Dermatitis herpetiformis.. Decay or atrophy of papillae tops. Erythrocytic papillomatous papillae, sciatica, vesicles or aggregated small bubbles

Dermatitis herpetiformis:
It is a thrombocytopenic skin disease, sometimes seen in children with an immunogenic origin and may be associated with celiac disease. Neurological and psychological tensions have a role as a predisposing factor.
Clinical manifestations:
- Skin lesions: It begins with a papillomatous papillary papillae, a sclerotic lesion or small collected vesicles or bubbles.
Pests appear on the extensor surfaces of the limbs, especially the knees, elbows, axilla, torso, shoulders, face and scalp.
In the later stage you may pretend to pigmentation and scars collected.
- Mouth lesions: Uncommon.
- Progressive pigmentation in skin lesions occurs in half of cases.
- Pelvic dermatitis may be associated with gastrointestinal gastroenteritis in celiac disease in children. Epileptic dermatitis affects genital areas, axillary folds. Limb region, buttocks and extensor surfaces of limbs.
- Disease in children usually does not cause symptoms and more common in males and it does not respond in children to treatments of sulfiridine or other drugs that are effective in adults.
- Delayed dermatitis in childhood may begin in the form of vesicular or vesicular papillomia and may extend to the adult, showing the process of exacerbation and rotation.
- Helicoptic dermatitis appears in the immune flood as IgA accumulates in the human epidermal junction.
Differential diagnosis:
Symmetry distribution, pest pooling. Severe itching and polymorphism, and response to sulfapiridine and dapsone may differentiate the disease from others.
Pathological Anatomy:
- Edema at the tops of human papillae and infiltrated by the equinoxes and bactericidal.
- Subcutaneous detachment.
- Formation of bubbles.
- Degeneration or atrophy of papillae tops.
- Separation of the skin and the ends of the dermis leads to vesicles.
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