We report on a 24-year-old, male Ugandan patient with a 2-week history of itchy papules, vesicles, erosions, and crusts distributed on the entire body, accompanied by minor erosions on the palate, tongue, and lower li...We report on a 24-year-old, male Ugandan patient with a 2-week history of itchy papules, vesicles, erosions, and crusts distributed on the entire body, accompanied by minor erosions on the palate, tongue, and lower lip. Conjunctivae and genital mucosa were not involved. Circulating IgG and IgA autoantibodies were found against recombinant full-length BP180, BP180 4575, and the C-terminus of BP230. In addition, IgG reactivity was observed against the 16th noncollagenous region of the BP180 ectodomain, the cell-derived soluble ectodomain of BP180 (linear IgA disease antigen 1), and the α 3 and γ 2 chains of laminin 5. No reactivity was detected with type VII collagen, α 6β 4 integrin, and the p200 protein. Oral prednisolone and dapsone led to clearance of lesions that mostly healed with scarring and milia formation. Here, we describe a scarring mucocutaneous variant of an autoimmune blistering skin disorder that extends the current clinical and immunopathologic spectrum of this group of diseases.展开更多
Background: No data are available on the incidence and immunoreactivity of autoimmune subepidermal blistering skin diseases in East Africa. Methods: All patients with frank blisters/erosions on the skin and/or mucous ...Background: No data are available on the incidence and immunoreactivity of autoimmune subepidermal blistering skin diseases in East Africa. Methods: All patients with frank blisters/erosions on the skin and/or mucous membranes that attended the Department of Dermatology at Mbarara University, Uganda, from May 2000 to June 2002, were investigated. The diagnosis was based on the clinical presentation and on the presence of circulating autoantibodies detected by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy on 1M NaCl-split human skin and by Western blotting of recombinant and cell-derived forms of BP180, BP230, and type VII collagen. Results: Twenty two patients with autoimmune subepidermal blistering skin disorders were identified, including nine with bullous pemphigoid pemphigoid(41%), four with linear immunoglobulin A (IgA) disease (18%), three with mucous membrane pemphigoid (14%), two with linear IgG/IgA bullous dermatosis (9%), and one each with cicatricial pemphigoid and epidermolysis bullosa acquisita (5%). In addition, two patients with immunoreactivity to both the epidermal and dermal side of salt-split skin by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy, who were unreactive to type VII collagen, were provisionally diagnosed as “mixed pemphigoid”(9%). In patients with subepidermal blistering diseases, IgG reactivity correlated significantly with old age, whereas younger patients preferentially developed IgA autoantibodies (P = 0.024). Conclusions: The age of patients with autoimmune subepidermal blistering diseases appears to influence the immunoglobulin class of autoantibodies. The high frequency of IgA autoantibodies in Ugandan patients may be explained by the age distribution of the Ugandan population.展开更多
文摘We report on a 24-year-old, male Ugandan patient with a 2-week history of itchy papules, vesicles, erosions, and crusts distributed on the entire body, accompanied by minor erosions on the palate, tongue, and lower lip. Conjunctivae and genital mucosa were not involved. Circulating IgG and IgA autoantibodies were found against recombinant full-length BP180, BP180 4575, and the C-terminus of BP230. In addition, IgG reactivity was observed against the 16th noncollagenous region of the BP180 ectodomain, the cell-derived soluble ectodomain of BP180 (linear IgA disease antigen 1), and the α 3 and γ 2 chains of laminin 5. No reactivity was detected with type VII collagen, α 6β 4 integrin, and the p200 protein. Oral prednisolone and dapsone led to clearance of lesions that mostly healed with scarring and milia formation. Here, we describe a scarring mucocutaneous variant of an autoimmune blistering skin disorder that extends the current clinical and immunopathologic spectrum of this group of diseases.
文摘Background: No data are available on the incidence and immunoreactivity of autoimmune subepidermal blistering skin diseases in East Africa. Methods: All patients with frank blisters/erosions on the skin and/or mucous membranes that attended the Department of Dermatology at Mbarara University, Uganda, from May 2000 to June 2002, were investigated. The diagnosis was based on the clinical presentation and on the presence of circulating autoantibodies detected by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy on 1M NaCl-split human skin and by Western blotting of recombinant and cell-derived forms of BP180, BP230, and type VII collagen. Results: Twenty two patients with autoimmune subepidermal blistering skin disorders were identified, including nine with bullous pemphigoid pemphigoid(41%), four with linear immunoglobulin A (IgA) disease (18%), three with mucous membrane pemphigoid (14%), two with linear IgG/IgA bullous dermatosis (9%), and one each with cicatricial pemphigoid and epidermolysis bullosa acquisita (5%). In addition, two patients with immunoreactivity to both the epidermal and dermal side of salt-split skin by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy, who were unreactive to type VII collagen, were provisionally diagnosed as “mixed pemphigoid”(9%). In patients with subepidermal blistering diseases, IgG reactivity correlated significantly with old age, whereas younger patients preferentially developed IgA autoantibodies (P = 0.024). Conclusions: The age of patients with autoimmune subepidermal blistering diseases appears to influence the immunoglobulin class of autoantibodies. The high frequency of IgA autoantibodies in Ugandan patients may be explained by the age distribution of the Ugandan population.