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Rheumatoid Arthritis and Skin Symptoms

In RA, your immune system goes into overdrive and attacks your joints. This creates uncontrolled inflammation that damages the cartilage in your joints and circulates throughout your body. Skin affected by inflammation in RA can develop the following problems.
Rheumatoid Nodules
- Elbows
- Fingers
- Forearms
- Heels or near the Achilles tendon
- Hips
- Low back (the sacrum)
- Scalp
In many cases, the nodules don’t cause symptoms or bother people from a cosmetic standpoint and can remain untreated, says Dr. Greer. Sometimes they go away on their own.
Symptomatic skin nodules can be treated with injections of a combination of a steroid and a pain reliever into the nodule. If this doesn’t help, or the nodules are causing complications like infections or severe pain, they may have to be surgically removed.
Easy Bruising
RA can lead to a low platelet count, which can cause bruising of the skin and bleeding from the gums. Platelets are cells that help the blood clot in response to an injury.
Low platelet levels can also be caused by some arthritis medications. “If a person [with RA] has bruising all over their body, it could be due to a medicine causing low platelets or the disease itself,” Greer says.
Palmar Erythema
Rheumatoid Vasculitis
“Vasculitis can look different in different people,” says Greer. “The rash can appear as purplish spots or little pinpoints of red on the skin, and it can be itchy.
Neutrophilic Dermatoses
Neutrophilic dermatoses are a group of skin conditions that occur as a result of white blood cells (called neutrophils) that flood the skin because of the body’s chronic inflammation. Symptoms of these conditions include purple nodules, papules, or plaques that can be painful.
The two most common forms of neutrophilic dermatoses that may develop in people with RA include:
- Sweet syndrome: This causes sudden, tender skin lesions, usually in the upper part of the body, and often comes with a fever. This rash may enlarge to form plaques or blisters. It can be painful and burning, but is not itchy.
- Pyoderma gangrenosum: This is a very serious and painful manifestation in which the skin develops ulcers, usually on the legs. If not treated promptly, the ulcers can become infected or progress to the point where underlying tendons or muscles are exposed.