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Roseola

roseola

Symptoms, Treatment, and Explanation of Roseola

You’re worried because your one-year-old has had a high fever for the past three days. This morning the fever seems to have subsided, but your child has suddenly broken out with a red rash all over the body. What could this be? Is it serious? Should you rush to the doctor? Here is the Dr. Sears guide to this very common childhood illness, Roseola.

What Is Roseola?

This illness, caused by a virus, is usually harmless. Roseola occurs almost only in children age 3 months to 3 years, most often between 9-12 months. And is probably the most common cause of fever in this age group.

What Does Roseola Look Like?

This virus generally causes 3 days of high fever (often over 103). The fever then subsides, and the child breaks out in a flat or bumpy red rash, usually starting around the neck, back and chest, then spreading out. The rash lasts a few days to a couple of weeks.

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Dr. Sears Clue: Roseola is about the only virus in which the rash appears after the fever breaks.

Sometimes this virus will cause 3 to 7 days of high fever, with no other symptoms and no rash. Some children will have swelling of the glands in the front and back of the neck, runny nose, cough, ear pain, vomiting or diarrhea with this illness. Children can have one or all of these symptoms.

Dr. Sears Clue: The characteristic of Roseola is that infants don’t seem very sick and act almost well when the high fever comes down.

Contagion and Transmission

Roseola is contagious from about two days before the fever starts. The contagion ends two days after the fever breaks. Children who are fever-free for 1 or 2 days can return to school, even if they still have a rash. It is passed via saliva, runny nose, or cough. The incubation period (time from when your child is exposed to the time of actual illness) is around 10 days.

How Do I Treat Roseola?

You essentially just treat any symptoms that are bothering your child. There is no actual treatment for this virus. The main thing to keep in mind is that this virus can cause high fevers. Try to be diligent in treating moderate to high fevers. Click here on fever for guidelines.

Do I Need to See the Doctor?

There is no urgency to see a doctor for this illness.

December 16, 2020 April 5, 2024 Dr. Bill Sears
age 3 months to 3 years, back, chest, children, contagious, cough, diarrhea, ear pain, fever, glands, guidelines, harmless, high fever, neck, one-year-old, rash, red rash, roseola, Runny Nose, saliva, symptoms, transmission, Treatment, virus, vomiting
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