Reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption: Difference between revisions
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Created page with "== Background == * RIME is a mucosal or mucocutaneous eruption following Mycoplasma pneumoniae infections ** Other suspected causative infections include Chlamydophila pneumoniae, human metapneumovirus, human parainfluenza virus 2, rhinovirus, enterovirus, influenza A and B, COVID‐19, and adenovirus * Similar to a postinfectious Stevens-Johnson syndrome, though more common in younger patients with notable mucosal..." |
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* Diagnosis and management of reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption. J Hosp Med. 2025 Nov;20(11):1212-1216. doi: [https://doi.org/10.1002/jhm.70099 10.1002/jhm.70099]. Epub 2025 Jul 7. PMID: [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40619921/ 40619921]; PMCID: [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12579755/ PMC12579755]. |
* Diagnosis and management of reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption. J Hosp Med. 2025 Nov;20(11):1212-1216. doi: [https://doi.org/10.1002/jhm.70099 10.1002/jhm.70099]. Epub 2025 Jul 7. PMID: [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40619921/ 40619921]; PMCID: [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12579755/ PMC12579755]. |
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[[Category:Dermatology]] |
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Revision as of 19:58, 13 April 2026
Background
- RIME is a mucosal or mucocutaneous eruption following Mycoplasma pneumoniae infections
- Other suspected causative infections include Chlamydophila pneumoniae, human metapneumovirus, human parainfluenza virus 2, rhinovirus, enterovirus, influenza A and B, COVID‐19, and adenovirus
- Similar to a postinfectious Stevens-Johnson syndrome, though more common in younger patients with notable mucosal findings and absent or minimal cutaneous findings
Clinical Manifestations
- Prodrome of fever, cough, and malaise lasting 3 to 13 days (median 8 days)
- Usually two or more mucosal surfaces involved, including oral (most common, in 95% of cases), ocular (next most common, in around 90%), urogenital (about 60%), and anal or esophageal surfaces (least common)
- Oral: erosions, ulcers, vesicular or vesiculobullous lesions, or desquamation
- Ocular: bilateral conjunctivitis (often purulent), conjunctival injection, or hyperemia
- Urogenital: more commonly described in female patients
- May have skin involvement, though absent in 1/3 and sparse in 1/2 of cases
- Vesiculobullous lesions are most common, followed by targetoid, papular, macular, and morbilliform
- Present on extremities and/or trunk
Diagnosis
- Evidence of an infectious trigger, with at least 2 of:
- Non-contributory medication history
- Erosive mucositis affecting 2 or more sites
- Vesiculobullous lesions or atypical targets affecting less than 10% of body surface area
- Evidence of an infectious trigger can include history of cough, fever, malaise, and arthralgias in the preceding 7 to 10 days, or signs of respiratory infection on clinical examination
Management
- Not well studied
- Supportive care: fluids, nutrition, and pain management
- Consider Ophthalmology consult for patients with ocular involvement
- In case reports or case series, patients have received high-dose corticosteroids (1-2 mg/kg IV methylprednisolone or 1 mg/kg p.o. prednisone for 3 to 5 days +/- taper), IVIG, cyclosporine, and etanercept
Further Reading
- Diagnosis and management of reactive infectious mucocutaneous eruption. J Hosp Med. 2025 Nov;20(11):1212-1216. doi: 10.1002/jhm.70099. Epub 2025 Jul 7. PMID: 40619921; PMCID: PMC12579755.