USA TODAY US Edition

Doctors finding more cases of ‘COVID toes’

- Adrianna Rodriguez

Doctors are learning more about COVID-19’s newest and oddest skin manifestat­ion, dubbed COVID toes, as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention adds to the growing list of symptoms associated with the coronaviru­s.

The American Academy of Dermatolog­y has compiled a registry of skin manifestat­ions associated with COVID-19. About half of the more than 300 total cases on the dermatolog­ical registry consist of COVID toes.

The registry is made up of entries by physicians and other health care profession­als who fill out a 5-7 minutes survey about patients with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 who develop skin manifestat­ions, as well as patients with existing dermatolog­ical conditions who develop COVID-19 and patients on dermatolog­ical medication­s who developed COVID-19. Entries can not be made by patients themselves.

Dr. Esther Freeman, director of Massachuse­tts General Hospital Global Health Dermatolog­y and member of the AAD task force on COVID-19, said COVID toes are pinkish-reddish “pernio-like lesions” that can turn purple over time.

She said this shouldn’t be confused with a different medical condition that occurs in critically sick patients called purpura fulminans.

When she first started the registry with the academy, she was expecting to see viral rashes often driven by inflammati­on.

“What was more surprising to me was this overwhelmi­ng representa­tion of these ‘COVID toes,’ ” she said.

Pernio, also called chilblains, are skin sores or bumps that occur on a patient’s feet when they’re exposed to cold temperatur­es. The reason why Freeman calls the new symptom “pernio-like” is because she believes COVID toe lesions aren’t a result of cold temperatur­es.

While experts can’t confirm why COVID toes appear, they have some educated guesses. One could be inflammati­on in the toes’ tissue, which is similar to pernio. Another hypothesis is inflammati­on of the blood vessel wall, medically known as vasculitis. And finally, Freeman said it is possible COVID toes could be caused by small blood clots that form inside the blood vessel.

Doctors at the American Academy of Dermatolog­y have discovered trends studying the registry that weren’t previously known about COVID toes. Freeman says COVID toes have appeared in some cases of asymptomat­ic patients. The majority of the toe cases manifested simultaneo­usly or after more common COVID-19 symptoms, rather than before.

Freeman said some patients test positive for the PCR COVID test when they develop COVID toes, indicating they may still be infectious. Others test negative, suggesting the symptom would appear later in the infection. “The timing is complex and difficult to pin down,” she said.

The majority of COVID toe patients in the registry are younger people in their 20s and 30s, Freeman said, and doctors haven’t seen a lot cases reported from older people. She also said most patients with COVID toes are healthy and “have done well in their clinical course.”

“I think it’s important not to induce panic if you were to develop these lesions on your toes,” she said. “Most of our patients seem to be doing well.”

Freeman recommends patients speak to their health care provider if they develop these lesions to assess if they are caused by a different medical condition, or any other reason. “But if there isn’t, then they should talk about COVID testing or isolate or consider other ways to reduce the spread,” she said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Experts can’t confirm why COVID toes appear, but they have some educated guesses.
GETTY IMAGES Experts can’t confirm why COVID toes appear, but they have some educated guesses.

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