| Literature DB >> 27799068 |
Udo Bonnet1,2, Claudia Selle3, Katrin Isbruch3, Katrin Isbruch3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is unusual for purpura to emerge as a result of drinking alcohol. Such a peculiarity was observed in a 55-year-old man with a 30-year history of heavy alcohol use. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Acetate; Alcohol; Hypersensitivity-like reaction; Purpura; Schamberg’s disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27799068 PMCID: PMC5088664 DOI: 10.1186/s13256-016-1065-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Routine laboratory results at the patient’s multiple admissions
Abbreviations: MCV Mean corpuscular volume, SGOT Serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase, SGPT Serum glutamate-pyruvate transaminase, GGT γ-Glutamyltransferase, CRP C-reactive protein, CK Creatine kinase, n/a Not applicable
Admissions with purpuric rashes are shaded (“purpuric phase”). Reference values are given in boldface type. Pathological laboratory results revealed slightly elevated uric acid in most measurements (not shown here)
Fig. 1Purpuric rashes at admission (a, b) and blanched lesions with confluent hyperpigmentation after 14 days of controlled alcohol abstinence (c, d) in November 2015. Fresh purpura (“cayenne pepper” spots) after 24 h of drinking vinegar (50 ml four times daily) (e1 left tibia, e2 right tibia) in April 2016 at the end of a 10-day inpatient detoxification treatment
Fig. 2Histology of the skin biopsy. a There is a light perivascular lymphocytic infiltration in the upper dermis without involvement of the epidermis. b The blood vessels show endothelial reaction without destruction. An extravasation of red blood cells can be seen (courtesy of Prof. Dr. Kasper, MD, Institut für Pathologie am Clemenshospital, Münster, Germany)
Immunodiagnostics in serum
The patient’s immunoglobulin (IgA) level appeared to increase, while his IgE levels fell, in tandem with abstinence days (AD). Reference levels are given in brackets, and measurements in variable intervals during the same inpatient treatment are shaded. Not shown in this table is the lymphocyte typing done in September 2015 with the following results: CD19 B-lymphocytes (132–422/μl) 92/μl, CD4 T-cells (645–1289/μl) 612/μl, and activated T-lymphocytes (43–270/μl) 303/μl with a ratio (3.0–12,5 %) of 23.4 %. The immunological results point to a moderate combined cellular immunodeficiency (low CD19 B-lymphocytes, low CD4 T-cells at normal CD4/CD8 ratio) and a hypersensitivity-like reaction (elevated IgA and IgE with specific response of the cellular immune system [elevated ratio of activated T-lymphocytes])