Pustular dermatosis of the dorsal hands is a peculiar variant of Sweet's syndrome described by Strutton et al. Nevertheless, not all authors accept this entity. We present a retrospective study of eight cases of neutrophilic vasculitis of the hands. Three patients presented with lesions only on the dorsal hands, three with lesions on the palmar surface and two with lesions on the dorsal and palmar surfaces of the hands. The patients with lesions on the dorsal surface presented a pustular aspect, and the histopathological examination revealed a high degree of vascular damage with presence of vasculitis and, in one case, with fibrinoid necrosis. Therefore, the term pustular vasculitis of the dorsal hands introduced by Strutton et al. should probably be conserved. Our cases may have demonstrated a peculiar clinicopathological disease with its own entity.
No intra or post-surgical mortality or life-threatening local complications were detected. Most post-surgical local complications appeared after wide excisions and complex reconstruction techniques that prolonged the length of the surgery.
Background. Eosinophilic dermatosis of hematologic disorders is a reactive process that may cause a variety of clinical manifestations.
Methods. We report a patient who had outbreaks of skin lesions since the onset of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia. Results. The cutaneous eruptions began as eosinophilic panniculitis and after changed to insect bite-like lesions.
Conclusion. We think that eosinophilic panniculitis and insect bite-like lesions may be part of the spectrum of the same entity in patients with hematologic disorders.
The term "Acute Syndrome of Apoptotic Pan-Epidermolysis" (ASAP) designs clinical entities characterized by massive cleavage of the epidermis resulting from hyperacute epidermal basal cell apoptotic injury. It can be seen typically in classic toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN), but occasionally occurs in non-drug-induced entities called "TEN-like" diseases (e.g., lupus erythematosus (LE), acute graft versus host disease and pseudoporphyria). We would like to highlight the difficulties of establishing differential diagnoses between "TEN-like" LE and drug reactions, especially when LE has not been previously diagnosed. We report a patient with fulminate pattern of epidermal cell injury resulting in a clinical presentation having combined features of drug-induced TEN and acute cutaneous LE with laboratory findings of systemic LE (SLE) and without systemic symptoms or high-risk drug ingestion. Although most cases of ASAP in the setting of LE are drug-induced TEN, there are reported cases of "TEN-like" LE with subacute progression, absence of systemic involvement and lack of drug ingestion. Such cases usually have a previous history of SLE and positive serologic markers. Although some authors observed that these lesions could be related to systemic severity of SLE, this is the first patient reported who progresses to discoid LE and we think it could be a marker of good prognosis.
The combination of an IPL system and a long-pulsed Nd:YAG laser is efficient and safe for the treatment of cutaneous and labial telangiectases in patients with HHT disease and constitutes an important tool in improving their quality of life.
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