1. [Leukocytoclastic vasculitis due to drug allergy presenting as generalized pustular exanthema].
- Author
-
Röckl H
- Subjects
- Aged, Benzeneacetamides, Diagnosis, Differential, Doxycycline adverse effects, Humans, Intradermal Tests, Male, Penicillanic Acid adverse effects, Polylysine adverse effects, Polylysine analogs & derivatives, Suppuration, Vasculitis, Leukocytoclastic, Cutaneous pathology, Anti-Bacterial Agents adverse effects, Drug Hypersensitivity etiology, Exanthema chemically induced, Vasculitis, Leukocytoclastic, Cutaneous chemically induced
- Abstract
A 68-year-old man who was treated for febrile angina with gentamicin, doxycycline, phenoxymethylpenicillin K, and minocycline developed a generalized pustular exanthema favoring the predilected areas (hands, feet). Apart from a subepidermal pustule, the most noteworthy histological finding was a pronounced leukocytoclastic vasculitis. After disappearance of the skin lesions an intradermal test using cilligen (penicilloyl-polylysin) was conducted. The test gave a strongly positive early reaction, and 48 h after this an acute pustular outbreak developed analogous to the original manifestation. Doxycycline tested late, produced no exacerbation even though it was positive in the intradermal test. This pustular allergical drug rash can be classified as a vasculitis leucocytoclastica allergica which, as we know, appears in various clinical forms. It does not form a new disease entity. Terms used so far, such as "pustular necrotizing angiitis", "generalized pustular drug rash", "acute generalized pustular bacterid", "pustulosis acuta generalisata", only partially correspond to the actual pathoetiology.
- Published
- 1981