Sweet Syndrome Accompanying Inflammatory Bowel Disease in a Child

Authors

  • Anahita Sanaei Dashti Pediatric Infection Research Center (PIRC), Mofid Children Hospital, Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
  • Perikala Kumar
Abstract:

Acute neutrophilic dermatosis, first described in 1964 by Robert Douglas Sweet, is characterized by sudden onset fever, neutrophilic leukocytosis, and well demarcated erythematous papules, nodules, and plaques with dense neutrophilic infiltrates on histologic evaluation.Here is a report of a 7-year-old girl who presented with high grade fever, and discrete erythematous papular skin eruptions, which gradually increased in number and involved the face, trunk, extremities, palms, soles, hard palate, and palatal tonsils. The skin eruptions evolved to pustules and after coalescing caused large crusted plaques, with mild tenderness but without any pruritus. White blood cells were 36900/ml with 92% neutrophils. Skin biopsy test was compatible with acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis, so prednisolone (1 mg/kg/day) was started that led to a rapid defervescence and significant improvement of dermatosis. After a few days, the patient presented with fever and arthritis of right elbow, both ankles, and wrists, so she was re-admitted. She also developed bloody diarrhea during the hospital stay. Colonoscopy and intestinal biopsy were performed, which confirmed the diagnosis of ulcerative colitis. Prednisolone, sulfasalazine, and naproxen were prescribed. The fever and diarrhea stopped after a few days and joint swelling decreased. She was discharged 2 weeks after the admission with a rather good general condition. Inflammatory bowel disease can be one of the several conditions accompanying sweet syndrome.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

sweet syndrome accompanying inflammatory bowel disease in a child

acute neutrophilic dermatosis, first described in 1964 by robert douglas sweet, is characterized by sudden onset fever, neutrophilic leukocytosis, and well demarcated erythematous papules, nodules, and plaques with dense neutrophilic infiltrates on histologic evaluation. here is a report of a 7-year-old girl who presented with high grade fever, and discrete erythematous papular skin eruptions, ...

full text

Inflammatory bowel disease or irritable bowel syndrome?

Gastrointestinal complaints are one of the most common reasons individuals seek medical care. Many have been through numerous physician consultations and treatment modalities without relief. Unfortunately, millions more suffer silently, thinking that their GI symptoms are “normal”; while self-medicating with antacids, Pepto Bismal or food avoidance. Additionally, many GI complaints are embarras...

full text

Histiocytoid Sweet Syndrome in a Child without Underlying Systemic Disease

Sweet syndrome (acute, febrile, neutrophilic dermatosis) is characterized by the acute onset of an eruption of painful nodules or erythematous or violaceous plaques on the limbs, face and neck. These symptoms are accompanied by fever. The diagnostic features include histopathological findings of dermal neutrophilic infiltration without leukocytoclastic vasculitis or peripheral blood leukocytosi...

full text

Is irritable bowel syndrome a low-grade inflammatory bowel disease?

Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is multifactorial in its etiology and heterogeneous in its clinical presentation and pathogenesis. It is recognized that inflammation plays an important role in symptom generation, at least in a subset of patients with IBS. Previous gastroenteritis has been identified as the most important risk factor for IBS, and several studies reported that a substantial propor...

full text

Inflammatory Bowel Disease in a Child with Sickle Cell Anemia

Sickle cell anemia (SCA) is a chronic haemoglobinopathy that can affect many organs in the body including gastrointestinal tract. However, colonic involvement is very rare and usually in the form of ischemic colitis. We are reporting an 11-year-old Saudi girl with SCA who presented with persistent diarrhea and was found to have inflammaftory bowel disease.

full text

Neonatal Presentation of Unremitting Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Very-early-onset inflammatory bowel disease (VEO-IBD) has a distinct phenotype and should be considered a specific entity. VEO-IBD presents with very severe clinical pictures and is frequently known by an indeterminate colitis whose clinical remission is unmanageable. This study examines the case of a neonate with VEO-IBD, not responding to medical and surgical treatment. A 7-day-old Iranian fe...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 35  issue 1

pages  61- 64

publication date 2015-03-02

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Keywords

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023