Introduction: Staphylococcal scaled skin syndrome (SSSS) presents generalized form bullous impetigo caused by Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) infection, typically seen in infants and children. SSSS may occur also in adults; however, the majority of adult cases are those with immunosuppression. Atypical clinical features of impetigo in adults sometimes make it difficult to diagnose correctly. Case Report: A 74-year-old healthy woman was hospitalized, complaining of extensive desquamative erythema and a number of erosions. She was administered oral antiviral drugs under suspicion of herpes zoster prior to 10 days. Initial diagnosis on the admission was toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) due to antiviral tablets; however, steroid pulse therapy resulted in no effect. Bacterial culture yielded coagulasepositive methicillin-resistent S. aureus, producing exfoliative toxin B. A biopsy specimen showed subcorneal splitting of the epidermis. The diffuse erosions gradually improved over 10 days by the treatment with intravenous antibiotics.
Conclusions:The differentiation between streptococcal scaled skin syndrome (SSSS) and TEN is sometimes difficult. It is important to remind SSSS when we suspect TEN, even in healthy adults.
Small-cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix is a rare and aggressive tumor, and the prognosis is poor compared with those of squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma of the uterine cervix, even when discovered at an earlier stage. We treated a patient with progressive small-cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix that metastasized to the cervical spine. The patient, a 73-year-old woman, presented with the symptom of numbness in her limbs. As she had difficulty moving her limbs (ie, quadriplegia), she was carried to an emergency room. A metastatic cervical spine tumor from the uterine cervical cancer was revealed by a computed tomography scan, and the patient was then transferred to our hospital’s neurosurgery department for treatment. We performed a resection of the cervical spine tumor and fixation of the spinal bone. Because the patient’s performance status was 4 and she remained bedridden 24 h/day, we could not perform systemic chemotherapy. We thus provided palliative care, including palliative radiotherapy, pain control, and rehabilitation to improve her limbs’ functioning. The patient died of the uterine cancer within approx. 6 months after the initiation of treatment. There is no established treatment for small-cell carcinoma as a gynecological lesion. For patients with progressive uterine cancer, the optimal treatments, including palliative care, must be determined.
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