| Literature DB >> 22347192 |
Brian L Huang1, Stephanie Chandra, David Quan Shih.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a disease that affects the intestinal tract via an inflammatory process. Patients who suffer from IBD often have diseases that affect multiple other organ systems as well. These are called extraintestinal manifestations and can be just as, if not more debilitating than the intestinal inflammation itself. The skin is one of the most commonly affected organ systems in patients who suffer from IBD. The scientific literature suggests that a disturbance of the equilibrium between host defense and tolerance, and the subsequent over-activity of certain immune pathways are responsible for the cutaneous disorders seen so frequently in IBD patients. The purpose of this review article is to give an overview of the types of skin diseases that are typically seen with IBD and their respective pathogenesis, proposed mechanisms, and treatments. These cutaneous disorders can manifest as metastatic lesions, reactive processes to the intestinal inflammation, complications of IBD itself, or side effects from IBD treatments; these can be associated with IBD via genetic linkage, common autoimmune processes, or other mechanisms that will be discussed in this article. Ultimately, it is important for healthcare providers to understand that skin manifestations should always be checked and evaluated for in patients with IBD. Furthermore, skin disorders can predate gastrointestinal symptoms and thus may serve as important clinical indicators leading physicians to earlier diagnosis of IBD.Entities:
Keywords: Crohn’s disease; inflammatory bowel disease; skin disorders; ulcerative colitis
Year: 2012 PMID: 22347192 PMCID: PMC3273725 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2012.00013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Summary table of cutaneous manifestations of IBD.
| Cutaneous manifestation | Presentation | Incidence | Pathogenesis or proposed mechanism | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD | UC | |||||
| Orofacial: aphthous stomatitis, ulcers | Symptoms: round to oval shaped, can take 2–4 weeks to heal and may frequently scar depending on size | 10% | 4% | CD: non-caseating granuloma with similar mechanism to underlying bowel pathology | ||
| Location: buccal mucosa and lips. | UC: unclear | |||||
| Perianal: fissures, fistulas | Fissures: painless, located posteriorly | 50% (≥1 episode) | Rare | Direct local involvement of skin and mucosa by underlying bowel disease | Fistulas: internal or entero-cutaneous, can destroy the anal sphincter | |
| Metastatic | Symptoms: subcutaneous nodules or non-healing ulcers | Rare | Very rare | Specific granulomatous cutaneous lesions with the same histopathology (non-caseating granulomas with multinucleated giant cells in the dermis) as the intestinal lesions | Location: genital (more common in children) vs. non-genital (more commonly affects lower extremities, abdomen, and trunk) | |
| Affects: adult/female predilection | ||||||
| Erythema nodosum | Symptoms: painful, tender, warm nodules with a bruise-like appearance | 4–15% | 3–10% | Panniculitis, perivascular deposits of immunoglobulins, and complement suggesting mechanism related to abnormal immunological response of common antigens between bowel bacteria and skin | Location: typically lower extremities | |
| Affects: female predilection | ||||||
| Pyoderma gangrenosum | Symptoms: non-infectious nodules that develop into deep and painful ulcers. Often debilitating | 1–2% | 5–12% | A type of neutrophilic dermatosis | ||
| Location: lower extremities, peristomal lesions | Altered immune response (cross-reacting autoantibodies to common antigens in the gut and skin), over-expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-8, IL-16, TNF-α), and neutrophil chemotaxis | |||||
| Affects: female predilection | Pathergy: exaggerated response of skin to local trauma | |||||
| Sweet’s syndrome (SS) | Symptoms: fever, peripheral neutrophilia, tender nodules/papules | Rare | UC > CD | A type of neutrophilic dermatosis | ||
| Location: upper limbs, face, neck. Can be difficult to distinguish from EN if affecting lower extremities | Altered immune response (cross-reacting autoantibodies) | |||||
| Affects: adult/female predilection | ANCA, G-CSF, or other cytokines in activation, maturation, and chemotaxis of neutrophils | |||||
| Bowel-associated dermatosis–arthritis syndrome (BADAS) | Symptoms: erythematous macules developing into painful papules and pustules over 1–2 days. Usually resolve in 1–2 weeks, but can recur every 1–6 weeks. Temporally dependent on IBD activity. Associated with fever, malaise, abdominal pain, arthralgias | Rare | UC > CD | A type of neutrophilic dermatosis | ||
| Location: upper chest, arms, legs | Overgrowth of gut bacteria resulting in production of antibodies to gut bacteria antigen (peptidoglycan) which cross-reacts with skin and joints | |||||
| PDV, PSV, PPV | PDV: pustules in skin folds (axillary, inguinal regions) | Rare | UC > CD | Unclear, but possible related to cross-reacting antigens between the bowel and skin | ||
| PSV: hyperplastic folds of buccal and labial mucosa that progress to shallow ulcers | ||||||
| PPV: variants of PDV and PSV. specific marker of IBD | ||||||
| Affects: adult/Caucasian/male predilection | ||||||
| Leukocytoclastic vasculitis | Symptoms: ranges from palpable purpura to necrotic ulcers. In CD, can occur during remission or exacerbation. In UC, precedes onset of bowel disease. | Rare | UC > CD | Hypersensitivity vasculitis of small vessels due to deposition of immune complexes | ||
| Psoriasis | Symptoms: pruritic and irritated scaly patches. Can be associated with nail changes, arthritis | 11.2% | 5.7% | Genetic (HLA linkage) or Immunologic related mechanisms | ||
| Location: elbows, knees, trunk, but can occur anywhere | ||||||
| Secondary amyloidosis | Symptoms: pruritic rash due to deposits of amyloid in the skin | 0.9% | 0.07% | Type AA Amyloidosis, reactive systemic amyloidosis associated with chronic inflammation | ||
| Vitiligo | Symptoms: irregular white patches of skin | Rare | UC > CD | Related to autoimmune or HLA linkage mechanisms | ||
| Location: face, elbows, knees, hands, feet, genitals | ||||||
| Acquired epidermolysis bullosa | Symptoms: sub-epidermal blisters of the skin and mucous membranes | Rare | UC > CD | Unclear, but related to autoantibodies to type VII collagen in the skin and gut | ||
| Zinc deficiency (acrodermatitis enteropathica) | Symptoms: erythematous patches and plaques that progress to crusted vesicles, bullae, or pustules | 40% | No difference compared to control | Reduced mucosa availability for absorption and chronic diarrhea | Location: mouth, anus, limbs, fingers, scalp | |
| Iron deficiency anemia | Symptoms: koilonychias, angular cheilitis, pale skin | 39% | 81% | Malabsorption of iron and chronic intestinal bleeding | ||
| Essential fatty acid deficiency | Symptoms: Xeroderma, dry skin, unspecific eczema | CD > UC | UC < CD | Malabsorption | ||
| Corticosteroid usage | Symptoms: corticosteroid induced acne | Common | Common | Increased sebaceous gland activity | Affects: younger patients | |
| Anti-TNF-αagents | Symptoms: anti-TNF α agent induced psoriasis | Total of 15 cases described | Total of three cases described | Over-expression of IFN-α causing predisposition to psoriasis | ||
Figure 1Perianal fissure in a patient with IBD. Note the longitudinal tear pattern in the anoderm.
Figure 2Aphthous stomatitis of the oral mucosa. Note the erythematous ring around the yellow to gray colored ulceration in this minor aphthous stomatitis.
Figure 3Erythema nodosum manifested as erythematous nodules of the skin. These lesions are often painful and assume a bruise-like appearance.
Figure 4Pyoderma gangrenosum can start as small pustules that as they progress form larger and deeper ulcers. Classically, the borders of the lesions are mucopurulent and purple. Example of pyoderma gangrenosum lesion involving the leg (A) and parastoma (B).