15 结果
We report a case of a 16-yr-old white female patient with acute abdominal pain due to visceral involvement of Degos' disease that required extensive small bowel resection. Skin manifestations of her disease had been present for 2 yr before the correct diagnosis. She died as a result of central
Degos' disease, otherwise known as "malignant atrophic papulosis," is a rare condition characterized by typical cutaneous lesions. Its involvement of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract is usually associated with a poor prognosis. We report a case of Degos' disease with GI involvement, which ultimately
Malignant Atrophic Papulosis (MAP) or Degos disease is a very rare vasculopathy affecting multiple systems. When associated with gastrointestinal tract or central nervous system involvment, patients with Degos disease have a poor prognosis and a high mortality. We report a case of Degos disease with
Malignant atrophic papulosis usually presents as pathognomonic skin lesions followed by acute abdominal pain, bowel perforation, peritonitis, and death. Rare patients who may lack gastrointestinal symptoms present with central nervous system manifestations, including headache, paresthesias,
A 47-year old male complaining of severe abdominal pain associated with distention was admitted to our department on August 5, 1986. His first admission to our hospital was 18 days previously for leg pain and fever. He underwent emergency operation with a preoperative diagnosis of acute peritonitis
A 48-year-old man presented with acute abdominal pain underwent laparotomy that revealed two perforated ulcers in jejunum. He had skin lesions with porcelain white atrophic scar which were ignored for 3 years, whereas the disease revealed own malignant nature and progressed to nervous,
A 75-year-old woman presented with pink papules over the trunk and limbs. Over the next few weeks, the papules became umbilicated and then developed into porcelain-white lesions with a rose or violaceous rim. A biopsy of one of these lesions revealed superficial and deep dermal lymphohistiocytic
Malignant atrophic papulosis (MAP) is characterized by skin lesion and high mortality rate caused by perforation of the GI tract or involvement of the central nervous system. Approximately 100 cases have been reported in the world literatures, but etiology is unknown. A 44-year-old female patient
A 47-year-old woman presented with slightly pruritic, burning lesions on her submammary area and legs of 3.5 years' duration. Similar lesions had appeared on her arms and feet. She was hospitalized at the Pulmonary Diseases Hospital, Izmir, with a complaint of thoracic pain, and was diagnosed with
We report the case of a 60-year-old man who presented with sudden visual loss, a history of postprandial abdominal pain, malabsorption, and skin lesions typical of systemic Degos' disease. Despite anti-aggregants and prednisone the patient's status did not improve. On the basis of the hypothetical
We present the case of a 57-year-old woman with a 1-year history of a cutaneous eruption clinically and histopathologically characteristic of Degos disease. In one of the two cutaneous biopsy specimens taken from the trunk lesions, the histopathology consisted of necrosis and sclerosis of the
Degos' disease is a rare multisystem vasculopathy of unknown etiology. We report a 44-year-old man who presented himself with gait and sensory disturbances mainly due to thoracic transverse myelopathy four years after the appearance of many characteristic umbilicated papules over the trunk and
We reported clinical and neuropathological observations of a 41-year-old man with Degos disease. He first noted painless skin lesions over the upper extremities in January, 1982. Three years later he was diagnosed as Degos disease by skin biopsy, and treatment with aspirin was started. In September,
We report clinical and pathologic findings in a 16-year-old boy whose disease began in infancy with maculopapular skin lesions, followed by cyclic nodular cutaneous eruptions, intermittent enlargement of liver and spleen, episodic abdominal pain, and sporadic unexplained fever. Subsequently, various