Scabies Surrepticius: Scabies Masquerading as Pityriasis Rosea.

Title

Scabies Surrepticius: Scabies Masquerading as Pityriasis Rosea.

Creator

Stiff Katherine M; Cohen Philip R

Publisher

Cureus

Date

2017
2017-12

Description

Scabies, a mite infestation caused by 'Sarcoptes scabiei', most commonly presents as pruritic linear burrows where the mite has invaded the skin. Scabies variant such as bullous, crusted, hidden, incognito, nodular and scalp-mimic the other conditions. In addition, atypical presentations of scabies can masquerade as dermatitis herpetiformis, ecchymosis, Langerhans cell histiocytosis, systemic lupus erythematosus, urticaria, and urticaria pigmentosa. A 59-year-old male presented with non-pruritic papulosquamous plaques on his chest, abdomen, and back resembling lesions of pityriasis rosea in morphology and distribution. The complete cutaneous examination also demonstrated burrows on his finger webs. A mineral oil preparation of skin scrapings showed scabies mites, ova, and scybala. His infestation resolved after the treatment with topical permethrin 5% cream and oral ivermectin 15 mg on days one and eight. In conclusion, scabies surrepticius is a term that has recently been established to unify not only the numerous variants but also the atypical presentations of scabies. The inaccurate diagnosis of scabies infestation can lead to increased medical costs and the side effects of unnecessary tests and the treatment. Pityriasis rosea-like scabies can be added to the list of atypical presentations that are included under the unifying designation scabies surrepticius.

Subject

feces; mite; ova; pityriasis; rosea; scabies; scybala; surrepticius

Identifier

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Pages

e1961–e1961

Issue

12

Volume

9

Citation

Stiff Katherine M; Cohen Philip R, “Scabies Surrepticius: Scabies Masquerading as Pityriasis Rosea.,” NEOMED Bibliography Database, accessed March 28, 2024, https://neomed.omeka.net/items/show/5279.