1. Mafenide Acetate Allergy Presenting as Recurrent Chondritis
- Author
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G. T. Lionelli, Richard A. Korentager, E. J. Pickus, and Charles E. Woodall
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Mafenide ,Allergy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Erythema ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Drug Hypersensitivity ,Recurrence ,Edema ,medicine ,Humans ,Chondritis ,Ear, External ,Osteochondritis ,Antibacterial agent ,business.industry ,Otitis Externa ,medicine.disease ,Tars ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Anti-Infective Agents, Local ,medicine.symptom ,Differential diagnosis ,Burns ,Complication ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Acute chondritis has a strong predilection for recurrence. Mafenide acetate has been implicated in causing reactions that mimic this condition; however, these hypersensitivity reactions lack fever, fluctuance, and pain. The authors report a case of mafenide acetate allergy presenting as recurrent chondritis in a patient who had previously been treated successfully for this condition. In this patient, the allergic response resolved within 3 days after cessation of mafenide acetate. If unappreciated, it may have led to unnecessary operative intervention. Therefore, auricular edema and erythema, without fever, fluctuance, and pain, must be recognized by surgeons as a possible mafenide acetate allergy and must be considered in the differential diagnosis for patients who present with recurrent acute suppurative chondritis.
- Published
- 2002
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