RESUMO
Bacillary angiomatosis is a vasculoproliferative infectious disease mostly recorded in patients with human immunodeficiency virus and rarely in organ transplant recipients. We report the first case of bacillary angiomatosis due to Bartonella quintana in a paediatric renal transplant patient with skin, lymph node and bone involvement with excellent response to doxycycline. Click here for the corresponding questions to this CME article.
Assuntos
Angiomatose Bacilar , Bartonella quintana , Transplante de Rim , Dermatopatias , Criança , Doxiciclina , Humanos , Transplante de Rim/efeitos adversos , Dermatopatias/tratamento farmacológico , TransplantadosRESUMO
BACKGROUND: COVID-19 cutaneous manifestations have been recently described and classified in five different clinical patterns, including acral erythema-edema (pseudo-chilblain), maculopapular exanthemas, vesicular eruptions, urticarial lesions, and livedo or necrosis. OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to examine the skin of hospitalized patients with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 disease and describe the real prevalence of skin manifestations. METHODS: A cross-sectional study, which included hospitalized patients in Cruces University Hospital from April 14-30, 2020, with a laboratory-confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 (with polymerase chain reaction and/or serology tests), was conducted. Entire body surface examination was performed by experienced dermatologists to search for cutaneous manifestations related to COVID-19 disease. RESULTS: From a sample of 75 patients, 14 (18.7%) developed cutaneous manifestations possibly related to COVID-19. We found six patients with acral erythema-edema (pseudo-chilblain) (42.8%), four patients with maculopapular exanthemas (28.6%), two patients with urticarial lesions (14.3%), one patient with livedo reticularis-like lesions (7.15%), and one patient with vesicular eruption (7.15%). CONCLUSIONS: Our study provides a more plausible relationship between the main cutaneous patterns and COVID-19 in hospitalized patients as all of them had a confirmatory laboratory test. Skin manifestations are frequent but mild with spontaneous resolution. These findings are nonspecific and can be similar to other viral infections and adverse drug reactions in hospitalized patients.