Mohs Micrographic Surgery-Induced Pemphigus |
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Authors: | Michael G Duick MD Boris Zaks MD Ronald L Moy MD and Richard P Kaplan MD |
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Institution: | Department of Internal Medicine, North-western University School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA. |
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Abstract: | BACKGROUND: Pemphigus is an autoimmune blistering disease that presents with flaccid intraepidermal blisters, erosions of the skin and mucous membranes, acantholysis, and in vivo bound and circulating autoantibodies against keratinocyte antigen. Currently a handful of reports incriminate surgical trauma as an initiating factor in this disease. OBJECTIVE: To document pemphigus evolving in a wound after Mohs micrographic surgery. METHODS: Case report. RESULTS: We present a case of pemphigus that started in a Mohs surgical wound after the excision of a squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) from a 49-year-old woman. Biopsy of the preoperative lesion did not reveal pemphigus. Biopsy of the postoperative lesion revealed pemphigus with no residual SCC. CONCLUSION: We suggest that Mohs surgery, like any other skin surgery, may nonspecifically activate pemphigus. This change must be differentiated from postoperative wound infection and other causes of poor wound healing. |
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