Dermatology Made Easy by Amanda Oakley

Dermatology Made Easy by Amanda Oakley

Author:Amanda Oakley [Oakley, Amanda]
Language: eng
Format: azw3, pdf
Publisher: Scion Publishing
Published: 2017-05-06T04:00:00+00:00


Figure 3.187. SJS/TEN.

Figure 3.188. Sweet syndrome.

Recurrent/multiple ulcers

Aphthous ulceration (up to 20% children > older age; more common in Caucasians than other races, more common in females than in males); see Fig. 3.189.

Complex aphthosis: almost constant ulcers, oral and genital aphthous ulcers (adolescents, adults).

Behçet disease – oral and genital aphthous ulcers, ocular inflammation, skin lesions, pathergy and other symptoms and signs due to multisystem vasculitis (adults).

Contact stomatitis – (adults) e.g. to nicotine (irritant) or rubber (allergy).

Fixed drug eruption – to topical or oral medicine.

Erythema multiforme major – associated with herpes simplex virus activation (adolescents, young adults); see Fig. 3.190.

Oral lichen planus – may have cutaneous and mucosal lichen planus at other sites (middle-aged adults); see Fig. 3.191.

Systemic lupus erythematosus (young females); see Fig. 3.192.

Chronic ulcerative stomatitis (middle-aged women).

Orofacial granulomatosis – may have swollen lips and other orofacial features (young adults); see Fig. 3.193.

Immunobullous disease: especially pemphigus, linear IgA bullous dermatosis, mucous membrane pemphigoid – vesicles that erode/ulcerate, may have cutaneous lesions (adults); see Fig. 3.194.



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