Dermatitis herpetiformis

(Redirigido desde «Dermititis Herpetiformis»)

Background

Normal dermal anatomy.
  • Autoimmune blistering skin disorder strongly associated with celiac disease (gluten sensitivity)
  • IgA deposits at dermal papillae cause neutrophilic inflammation
  • Nearly all patients (>90%) have underlying celiac disease on intestinal biopsy, though most are asymptomatic from GI perspective
  • Peak age: 30-40 years; male predominance

Dermatitis Types

Clinical Features

Characteristic rash
  • Intensely pruritic papulovesicular eruption in symmetric distribution
  • Characteristic locations: elbows, knees, shoulders, buttocks, sacrum, scalp
  • Grouped vesicles on erythematous base (herpetiform pattern — hence the name, though unrelated to herpes)
  • Excoriations often predominate (patients scratch off the vesicles)
  • Resembles scabies but distribution is more extensor surfaces

Differential Diagnosis


Vesiculobullous rashes

Febrile

Afebrile

Evaluation

  • Skin biopsy with direct immunofluorescence (gold standard): granular IgA deposits at dermal papillae
  • Tissue transglutaminase (tTG) IgA — elevated in most patients
  • Consider referral for intestinal biopsy to confirm celiac disease

Management

  • Gluten-free diet — mainstay of long-term treatment (improves skin and GI disease)
  • Dapsone — rapid relief of symptoms (often within 24-48 hours)
  • Dapsone 50mg PO QD
  • Check G6PD level before starting dapsone (risk of hemolytic anemia)
  • Monitor CBC regularly on dapsone therapy

Disposition

  • Discharge with dermatology referral
  • Consider GI referral for celiac disease evaluation

See Also

References