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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Necrolytic migratory erythema
is considered to be one of five well-defined paraneoplastic syndromes of the skin. An association with a pancreatic A-cell glucagonoma is commonly postulated. However, during the last years 10 cases of necrolytic migratory erythema with no evidence for glucagonoma have been published. We report on a 59-year-old woman who presented with typical clinical and histological findings of necrolytic migratory erythema. Staging and laboratory investigations gave no evidence of any neoplasia. A liver biopsy revealed chronic persisting
hepatitis
. Hepatocellular dysfunction was recently reported to be present concomitantly in a number of cases of necrolytic migratory erythema, suggesting a relation to the skin changes described here.
...
PMID:[Erythema necroticans migrans without glucagonoma]. 792 44
Necrolytic migratory erythema
is characterized by waves of irregular erythema in which a central bulla develops, and subsequently erodes and becomes crusted. It usually occurs in patients with an alpha-islet cell tumor of the pancreas. However, necrolytic migratory erythema has also been observed in patients without an associated glucagonoma. We describe a woman with iatrogenic necrolytic migratory erythema. She received intravenous glucagon for hypoglycemia associated with an insulin-like growth factor II-secreting hemangiopericytoma. After chemotherapy, she developed necrolytic migratory erythema. The characteristics of the previously reported patients with nonglucagonoma-associated necrolytic migratory erythema are reviewed. In patients with nonglucagonoma-associated necrolytic migratory erythema, the dermatosis-related conditions most commonly observed were celiac disease or malabsorption, cirrhosis, malignancy, and pancreatitis; less common conditions included
hepatitis
, inflammatory bowel disease, heroin abuse, and odontogenic abscess. Although the pathogenesis of necrolytic migratory erythema remains unknown, hyperglucagonemia appears to have had a causative role in the development of this dermatosis in our patient. Patients who develop necrolytic migratory erythema should be evaluated for the presence of a glucagonoma; if a glucagonoma is ruled out, evaluation for other conditions known to occur with necrolytic migratory erythema, such as liver disease, malabsorptive disorders, and nonislet-cell tumors is warranted.
...
PMID:Iatrogenic necrolytic migratory erythema: a case report and review of nonglucagonoma-associated necrolytic migratory erythema. 959 6