RESUMO
A four-year-old girl was brought to the dermatology outpatient department with scaling all over the body since birth. She had history of episodic vomiting and abdominal distension. A dermatological diagnosis of lamellar ichthyosis was made. Abdominal examination revealed a nontender hepatomegaly, fatty liver on ultrasonography and deranged liver function tests. Peripheral blood smear showed lipid vacuoles in the granulocytes consistent with Jordans' anomaly. Similar lipid vacuoles were seen in the basal layer in skin biopsy. An inflammatory infiltrate, moderate fibrosis in the portal tract and diffuse severe fatty change in hepatocytes were seen in liver biopsy. The patient was diagnosed as a case of Dorfman-Chanarin syndrome.
Assuntos
Ictiose Lamelar/patologia , Pré-Escolar , Fígado Gorduroso/complicações , Feminino , Fibrose , Granulócitos/metabolismo , Granulócitos/ultraestrutura , Hepatócitos/patologia , Hepatomegalia/complicações , Humanos , Ictiose Lamelar/complicações , Erros Inatos do Metabolismo Lipídico/complicações , Erros Inatos do Metabolismo Lipídico/patologia , Fígado/irrigação sanguínea , Fígado/patologia , Hepatopatias/complicações , Hepatopatias/patologia , Sistema Porta/patologia , Pele/metabolismo , Pele/patologia , Síndrome , Vacúolos/metabolismo , Vacúolos/patologiaRESUMO
Cutaneous tuberculosis may be associated with concurrent systemic foci in the body such as lung, lymph node, bone or CNS. Phlyctenular keratoconjunctivitis (PKC) is a manifestation of immunological response to a variety of antigens in the eye, tubercular focus (evident or occult) being the commonest in India. Reports in the existing literature have shown lungs and lymph nodes to be the predominant underlying focus associated with PKC, whereas cutaneous tuberculosis has seldom been found in this situation. We report this forgotten association in two children with cutaneous tuberculosis, one each with lupus vulgaris and scrofuloderma, who also had PKC. Interestingly, one of the cases also had simultaneous lichen scrofulosorum, which is also an immunological response to tubercular antigen and manifests in the skin, thus showing immunological manifestation in two different organ systems along with cutaneous focus of tuberculosis.