple factors involved are:




    • Occlusion/lack of exposure to air.



    • Friction and mechanical trauma.



    • Local irritants—Fecal proteases and lipases.



    • Increased pH.



    • Maceration of the stratum corneum with loss of the protective barrier function of skin.



  • Irritant diaper dermatitis (IDD) is a combination of intertrigo (wet skin damaged from chafing) and miliaria (heat rash) when eccrine glands become obstructed from excessive hydration. It is a noninfectious, nonallergic, often asymptomatic contact dermatitis that typically lasts for less than 3 days after a change in diaper practices.



  • Candidal diaper dermatitis—Within 3 days, 45 to 75 percent of diaper rashes are colonized with Candida albicans of fecal origin.



  • Bacterial diaper dermatitis may be a secondary infection caused by Staphylococcus aureus or Streptococcus pyogenes. Other common bacterial isolates include Escherichia coli, Peptostreptococcus, and Bacteroides. Usually occurs during the warm summer months.



  • Perianal streptococcal dermatitis is caused by group A β-hemolytic streptococci (Figures 95-2 and 95-3).





Risk Factors



Listen






  • Diarrhea.



  • Formula-fed infants.



  • Recent antibiotic use.



  • Urinary tract abnormalities.



  • Poor skin care.





Diagnosis



Listen




Clinical Features




  • IDD begins with shiny erythema with or without scale and poorly demarcated margins on the convex skin surfaces in areas covered by diapers. Moderate cases can have papules, plaques, vesicles, and small superficial erosions that can progress to well-demarcated ulcerated nodules typically with sparing of skin folds (Figure 95-4).



  • Pustules or papules beyond the rash border (called “satellite lesions”), involvement of the skin folds, and white scaling all indicate a fungal infection with Candida (Figure 95-5).



  • Secondary bacterial infections can have redness, honey-colored crusting, swelling, red streaking, and/or purulent discharge. With impetigo in the diaper area, bullae are not usually intact but instead present as superficial erosions.



  • Perianal streptococcal dermatitis is a bright red, sharply demarcated rash sometimes associated with blood-streaked stools (Figure 95-2).





FIGURE 95-4


Irritant diaper dermatitis precipitated by diarrhea secondary to amoxicillin-clavulanate prescribed to treat otitis media. Note the absence of satellite lesions and how it spares the deep folds. (Used with permission from Richard P. Usatine, MD.)

Only gold members can continue reading. Log In or Register to continue

Stay updated, free articles. Join our Telegram channel

Dec 31, 2018 | Posted by in PEDIATRICS | Comments Off on Diaper Rash and Perianal Dermatitis

Full access? Get Clinical Tree

Get Clinical Tree app for offline access