We present 5 cases of eczema herpeticum in patients with severe recalcitrant atopic dermatitis to illustrate the range of possible clinical findings and supporting laboratory data that can obscure the diagnosis and complicate treatment. Major issues include: the need for aggressive laboratory evaluation (molecular diagnostics, viral cultures, skin biopsy, serology); the possibility of recurrent or chronic infection; the value of empiric antiviral therapy; the possibility of infection with thymidine-kinase resistant strains; and the importance of achieving control over the dermatitis with nonmyelosuppressive immunomodulating agents such as intravenous immunoglobulin or interferon gamma for dermatitis that requires systemic treatment.
Children with confirmed eczema herpeticum have evidence of impaired innate and adaptive immunity. IFN-γ did not result in dramatic improvement in either subset. Specific evaluation for IFN-γ production, function, or receptor defects may help predict response.
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