Pastia's lines

Pastia's signPastia lines,[page needed][1] or Thompson's sign is a clinical sign in which pink or red lines formed of confluent petechiae are found in skin creases, particularly the crease in the antecubital fossa, the soft depression on the inside of the arm; the folding crease divides this fossa where the forearm meets the (upper) arm (the bicepstricepshumerus section of the upper extremity); the inside of the elbow (the inside flexor depression (fossa) of the elbow. It occurs in patients with scarlet fever prior to the appearance of the rash and persists as pigmented lines after desquamation.[citation needed]

Pastia's lines
Differential diagnosisscarlet fever


The sign is named after the Romanian physician Constantin Chessec Pastia (1883–1926). 


This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
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