Tom, 10 years old, Bullous eruption
Written with the participation of FDVF (Future Dermatologists and Venereologists of France) interns.
Related topics
- Other
- 10-year-old child presents for a rash that developed 10 days ago.
- He is apyretic.
- The bullae and post-bullous erosions are located primarily on the face and axillary crease.
- Mobilisation of the left arm is painful due to the dermatological lesions on the axillary crease.
- The crusts are meliceric.
- Treatment with VALACICLOVIR was given by the general practitioner but did not lead to healing.
Quiz
14 respondents
Question of 1
What is your diagnosis? (only one correct response)
Pemphigus
Wrong answer!
It was bullous impetigo.
Let’s rule out differential diagnoses:
- Pemphigus:
This is a rare condition but it can affect children; the bullae are fragile and the skin is not erythematous; most often, only post-bullous erosions are seen. The presence of mucosal involvement will aid the diagnosis. The appearance can be misleading and the outcome will not be favourable following antibiotic therapy, which will require a skin biopsy.
- Lyell’s syndrome:
The symptoms are intense. There is deterioration of the overall condition and the child is exhausted. Semiologically, there is “wet laundry” detachment with Nikolsky’s sign on intact skin and mucosal involvement. This is a dermatological emergency that requires immediate hospitalisation.
- VZV infection:
Shingles in children is uncommon. The primary lesion is a vesicle that develops into clusters on inflammatory skin. The pattern is metameric. Pain and burning are the primary symptoms. A swab sample can be taken for an HSV PCR test if there is any doubt about the diagnosis.
Bullous impetigo
Bullous impetigo
It is indeed bullous impetigo.
Let’s rule out differential diagnoses:
Pemphigus
This is a rare condition but it can affect children; the bullae are fragile and the skin is not erythematous; most often, only post-bullous erosions are seen. The presence of mucosal involvement will aid the diagnosis. The appearance can be misleading and the outcome will not be favourable following antibiotic therapy, which will require a skin biopsy.
Lyell’s syndrome
The symptoms are intense. There is deterioration of the overall condition and the child is exhausted. Semiologically, there is “wet laundry” detachment with Nikolsky’s sign on intact skin and mucosal involvement. This is a dermatological emergency that requires immediate hospitalisation.
VZV infection
Shingles in children is uncommon. The primary lesion is a vesicle that develops into clusters on inflammatory skin. The pattern is metameric. Pain and burning are the primary symptoms. A swab sample can be taken for an HSV PCR test if there is any doubt about the diagnosis.
Lyell’s syndrome
Wrong answer!
It was bullous impetigo.
Let’s rule out differential diagnoses:
- Pemphigus:
This is a rare condition but it can affect children; the bullae are fragile and the skin is not erythematous; most often, only post-bullous erosions are seen. The presence of mucosal involvement will aid the diagnosis. The appearance can be misleading and the outcome will not be favourable following antibiotic therapy, which will require a skin biopsy.
- Lyell’s syndrome:
The symptoms are intense. There is deterioration of the overall condition and the child is exhausted. Semiologically, there is “wet laundry” detachment with Nikolsky’s sign on intact skin and mucosal involvement. This is a dermatological emergency that requires immediate hospitalisation.
- VZV infection:
Shingles in children is uncommon. The primary lesion is a vesicle that develops into clusters on inflammatory skin. The pattern is metameric. Pain and burning are the primary symptoms. A swab sample can be taken for an HSV PCR test if there is any doubt about the diagnosis.
VZV infection
Wrong answer!
It was bullous impetigo.
Let’s rule out differential diagnoses:
- Pemphigus:
This is a rare condition but it can affect children; the bullae are fragile and the skin is not erythematous; most often, only post-bullous erosions are seen. The presence of mucosal involvement will aid the diagnosis. The appearance can be misleading and the outcome will not be favourable following antibiotic therapy, which will require a skin biopsy.
- Lyell’s syndrome:
The symptoms are intense. There is deterioration of the overall condition and the child is exhausted. Semiologically, there is “wet laundry” detachment with Nikolsky’s sign on intact skin and mucosal involvement. This is a dermatological emergency that requires immediate hospitalisation.
- VZV infection:
Shingles in children is uncommon. The primary lesion is a vesicle that develops into clusters on inflammatory skin. The pattern is metameric. Pain and burning are the primary symptoms. A swab sample can be taken for an HSV PCR test if there is any doubt about the diagnosis.
- In France, 90% of cases of impetigo are caused by S. aureus
- Exfoliative toxins A and B lead to the formation of a superficial bulla.
- It is an acute infection.
- The lesions are primarily located in periorificial areas.
- The bullae are fragile and may have an erythematous base.
- The crusts have a yellow/honey-coloured appearance which is why they are described as “meliceric”; they are a valuable diagnostic aid.
Dermatological treatment:
- Localised forms:
When there are only a few scattered lesions, treatment with topical antibiotics such as fusidic acid or mupirocin can easily be considered in combination with a local antiseptic. One application per day for around 10 days will be sufficient to achieve healing.
- Extensive forms:
For more extensive forms, treatment with oral antibiotics as monotherapy will be necessary. Classes that act on Streptococcus pyogenes and Staphylococcus aureus should be used. Amoxicillin + clavulanic acid is the most commonly used combination; in the event of allergy, pristinamycin or clindamycin should be used.
Dermo-cosmetic support:
- During the acute phase, an emollient should be used as needed on dry areas of the skin; drying sprays are sometimes used but can cause pain when the crusts burst.
- During the healing phase, a repair cream may be useful on areas of post-inflammatory depigmentation.
- The entire time the skin is infected, a cleansing oil should be used; avoid rubbing the affected areas.
- The lesions are primarily periorificial lesions; remember to examine the perineal region.
- Within the same family, several children can be affected; remember to treat siblings with early forms.
- Micro-outbreaks can be prevented by reinforcing hygiene measures in the household and by keeping children out of school.
- Collecting fluid from a bulla for culture is not mandatory; Staphylococcus aureus is often found, even with a dermatosis that is not impetiginised.
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