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595 Urticarial Rash Associated with Chest Pain

BACKGROUND: Urticaria may be the first manifestation of an underlying systemic disease (tumors, infections, collagen vascular or thyroid disease. Differential diagnosis must be made with many entities that can be manifested with a similar skin injury. METHODS: A 49 year-old man who during 2 years ha...

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Autores principales: Boulaich, Mouna, Arce, José Meseguer, Sanchez-Guerrero Villajos, Inmaculada, Carrillo-Fernández Paredes, Paola, Piñera Martínez, Ana Ester, Pagán Alemán, Juan Antonio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: World Allergy Organization Journal 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3512883/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.WOX.0000411710.02257.fa
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author Boulaich, Mouna
Arce, José Meseguer
Sanchez-Guerrero Villajos, Inmaculada
Carrillo-Fernández Paredes, Paola
Piñera Martínez, Ana Ester
Pagán Alemán, Juan Antonio
author_facet Boulaich, Mouna
Arce, José Meseguer
Sanchez-Guerrero Villajos, Inmaculada
Carrillo-Fernández Paredes, Paola
Piñera Martínez, Ana Ester
Pagán Alemán, Juan Antonio
author_sort Boulaich, Mouna
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Urticaria may be the first manifestation of an underlying systemic disease (tumors, infections, collagen vascular or thyroid disease. Differential diagnosis must be made with many entities that can be manifested with a similar skin injury. METHODS: A 49 year-old man who during 2 years has monthly multi-days episodes of generalized pruritic papular skin lesions, responding to steroids but not to antihistamines. Occasionally associated with joint pain. Two skin injuries biopsies informed of simple urticaria. One year after skin lesion onset, he began with chest pain episodes suggestive of angina pectoris with elevated necrosis enzyme markers and ischemic changes on EKG. Angina episodes were sometimes preceded by skin lesion outbreak and it responded to steroid. Coronary catheterization was negative twice, so the diagnosis was vasospastic angina. Later he presented cough, wheezing, elevation of transaminases, LDH, FA, GGT, CPR and fibrinogen, 800 eosinophils in peripheral blood. Sputum eosinophils 40 to 60%.Chest X-Ray objective a thickened left hilum and doubtful left parahilar infiltrated. RESULTS: Allergologic study—Skin prick test with aeroallergens and wide food battery were negative. Specific IgE against Anisakis, latex, Echinococcus and other blood parameters including serology, autologous patient serum skin test were all normal/negative. Tryptase determination at baseline and during skin lesion shoot: normal. Other explorations—ECO-cardio: inferior basal akinesia and inferoposterior hypokinesia, LVEF 60%, normal RV systolic function and valves. CT scan visualize mediastinal and abdominal adenopathy, splenomegalia and ureterolithiasis. Mediastinoscopy and biopsy of right paratracheal grainy adenopathy confirms the diagnosis of sarcoidosis. ACE: 250 U/L. Gallium67 scan suggestive mediastinal sarcoidosis. Heart RM scan: no evidence of morphological criteria for cardiac sarcoidosis diagnosis. CONCLUSIONS: Sarcoidosis is a multisystem granulomatous disease of unknown etiology. It may affect almost any organ, predominantly lung, lymph nodes and skin. Cardiac involvement is 25% but only symptomatic in 5%. We report a patient with sarcoidosis and vasoespastic angina. It´s described cases of cardiac sarcoidosis and vasospastic angina. In this case we cannot demonstrate cardiac injury. Sarcoidosis is a great simulating of cutaneous lesions and it can imitate to urticaria.
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spelling pubmed-35128832012-12-21 595 Urticarial Rash Associated with Chest Pain Boulaich, Mouna Arce, José Meseguer Sanchez-Guerrero Villajos, Inmaculada Carrillo-Fernández Paredes, Paola Piñera Martínez, Ana Ester Pagán Alemán, Juan Antonio World Allergy Organ J Abstracts of the XXII World Allergy Congress BACKGROUND: Urticaria may be the first manifestation of an underlying systemic disease (tumors, infections, collagen vascular or thyroid disease. Differential diagnosis must be made with many entities that can be manifested with a similar skin injury. METHODS: A 49 year-old man who during 2 years has monthly multi-days episodes of generalized pruritic papular skin lesions, responding to steroids but not to antihistamines. Occasionally associated with joint pain. Two skin injuries biopsies informed of simple urticaria. One year after skin lesion onset, he began with chest pain episodes suggestive of angina pectoris with elevated necrosis enzyme markers and ischemic changes on EKG. Angina episodes were sometimes preceded by skin lesion outbreak and it responded to steroid. Coronary catheterization was negative twice, so the diagnosis was vasospastic angina. Later he presented cough, wheezing, elevation of transaminases, LDH, FA, GGT, CPR and fibrinogen, 800 eosinophils in peripheral blood. Sputum eosinophils 40 to 60%.Chest X-Ray objective a thickened left hilum and doubtful left parahilar infiltrated. RESULTS: Allergologic study—Skin prick test with aeroallergens and wide food battery were negative. Specific IgE against Anisakis, latex, Echinococcus and other blood parameters including serology, autologous patient serum skin test were all normal/negative. Tryptase determination at baseline and during skin lesion shoot: normal. Other explorations—ECO-cardio: inferior basal akinesia and inferoposterior hypokinesia, LVEF 60%, normal RV systolic function and valves. CT scan visualize mediastinal and abdominal adenopathy, splenomegalia and ureterolithiasis. Mediastinoscopy and biopsy of right paratracheal grainy adenopathy confirms the diagnosis of sarcoidosis. ACE: 250 U/L. Gallium67 scan suggestive mediastinal sarcoidosis. Heart RM scan: no evidence of morphological criteria for cardiac sarcoidosis diagnosis. CONCLUSIONS: Sarcoidosis is a multisystem granulomatous disease of unknown etiology. It may affect almost any organ, predominantly lung, lymph nodes and skin. Cardiac involvement is 25% but only symptomatic in 5%. We report a patient with sarcoidosis and vasoespastic angina. It´s described cases of cardiac sarcoidosis and vasospastic angina. In this case we cannot demonstrate cardiac injury. Sarcoidosis is a great simulating of cutaneous lesions and it can imitate to urticaria. World Allergy Organization Journal 2012-02-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3512883/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.WOX.0000411710.02257.fa Text en Copyright © 2012 by World Allergy Organization
spellingShingle Abstracts of the XXII World Allergy Congress
Boulaich, Mouna
Arce, José Meseguer
Sanchez-Guerrero Villajos, Inmaculada
Carrillo-Fernández Paredes, Paola
Piñera Martínez, Ana Ester
Pagán Alemán, Juan Antonio
595 Urticarial Rash Associated with Chest Pain
title 595 Urticarial Rash Associated with Chest Pain
title_full 595 Urticarial Rash Associated with Chest Pain
title_fullStr 595 Urticarial Rash Associated with Chest Pain
title_full_unstemmed 595 Urticarial Rash Associated with Chest Pain
title_short 595 Urticarial Rash Associated with Chest Pain
title_sort 595 urticarial rash associated with chest pain
topic Abstracts of the XXII World Allergy Congress
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3512883/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.WOX.0000411710.02257.fa
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