CASE PRESENTATION
A previously healthy 67-year-old man presented to the Emergency Department with fever evolving for 5 days and dry cough. Nasopharyngeal swab polymerase chain reaction (PCR) confirmed Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection. The patient was diagnosed as a mild form of COVID-19. He needed only symptomatic treatment and clinical monitoring. Five days later, during his hospitalization in Infectious Disease Department, we noted multiple asymptomatic golden brown-colored infiltrated patches on the inner side of his left leg (Figure 1a). The rest of physical examination did not show any abnormalities. He has used, recently, only paracetamol. He denied any exposure to a new product or trauma on both legs. Dermoscopic examination showed brownish to coppery-red diffuse coloration of the background, round to oval red dots and globules (Figure 1b). Histological examination of skin biopsy revealed superficial dermal band-like infiltrate of lymphocytes and histiocytes, red blood cells extravasation (Figure 2a). For further confirmation, Perls’ stain was performed and showed hemosiderin deposits in the dermis (Figure 2b). The evolution was marked by spontaneous disappearance of skin lesions 2 weeks after clinical recovery from COVID-19.