A 72-year-old woman developed a lichen planus pemphigoides-like eruption following the administration of cinnarizine. The eruption recurred on challenge with the drug. Direct immunofluorescence studies of the lesions demonstrated deposition of IgG, IgM and C3 on colloid bodies and fibrin at the epidermal basement membrane zone. Circulating IgG antibasement membrane zone antibodies were detected at high titres, with no complementfixing activities. To our knowledge, this is the first report of immunologically defined lichen planus pcmphigoides induced by a drug.
Rifampicin therapy caused exacerbation of skin lesions, rising serum pemphigus antibody titres, and decreased serum betamethasone levels in a 59-year-old man with pemphigus vulgaris. Exacerbation of pemphigus was confined to the period of rifampicin therapy and seems to be best explained by the effect of rifampicin on the metabolism of betamethasone. Physicians prescribing rifampicin for the treatment of tuberculosis should be aware of its potential to produce such an important adverse reaction.
Systemic sclerosis-like lesions developed in a 14-year-old boy with Wilson's disease who had been treated with D-penicillamine for 11 years. Clinical and laboratory manifestations included proximal scleroderma, pulmonary restrictive defects, positive antinuclear antibodies, and the deposition of C3 at the dermal-epidermal junction of the lesional skin. This is the first case reported in which long-term administration of penicillamine was followed by the development of systemic sclerosis-like lesions.
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