The patient, a 59-year-old male, had been diagnosed as having alcoholic hepatopathy 20 years previously. He noticed localized swelling on his left leg after fishing in a river. The patient was diagnosed as having cutaneous mucormycosis upon histological and mycological examination of the skin. Gradual improvement of the symptoms was noted four weeks after administration of itraconazole and fruconazole; these were discontinued after five months.
We conducted a questionnaire study of immediate allergy to natural rubber gloves among 2,408 medical workers who had used rubber gloves at Kumamoto University Hospital and allied hospitals. The response rate was 64.5% (1,321 workers). Among them, 8.5% (7.0-10.0% at 95% confidence limit) replied that they had experienced immediate allergy to rubber gloves. There were significant correlations among the frequency of rubber glove use, a history of atopic dermatitis or contact dermatitis, and the presence of skin lesions due to allergic reactions to rubber gloves. In 27 workers, skin lesions were associated with general symptoms. Of 59 workers who experienced immediate allergy and were tested for latex-specific IgE, 4 persons were positive. We conclude that the frequency of contact allergy to natural rubber products is substantially prevalent among Japanese hospital personnel and that education and awareness of this allergy are important.
Bart's syndrome is one type of dominant dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (EB). It is known that, in some familial cases of dominant dystrophic EB, the symptoms differ depending on the individual. We observed the way Bart's syndrome affected four generations in the same family. The proband was a newborn boy who showed congenital localized absence of skin (CLAS) and bullae on the anterior aspects of both legs. Histologically, the bullae were located subepidermally. The CLAS and bullae disappeared within 4 months after birth, leaving scars. His father retained scarring and scaling from the knees down along the anterior aspect of the legs, and the nails of the toes were either lacking or deformed. His paternal grandmother and great-grandmother also presented deformed nails of the toes, although they had not had CLAS or bullae on the legs at birth. The individuals in this family thus showed some heterogeneity depending on the sex: blistering and CLAS were seen on the legs soon after birth in the male family members, but the female members did not share this pattern of symptoms, suggesting that the expression of symptoms may differ depending on the sex of the affected individual.
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