These are some of the diseases cured by Dr. Chakraborti - Skin Ulcers, Mouth Ulcers, Genital Ulcer, Herpes Infection, Siphilis, Gonorrhoea, AIDS, Beauty Spots, Leprosy
Dr.Tamal Chakraborty doctor
   Dermatology
... Trichotillomania
... Alopecia Areata
... Androgenic alopecia in women
... Androgenic alopecia (male)
... Kaposi sarcoma
... Basal cell carcinoma
... Angiokeratoma
... Malignant melanoma lentigo maligna
... Paget disease of the brest
... Keloids and hypertrophic scars
... Melasma
... Lentigo, juvenilr lentigo, solar lentigo
... Polymorphous light eruption
... Sun-damaged skin, photoaging
... Scleroderma
... Acute cutaneous lupus erythematosus
... Bullous pemphigoid
... Pemphigus vulgaris
... Dermatitis herpetiformis
... Head lice
... Scabies
... Schamgerg disease
... Stevens-Johnson syndrome
... Cutaneous drug eruptions
... Non-specific viral rash
... Hemangiomas of infancy
 
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Pemphigus vulgaris ...

 
Pemphigus vulgaris
Oral erosions usually precede the onset of the skin blisters by weeks or months.
 

DESCRIPTION
Rare, potentially life-threatening, autoimmune, intra-epidermal blistering disease involving skin and mucous membranes. Often presents with only oral involvement.

HISTORY

  • Mean age of onset 60 years; men and women affected equally.
  • Incidence estimated at 0.5-3.2 cases per million; highest in people of Ashkenazi Jewish descent.
  • Oral erosions usually precede onset of skin blisters by weeks to months.
  • Most patients describe skin tenderness or irritation.

PHYSICAL FINDINGS

  • Bullae vary from 1 to 3 cm in diameter. Initially localized but eventually become generalized if untreated. Bullae rupture easily because the vesicle roof is very fragile, consisting of a thin portion of upper epidermis.
  • Applying pressure to small intact bullae causes the fluid to dissect laterally (Asboe-Hansen sign). Traction pressure on intact skin causes bullae formation (Nikolsky's sign).
  • Erosions heal without scarring.
  • Painful oral erosions occur in 50-70% of patients and typically precede the skin blisters by weeks or months.
  • Skin biopsy with immunofluorescence recommended for all blistering diseases. Shows an intraepidermal bullae or separation of epidermal cells and an infiltrate of eosinophils.
  • Direct immunofluorescence performed on two biopsies: one from the edge of a fresh lesion, a second from an adjacent normal area showing IgG and often complement C3 in the intercellular substance areas of the epidermis.
  • Indirect immunofluorescence confirms circulating serum IgG antibodies in 80-90% of patients with active disease. These antibodies are directed against desmoglein-3, an intracellular keratinocyte adhesion molecule. Level of antibody reflects disease activity.

TREATMENT

  • Consider dermatology referral for suspected cases, as both diagnosis and management require specialist training.
  • Prednisone with an immunosuppressive adjuvant agent such as azathioprine or cyclophosphamide is standard treatment. Goal of treatment is to arrest blister formation. Starting dosages of prednisone typically vary between 40 and 120 mg/day, and are subsequently tapered to establish a minimum dose that controls most disease activity.
  • Cyclophosphamide (1.5-2.5 mg/kg per day) or azathioprine (1.0-2.5 mg/kg per day) is initiated with or after starting corticosteroids.
  • A negative direct immunofluorescence finding is a good indicator of remission.
  • Mg should be used in patients with severe pemphigus where conventional therapy is contraindicated or the disease has been refractory to conventional forms of treatment. Treatment with IVIg results in a gradual decline in pemphigus autoantibodies.
 
Courtesy by : Thomas P. Habif, James L. Campbell Jr, M. Shane Chapman, James G. H. Dinulos, Kathryn A. Zug
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