TY - JOUR
T1 - Onychomadesis secondary to mouth, hand, and foot disease
T2 - Case report
AU - Arredondo-Nontol, Rodolfo
AU - Arredondo-Nontol, Miriam
AU - Castillo-Peña, Luis
AU - Vertiz, Edward Andrés
AU - Gómez, Gaby Lourdes
AU - Reto, Narcisa
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© (2025), (Instituto Nacional de Salud). All rights reserved.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This case is about a previously healthy five-year-old girl who presented with hand, foot, and mouth disease, and subsequently developed onychomadesis one month later, with detachment of the nail plates on both fingers and toes. However, the condition resolved spontaneously. After hand, foot, and mouth disease, she exhibited nail bed elevation at the proximal region of the nails on the second and third fingers of both hands. This elevation was painless, without bleeding, and later involved all toes. The condition resolved spontaneously over the following three months, with new, healthy nail growth. In Latin America, onychomadesis is a rare complication of hand, foot, and mouth disease in our region and is associated with atypical forms of the disease, indicating altered host response to common infections with coxsackie viruses. Reporting such cases is essential to understand these benign and self-limited variations, prevent misdiagnoses, and inform parents appropriately.
AB - This case is about a previously healthy five-year-old girl who presented with hand, foot, and mouth disease, and subsequently developed onychomadesis one month later, with detachment of the nail plates on both fingers and toes. However, the condition resolved spontaneously. After hand, foot, and mouth disease, she exhibited nail bed elevation at the proximal region of the nails on the second and third fingers of both hands. This elevation was painless, without bleeding, and later involved all toes. The condition resolved spontaneously over the following three months, with new, healthy nail growth. In Latin America, onychomadesis is a rare complication of hand, foot, and mouth disease in our region and is associated with atypical forms of the disease, indicating altered host response to common infections with coxsackie viruses. Reporting such cases is essential to understand these benign and self-limited variations, prevent misdiagnoses, and inform parents appropriately.
KW - and mouth disease; enterovirus; case reports
KW - foot
KW - hand
KW - Nail diseases
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105007341173&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.7705/biomedica.7171
DO - 10.7705/biomedica.7171
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:105007341173
SN - 0120-4157
VL - 45
SP - 190
EP - 196
JO - Biomedica
JF - Biomedica
IS - 2
ER -