Introduction - Itchy Echoes
- Autoeczematization (Id Reaction): A secondary, disseminated eczematous reaction.
- Mechanism: Immunologic hypersensitivity (autosensitization) to antigens from a distant primary inflammatory or infectious focus. It is a sterile eruption, often a delayed-type hypersensitivity (Type IV) response.
- Common Triggers:
- Fungal (dermatophytids)
- Bacterial (bacterids)
- Viral, parasitic
- Inflammatory dermatoses (e.g., stasis dermatitis, contact dermatitis)
⭐ Autoeczematization is a sterile, immunologically mediated rash triggered by a remote inflammatory or infectious site.
Clinical Picture - Rash Reflections
- Onset: Typically acute and symmetrical.
- Morphology:
- Pruritic papules, vesicles (often pompholyx-like/dyshidrotic eczema on hands/feet), eczematous patches, erythema, scaling.
- Can be polymorphic.
- Common Distribution:
- Trunk, extremities (especially sides of fingers, palms, soles).
- Often spares the face.
- Symptoms: INTENSE pruritus is a hallmark.
- Timing: Appears after the primary focus is established (e.g., dermatophytid, bacterid); may flare with initial treatment of the primary focus.

⭐ The classic Id reaction presents as a symmetrical, intensely itchy papulovesicular eruption, often resembling pompholyx on the hands and feet.
The Source - Culprit Hunt
Identifying and treating the primary lesion is crucial for resolving an Id reaction. Key foci include:
📌 Mnemonic: 'F B V P I'
- Fungal (Dermatophytids):
- Tinea pedis (most common)
- Tinea capitis (kerion)
- Tinea cruris
- Bacterial (Bacterids):
- Impetigo, folliculitis
- Infected wounds (Staphylococcal/Streptococcal)
- Viral:
- Molluscum contagiosum
- Herpes zoster/simplex
- Parasitic:
- Scabies
- Inflammatory dermatoses:
- Stasis dermatitis (often with secondary infection/inflammation)
- Severe contact dermatitis, infected eczema
⭐ Tinea pedis is the most frequently implicated primary trigger for autoeczematization (dermatophytid reaction).
Diagnosis & Mimics - Spotting the Spread
Primarily a clinical diagnosis. Key features:
- A primary infectious or inflammatory focus.
- Followed by a secondary, disseminated eczematous rash.
- Rash is sterile (negative scrapings/cultures from Id lesions).
- Crucially, Id reaction resolves with effective treatment of the primary focus.
Investigations: KOH/culture of primary site. Biopsy of Id lesion shows non-specific spongiotic dermatitis (helps rule out mimics). DDx: Generalized allergic contact dermatitis, atopic dermatitis flare, drug eruption, scabies.
⭐ Biopsy of an Id reaction typically reveals non-specific spongiotic dermatitis; its main utility is to exclude other diagnoses.
Treatment Plan - Calming the Chaos
- Core Principle: Aggressively treat the primary underlying focus (e.g., antifungals for dermatophytosis, antibiotics for infections).
- Symptomatic Id Reaction Management:
- Topical corticosteroids: Mid- to high-potency.
- Systemic corticosteroids (severe cases): Prednisolone $0.5-1 \text{ mg/kg/day}$, short course, then taper.
- Oral antihistamines: For pruritus relief.
- Emollients: Maintain skin barrier.
- Wet dressings/compresses: For acute vesicular lesions.
⭐ The most critical step in managing autoeczematization is the successful eradication or control of the primary sensitizing dermatosis or infection. Prognosis: Excellent if primary focus is adequately treated.
High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Autoeczematization (Id Reaction): Acute, symmetrical, pruritic vesicular eruption secondary to a distant primary inflammatory focus.
- Most commonly triggered by fungal infections (dermatophytid), especially tinea pedis.
- A hypersensitivity reaction, not direct infection spread.
- Diagnosis: Clinical; identify and confirm primary source (e.g., KOH for fungi).
- Treatment: Eradicate the underlying primary cause; topical steroids for symptomatic relief.
- Id lesions are sterile; resolve once primary trigger is managed.
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