| Literature DB >> 35340465 |
Darlene Diep1, Bineetha Aluri1, Alison Crane1, Kathleen Miao2, Kamilah S Kannan3, Robert Goldsteen1.
Abstract
This is a review of a patient encounter that underscores the common trend of insufficient inclusivity and lack of diversity regarding skin of color representation in teaching materials including textbooks in the medical education setup. A Black woman who was treated with carbamazepine for trigeminal neuralgia after a dental procedure presented with upper airway breathing difficulties and facial pain and swelling. After doubling her dose of carbamazepine as advised by her primary care physician, her symptoms continued to worsen, and she was treated in the emergency department for a presumed allergic reaction of unknown etiology. Two days later, her symptoms progressively worsened. She self-admitted to the emergency department, where she required cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Eventually, the formal diagnosis of carbamazepine-induced Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS) was made based on history, clinical presentation, and skin biopsy. The nature of the disease progression in this case prompted our investigation into the lack of representation of skin of color in current medical training resources regarding SJS. Our assessment demonstrates that there is a significant underrepresentation of SJS in skin of color in medical educational resources. Increased inclusivity of skin disorders in patients of color is crucial in training healthcare professionals to recognize life-threatening cutaneous disorders quickly and accurately in such patients.Entities:
Keywords: carbamazepine; diversity; equity; fitzpatrick; medical education; medical training; patient of color; skin of color; stevens-johnson
Year: 2022 PMID: 35340465 PMCID: PMC8929762 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.22245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Clinical presentation of Stevens-Johnson syndrome progression
From the first day of symptoms (A) to the fifth (B and C) and ninth (D), edema of the eyes (white arrows) and desquamation of the lips (red arrows) developed in a 25-year-old Black woman. Atypical targetoid macules on the palm (yellow circle) were also noted in addition to the extremities, back, and soles of the feet
Clinical differential diagnoses of Stevens-Johnson syndrome
DRESS: drug rash with eosinophilia and systemic
| Morphology | Conditions | References |
| Blisters | Erosive lichen planus | [ |
| Necrolytic acral erythema | [ | |
| Pemphigus vulgaris | [ | |
| Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome | [ | |
| Edematous | Allergic dermatitis | [ |
| Angioedema | [ | |
| Orofacial granulomatosis | [ | |
| Rosacea | [ | |
| Macular | DRESS syndrome | [ |
| Erythroderma | [ | |
| Secondary syphilis | [ | |
| Targetoid | Erythema annulare centrifugum | [ |
| Erythema multiforme | [ | |
| Lyme disease | [ |
Figure 2Total percentage of Fitzpatrick I-III vs. Fitzpatrick IV-VI images of SJS in medical education resources
**Denotes a very significant difference between the representation of Fitzpatrick I-III skin types and Fitzpatrick IV-VI skin types. A p-value of less than 0.01 was considered statistically very significant
SJS: Stevens-Johnson syndrome
Figure 3Percentage of Fitzpatrick skin type representation in medical education resources compared to the U.S. Census population demographics
*Denotes a significant difference between the representation of images in medical texts compared to the population in the U.S. A p-value of less than 0.05 was considered statistically significant