| Literature DB >> 27570816 |
Nicola A Quatrano1, Maressa C Criscito1, Alisa N Femia1, Nooshin K Brinster1.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: BMZ, basement membrane; DEJ, dermoepidermal junction; DIF, direct immunofluorescence; LE, lupus erythematosus; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; autoimmune connective-tissue disorders; neutrophilic dermatosis; neutrophils; nonbullous; palmoplantar; systemic lupus erythematosus
Year: 2016 PMID: 27570816 PMCID: PMC4992001 DOI: 10.1016/j.jdcr.2016.07.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAAD Case Rep ISSN: 2352-5126
Fig 1SLE-associated neutrophilic dermatosis. Erythematous macules and annular, urticarial papules and plaques bilaterally distributed on the palmar surfaces.
Fig 2Acral skin with neutrophils aligned along the DEJ associated with vacuolar alteration and rare dyskeratosis. (Hematoxylin-eosin stain.)
Fig 3Neutrophil-medicated vacuolar alteration along the DEJ with a necrotic keratinocyte. There is also a perivascular and interstitial neutrophilic infiltrate with leukocytoclasia in the absence of vasculitis. (Hematoxylin-eosin stain.)
Clinical and histopathologic differential diagnoses of SLE-associated neutrophilic dermatosis with separate discussion for generalized and palmoplantar cutaneous eruptions
| Diagnosis | Clinical features | Histopathologic features |
|---|---|---|
| SLE-associated neutrophilic dermatosis | Erythematous papules and plaques Urticarial or annular morphology Trunk or extremities | Interstitial neutrophilic infiltrate, leukocytoclasia ±Vacuolar interface alteration, increased dermal mucin, BMZ thickening, positive DIF (C3, IgG, IgM along DEJ) No vasculitis or bulla formation |
| Generalized eruption | ||
| Neutrophilic urticarial dermatosis | Erythematous macules or thin plaques Resolve within 48 hours Trunk or extremities | Interstitial neutrophilic dermal infiltrate, leukocytoclasia No vasculitis |
| Neonatal lupus erythematosus | Erythematous macules, papules, plaques Head and neck, ±trunk, extremities Maternal history of anti-Ro/SS-A lupus | Interstitial neutrophilic infiltrate ±Vacuolar interface alteration, increased dermal mucin |
| Bullous SLE | Widespread, symmetric, vesiculobullous eruption History of SLE or SLE-related manifestations Mucosal involvement often observed | Subepidermal neutrophil-mediated separation Interstitial neutrophilic infiltrate |
| Dermatitis herpetiformis | Erythematous excoriated papules, plaques Symmetric distribution over extensor surfaces | Neutrophilic microabscesses in papillary dermis Leukocytoclasia ±Eosinophils Granular IgA deposits in dermal papillae |
| Linear IgA bullous dermatosis | Vesicles or bulla on erythematous or urticarial skin, often annular or polycyclic Trunk and limbs, ±mucosal involvement | Neutrophils aligned along DEJ Interstitial neutrophilic infiltrate with admixed eosinophils ±Subepidermal blistering IgA deposits in linear pattern along DEJ |
| Still's disease | Evanescent, salmon-pink erythema that waxes and wanes with fever Favor the extremities Intermittent high fevers ± arthralgia | Paucicellular to moderately cellular neutrophilic infiltrate in papillary dermis ±Vacuolar interface alteration |
| Behcet's disease | Aphthous or herpetiform ulcers in oral cavity and genitalia ±Pseudofolliculitis, acneiform lesions Erythema nodosum | Cell-rich or Sweet's-like neutrophilic infiltrate ± Suppurative folliculitis or vasculitis |
| Pyoderma gangrenosum | Deep ulceration with violaceous, undermined border Pathergy | Cell-rich pan-dermal neutrophilic infiltrate No vasculitis |
| Sweet's syndrome | Erythematous to violaceous edematous papules, plaques, nodules Fever Leukocytosis | Cell-rich neutrophilic infiltrate with leukocytoclasia Papillary dermal edema No vasculitis |
| Palisaded neutrophilic and granulomatous dermatitis | Symmetrically distributed umbilicated papules Favor extensor surfaces of the extremities | Palisaded granulomas with neutrophils Variable small vessel leukocytoclastic vasculitis |
| Leukocytoclastic vasculitis | Palpable purpura ±Urticarial lesions | Perivascular small vessel neutrophilic infiltrate with extension into vessel walls Leukocytoclasia Fibrinoid necrosis of vessel walls Extravasation of erythrocytes |
| Hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis | Painful, pruritic urticarial papules Persist for >24 hours Hyperpigmentation after resolution Hypocomplementemia with low C1q, C3, C4 Positive C1q antibody | Small vessel leukocytoclastic vasculitis Variable, perivascular neutrophilic infiltrate |
| Palmoplantar eruption | ||
| Palmoplantar eccrine hidradenitis | Abrupt onset of erythematous, tender papules, nodules Most commonly in children | Neutrophilic peri-eccrine infiltrate ±Mixed perivascular infiltrate |
| Palmoplantar pustulosis | Persistent, painful sterile pustules that coalesce Resolve to brown macules and hyperkeratosis | Intraepidermal pustules Spongiform alterations ±Mixed perivascular infiltrate |
| Erythema multiforme | Erythematous targetoid papules and plaques ±Mucosal ulceration | Vacuolar interface dermatitis with conspicuous keratinocyte necrosis Sparse superficial perivascular lymphocytic infiltrate |
BMZ, basement membrane; DIF, direct immunofluorescence.
Neutrophil-dominant dermatoses that may occur in association with SLE.