BACKGROUND
Raynaud's phenomenon (RP) is a clinical syndrome characterized by recurrent episodes of digital vasospasm triggered by exposure to physical and chemical agents or emotional stress. Although many pharmacologic treatments have been tested, there is still no cure or gold standard therapy. Botulinum toxin treatment has been proved to reduce pain and increase arterial blood flow in treated hands of adult patients with RP.
OBJECTIVE
The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of botulinum toxin A on younger than 18-year-old patients with primary and secondary RP.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
A single-center prospective study was performed, including 8 patients aged 14 to 17 years who were clinically diagnosed with primary or secondary RP. BTX was injected into each hand without sedation or anesthetic blockade. The primary outcome was pain reduction after BTX injection. Pain intensity was evaluated at baseline and in the first follow-up. Secondary outcomes included variations in the number and severity of RP episodes after the BTX injection.
RESULTS
All patients stated significant pain reduction and decreased cold sensitivity, except one patient who did not feel any changes. No patients reported any loss of strength on thumb-index finger.
CONCLUSION
BTX injection is a simple, noninvasive, and cost-effective treatment alternative, offering an important nonsurgical therapeutic option for the pediatric population. It could also help optimize the dose of other treatments used in these patients. The most commonly observed positive effect is a reduction in the pain associated with RP attacks. Further studies are needed to confirm these results.
Zhu‐Tokita‐Takenouchi‐Kim (ZTTK) syndrome is a rare, severe, and recently described multisystem developmental disorder characterized by delayed psychomotor development and intellectual disability, characteristic facial features, hypotonia, poor overall growth, and visual abnormalities. Mucocutaneous manifestations have not been reported so far among individuals with ZTTK syndrome. Herein, we present a patient with ZTTK syndrome due to a de novo mutation in SON gene, who has dental abnormalities and retronychia of the toenails. We suggest that mucocutaneous features may be a part of the phenotype.
Raynaud's phenomenon (RP) is an episodic vasospastic response to cold or emotional stress causing color changes and pain. These attacks can lead to digital ischemia, ulcers, and gangrene. Severe and refractory RP in children is a therapeutic challenge for clinicians because there are no standardized treatment protocols for these patients. We present a case of RP involving the toes of a child successfully treated with botulinum toxin A.
Dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa is a rare blistering condition caused by mutations in the COL7A1 gene. Different clinical variants have been described, with dominant and recessive inheritance, but no consistent findings have been elucidated to establish a genotype-phenotype correlation. We present three unrelated patients with two identical pathogenic compound heterozygous mutations in the COL7A1 gene that developed different clinical forms of dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa-epidermolysis bullosa pruriginosa and mild recessive non-Hallopeau-Siemens-raising the possibility of other genetic or environmental modifying factors responsible for the phenotype of the disease.
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