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Pemphigus Vulgaris

Pemphigus vulgaris

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Page 1: Pemphigus vulgaris

Pemphigus Vulgaris

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What is it?• This patient

complains of this painful outbreak. You tell them they have

• A) Poor hygiene

• B) Bullous Pemphigoid

• C) Pemphigus Vulgaris

• D) Bullous Impetigo

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Pemphigus Vulgaris• Pemphigus

vulgaris is the most common form of pemphigus

• Oral lesions usually precede the skin blisters by weeks to months (80% present with oral lesions first)

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Pemphigus Vulgaris• The primary

lesion is a flaccid blister/bullae that easily ruptures, leaving erosions and crusting, and eventual marked post-inflammatory changes

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Pemphigus Vulgaris• In severe cases the

oral epithelium is completely denuded and is associated with intraoral pain that is particularly worsened by eating

• Infrequently other mucous membranes maybe involved (ocular and genitourinary)

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Pemphigus Vulgaris

• Nonpruritic skin blisters varying in size from 1 to several cm’s gradually appear and maybe localized for a considerable time

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Pemphigus Vulgaris• The lesions

become invariably more generalized if left untreated.

• It is usually most accentuated in the intertriginous areas

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Pemphigus Vulgaris

• The etiology is from autoimmunity to the pemphigus vulgaris antigen (desmoglein 3) a member of the cadherin family and a normal component of human keratinocyte cell membranes

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Pemphigus Vulgaris • DIF reveals IgG in the intercellular regions of the epidermis in and around the affected parts of the skin or mucous membranes

• C3, IgM and IgA are found much less frequently

• Indirect IF studies are positive and can be used as an indicator of disease activity (monkey esophagus)

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Pemphigus Vulgaris• The basal cells lose

their intercellular bridges but they remain attached to the dermis, giving a ‘tombstone appearance’

• The blister cavity usually contains a few acantholytic cells which often show degenerative changes

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Diagnosis

• Clinical picture• Skin biopsy for

light microscopy• Skin biopsy for

direct IF studies• Indirect IF

studies (levels correlate with disease activity)

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Pemphigus Vegetans• This is a variant of P.

Vulgaris in which markedly hyperplastic erosive plaques develop, primarily in intertriginous regions (groin and axillary vaults)

• At times, such lesions occur in some patients with longstanding pemphigus vulgaris

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Pemphigus Vegetans• P. Vegetans is

characterized by flaccid bullae that become erosions and form fungoid vegetations or papillomatous proliferations especially in the body folds

• The bullae rupture and become exuberant with verrucous vegetations, capped by crusts and surrounded by a zone of inflammation

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Pemphigus

Other variants:• P. erythematosus• P. Foliaceous• P. Vulgaris• P. Vegetans

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P. Vulgaris Treatment

Oral steroids

Azathioprine

Cyclosporine

Plasmapheresis

Rituximab