Cases reported "Pemphigus"

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1/155. Scrape cytology of oral pemphigus. Report of a case with immunocytochemistry and light, scanning electron and transmission electron microscopy.

    BACKGROUND: pemphigus vulgaris is a disseminated disease of the skin and mucous membranes characterized by recurrent vesicular and bullous lesions due to the autoantigen belonging to the cadherin type of cell adhesion molecules. The presence of acantholysis associated with immunoglobulins in the intercellular spaces and on the cell membrane are diagnostic features. However, the appearance of smears from the oral cavity by scanning (SEM) and transmission electron microscopic (TEM) study as well as immunocytochemistry of cadherin does not appear to have been previously reported. CASE: A 67-year-old female developed erosion on her gingiva with severe pain. On oral examination, there were ulcerations on the palate, and the Nikolsky sign was positive. The characteristic cytologic findings from oral scrapes were high cellularity, a bloody background and a predominant cell population consisting of polygonal basal and parabasal cells with pronounced nucleoli. Also present were degenerative cell changes: e.g., cytoplasmic vacuoles and a homogeneous nuclear appearance. Immunocytochemical staining for IgG and cadherin gave a positive reaction in the intercellular spaces and on the cell membranes. The surface of cells in pemphigus vulgaris by SEM showed somewhat irregularly distributed microridges, and TEM revealed desmosomal attachments, degenerated tonofilaments with pronounced nucleoli and heterochromatin. As a result of cytodiagnosis, additional appropriate specimens were obtained at the time of the scraping for confirmatory immunocytochemistry for cadherin, SEM and TEM studies. CONCLUSION: The results demonstrate that a precise diagnosis of pemphigus vulgaris can be rendered on cellular material and cadherin immunocytochemistry obtained by scrape from the oral mucosa.
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ranking = 1
keywords = mucous membrane, mucosa, membrane
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2/155. Pyodermatitis-pyostomatitis vegetans: report of a case and review of the literature.

    Pyodermatitis-pyostomatitis vegetans is a benign, rare disorder characterized by a pustular eruption in the oral mucosa and vegetating plaques involving the groin and axillary folds. Its association with inflammatory bowel disease is well established. We report the case of a 49-year-old-white man with ulcerative colitis who manifested a vegetating, annular plaque in the left inguinal region of 2 months' duration. Oral examination disclosed an erythematous mucosa with multiple painful pustules involving the labial and gingival mucosa. Histopathologic study demonstrated epidermal hyperplasia and an inflammatory infiltrate composed mostly of neutrophils and eosinophils, grouped into microabscesses within the epidermis and with a bandlike configuration in the upper dermis. Results of direct and indirect immunofluorescence studies were negative. We discuss the differential diagnosis between pyodermatitis-pyostomatitis vegetans and pemphigus vegetans.
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ranking = 0.082535334917329
keywords = mucosa
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3/155. esophagitis dissecans superficialis associated with pemphigus vulgaris.

    The extension of bullous lesions in pemphigus to the esophagus is relatively uncommon, especially in patients who appear to be in clinical remission. Very rarely, pemphigus vulgaris may affect the entire esophagus, resulting in complete sloughing of the mucous membrane. A 20-year-old man with pemphigus vulgaris presented to the emergency room with acute onset of dysphagia, odynophagia, and hemoptysis. There were no cutaneous or oral findings of pemphigus on presentation, since he was being maintained on corticosteroids and azathioprine with excellent results. During initial evaluation in the emergency room, the patient was observed to vomit a cast of the mucosal lining of the esophagus. The morphologic description of such an esophageal cast is termed esophagitis dissecans superficialis. This is the third case of esophagitis dissecans superficialis in pemphigus vulgaris recorded in the medical literature.
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ranking = 0.99075246188161
keywords = mucous membrane, mucosa, membrane
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4/155. Paraneoplastic pemphigus with fatal pulmonary involvement in a woman with a mesenteric Castleman tumour.

    A 42-year-old woman presented with oral and labial erosions, conjunctivitis, facial rash and lichenoid erythematous papules on the trunk. Paraneoplastic pemphigus (PNP) was suspected, and a search for a neoplasm revealed an intra-abdominal Castleman tumour sized 7 x 5 x 6 cm. After removal of the Castleman tumour, the skin and mucosal inflammation gradually subsided over the next 12 months. However, due to irreversible pulmonary involvement the patient died of intractable respiratory distress 2 years after the onset of the disease. Systemic corticosteroids, azathioprine, cyclophosphamide, high-dose intravenous immunoglobulins and thalidomide were ineffective. The diagnosis of PNP was confirmed by keratinocyte antigen immunoprecipitation with the patient's serum.
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ranking = 0.027511778305776
keywords = mucosa
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5/155. pemphigus vulgaris in pregnancy with favourable foetal prognosis.

    pemphigus vulgaris is an immunobullous disease affecting the skin and mucous membranes most commonly during the fifth and sixth decades of life. Its occurrence in pregnancy is rare. We now report two severe cases of the disorder presenting during pregnancy and discuss its potential effects on the foetus and its management in pregnancy.
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ranking = 0.96324068357584
keywords = mucous membrane, membrane
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6/155. Successful treatment of adolescent pemphigus vulgaris by immunoadsorption method.

    A 15-year-old girl with pemphigus vulgaris did not respond to oral administration of prednisolone at 45 mg/day. The skin and oral mucous membrane lesions recurred after effective treatments with methylprednisolone pulse therapy and combination therapy with prednisolone and cyclosporine. The finally successful treatment involved eleven cycles of immunoadsorption using a tryptophan column and administration of a moderate dose of prednisolone. serum gamma-globulin level and anti-intercellular antibody titer decreased from 1.08 g/dl to 0.5 g/dl and 1:320 to 1:20, respectively. She has been well controlled with 21.5 mg/day prednisolone for 8 months after the final adsorption. Considering the physical, mental and social situation of adolescent student patients, immunoadsorption is a highly preferable choice among a variety of treatment modalities for pemphigus vulgaris because it makes the term of hospitalization shorter and avoids undesirable side effects from initial high dose corticosteroids.
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ranking = 0.96324068357584
keywords = mucous membrane, membrane
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7/155. pemphigus vulgaris localized to the vagina presenting as chronic vaginal discharge.

    Involvement in pemphigus vulgaris of the female genital tract including the vulva, vagina and cervix has previously been described. In all these cases other cutaneous and mucosal sites have also been affected at some time. We describe a case of pemphigus vulgaris which only involved the vaginal mucosa. The patient presented with a persistent vaginal discharge and examination showed extensive vaginal erosions. histology of vaginal biopsies was non-diagnostic. The recognition that the vaginal changes may represent an immunobullous disease led to further vaginal biopsies on which direct immunofluorescence studies were performed. These biopsies showed IgG and C3 in the intercellular epidermis, suggesting a diagnosis of pemphigus vulgaris. During the 3-year period that the patient has been under review there have never been any other cutaneous or mucosal lesions. To our knowledge, this is the first case of pemphigus vulgaris localized exclusively to the vaginal mucosa. There was considerable delay in diagnosis and this case highlights how important it is to recognize that chronic mucosal lesions at genital sites may be caused by immunobullous diseases such as cicatricial pemphigoid and pemphigus, and to institute appropriate investigations.
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ranking = 0.13755889152888
keywords = mucosa
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8/155. A child with localized vulval pemphigoid and IgG autoantibodies targeting the C-terminus of collagen XVII/BP180.

    Localized vulval pemphigoid of childhood (LVPC) has previously been reported in six girls. Clinical features and immunopathological data have suggested it to be a morphological variant of bullous pemphigoid. Epitope targets of the autoantibodies of these patients have not been defined in detail. We describe a 9-year-old girl with possible cicatricial LVPC and circulating IgG antibodies directed against native collagen XVII/BP180, its 120-kDa soluble ectodomain and against the C-terminus of collagen XVII/BP180. No reactivity was detected towards the NC16A domain of collagen XVII/BP180. Linear IgG and C3 deposits were found along the cutaneous basement membrane zone. On 1 mol/L salt-split skin, IgG autoantibodies were shown to bind to the epidermis, and the HLA type II allele DQB1*0301, a marker with significantly increased occurrence in patients with ocular and oral cicatricial pemphigoid, was identified in this patient. Our data suggest that LVPC is a variant of bullous pemphigoid in which direct immunofluorescence microscopy combined with immunoblot analysis can deliver valuable diagnostic information for differential diagnosis. However, differentiation between the scarring and non-scarring course of the disease cannot be made with the present diagnostic markers and therefore careful follow-up of patients with LVPC is required.
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ranking = 0.0046237690591926
keywords = membrane
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9/155. Gingival lesions diagnosed as pemphigus vulgaris in an adolescent. Case report.

    Desquamative gingivitis (DG) is a fairly common disorder in which the gingivae show chronic desquamation. Originally considered to be related to hormonal changes at menopause, since many of the patients are middle-aged women, DG is now recognized to be mainly a manifestation of a number of disorders ranging from vesiculobullous diseases to adverse reactions to a variety of chemicals or allergens. Desquamative gingivitis can be an important early clinical manifestation of serious systemic diseases such as pemphigus vulgaris. The authors present a case that illustrates the importance of a specific diagnosis in patients with desquamative gingival lesions previously treated for 6 months as classical gingivitis. Gingival biopsy showed histologic patterns typical of pemphigus vulgaris. The patient was treated with systemic and topical corticosteroids in association with miconazole. The patient is now under control with low-dose systemic corticosteroids. Proper recognition of lesions in the oral mucosa leads, in several situations, to an early diagnosis of a systemic disease.
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ranking = 0.027511778305776
keywords = mucosa
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10/155. Late development of antidesmoglein 1 antibodies in pemphigus vulgaris: correlation with disease progression.

    The coexistence of antidesmoglein 3 (Dsg3) and antidesmoglein 1 (Dsg1) autoantibodies is well described in patients with pemphigus vulgaris (PV); however, there is little evidence of sequential development of these two autoantibodies. Autoantibody responses to Dsg3 and Dsg1 were studied in seven PV patients over time by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, using baculovirus expressed recombinant fusion proteins. All patients had anti-Dsg3 IgG antibodies at presentation. Two patients developed anti-Dsg1 later in the course of the disease. The transition in autoantibody profile was associated with disease progression to generalized PV involving mucous membranes and skin in both patients; one patient initially presented with a predominantly mucosal phenotype, the other with herpetiform pemphigus-like features. These findings demonstrate that there is an extension of autoimmune response from anti-Dsg3 only to both anti-Dsg3 and anti-Dsg1 in some patients, which is associated with an alteration in clinical expression in PV.
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ranking = 0.99075246188161
keywords = mucous membrane, mucosa, membrane
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