Times Colonist

Doctors notice increase in ‘COVID toes’

- GREGORY STRONG

TORONTO — A Toronto doctor is suggesting that parents look at their children’s feet to see if there are unusual lesions around the toes that could be a sign of possible COVID-19 infection.

Dr. Elena Pope, the pediatric dermatolog­y section head at the Hospital for Sick Children, said there has been an uptick in skin presentati­ons of this nature — socalled COVID toes — in otherwise asymptomat­ic kids over the past few weeks in North America.

“The kids are not really bothered by those lesions and I think that’s why it took a while for this to come to the forefront,” she said. “If they were not bothered by it, they maybe didn’t actually report it to their parents . . . most of the lesions disappear on their own. They fade over time.”

Pope said there have been some cases where fingers are affected as well. The lesions have a red or purple colour and look similar to frostbite.

The Canadian Paediatric Surveillan­ce Program (CPSP) issued a public health alert to clinicians this week, advising that these skin lesions should prompt COVID-19 testing. Pope and Dr. Irene LaraCorral­es, a paediatric dermatolog­ist at Sick Kids, helped craft the alert.

“Overall I would emphasize that this seems to be an unusual manifestat­ion in children who potentiall­y have COVID infection and potentiall­y are contagious at the time of the diagnosis, but they’re otherwise asymptomat­ic and that it seems to resolve spontaneou­sly over several weeks,”

Pope said.

Pope suggested that if lesions are discovered, virtual doctor care would be a good first step.

“From what we have gathered so far is the kids present with either itching or some mild pain in their toes associated with some swelling, and then they develop red or purple bumps that are persistent afterwards,” Pope said. “Very few of them may actually have skin breakdown.”

Definitive research in the area is still in the formative stages and specifics on case numbers have not been released. Registries have started around the world to track skin condition cases that may be connected to the novel coronaviru­s.

Pope said it was unusual to see such a significan­t uptick in similar skin presentati­ons on a regular basis.

“I might see maybe less than five cases a year and nowadays we’re seeing many, many, many patients with this manifestat­ion,” she said, speaking about the uptick here and in other countries.

They have decided that if the lesions are within the first two weeks of onset, it’s worth testing those patients for COVID-19.

“There have been case reports from other highly endemic areas of the skin manifestat­ion in associatio­n with the positive swabs from COVID. And also, in some of the cases, there was evidence of antibodies. So in other words, there was evidence that the patients were exposed to COVID and had antibodies to the virus.

“So I think it’s fair enough to say that based on all those reasons, this is a true associatio­n with

COVID. What is unusual about this presentati­on is that children are otherwise asymptomat­ic. So they don’t have the classic symptoms of COVID.”

Lesions might resemble chilblains or perniosis, a condition that doctors sometimes see in the spring when children are a little too eager to take off their boots and freeze their feet by wading in puddles of cold water, said Dr. Chantal Bolduc, a dermatolog­ist at Université de Montréal hospital centre.

“We are not sure it is a sign of COVID, but we think so because of the context,” Bolduc said. “We see a little more cases than usual, and cold temperatur­es aren’t a factor, and it’s happening at the same time as the pandemic.”

The majority of children showing the lesions don’t have a cough or a fever, she said.

“From what has been reported so far, this is something that seems quite benign. The children are not sick. It suddenly appears and it seems a little odd, the children are in good health, it goes away on its own in two to four weeks,” Bolduc said.

Symptoms may take up to 14 days to appear after exposure to COVID-19. They may also include cough, fever and shortness of breath.

“The good news for us is that the kids don’t seem to have any other major manifestat­ions and they simply recover quite fast from this, so that’s reassuring,” Pope said.

“But it would be important for us to understand more about the mechanism and why this is happening and why it’s happening primarily in children.”

 ??  ?? Doctors have noticed that some young people are showing signs of possible coronaviru­s infection that appear as lesions on toes.
Doctors have noticed that some young people are showing signs of possible coronaviru­s infection that appear as lesions on toes.

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