| Literature DB >> 33324901 |
Elgin Hoffmann1,2, Christian Boßelmann1, Stephan Forchhammer3, Holger Lerche1, Tobias Freilinger1,4.
Abstract
Acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis (Sweet's syndrome) is a dermatological entity, which may be associated with malignancies, drugs, and infections and which is characterized by high fever, elevated neutrophils, and tender erythematous skin lesions. Involvement of the nervous system - Neuro-Sweet syndrome (NSS) - is rare, manifesting most commonly with an encephalitic syndrome in addition to fever and dermal lesions. Here, we report an unusual case of NSS in a Caucasian male patient in the setting of B-cell-lymphocytosis, with encephalitis preceding dermal lesions. Symptoms resolved completely in response to corticoids. NSS is a rare, but important differential diagnosis in the work-up of febrile aseptic meningoencephalitis unresponsive to anti-infectious treatment. Due to its rarity and clinical variability, diagnosis of NSS might be challenging. Knowledge of this entity may facilitate proper diagnosis and differentiation from conditions with similar clinical presentation, especially Neuro-Behçet's disease. It may further lead to early detection of a potentially underlying malignancy and help in initiating adequate therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Differential diagnosis to meningoencephalitis; Neuro-Behçet disease; Neuro-sweet syndrome; Paraneoplastic syndromes
Year: 2019 PMID: 33324901 PMCID: PMC7650048 DOI: 10.1186/s42466-019-0041-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Res Pract ISSN: 2524-3489
Fig. 1Details of dermal lesions: Close-up of the erythematous plaques (a). Lesions visible on the dorsal side of the calves. b Skin biopsy of erythematous plaques on the dorsal side of the thumbs. HE stain, 4x magnification with 10x inlay. Ribbon-like histiocytic infiltration of the upper corium with numerous neutrophilic granulocytes, granulomatous formations and edema with few perivascular lymphocytes and without vasculitis or viral cytopathic changes