Familial Benign Chronic Pemphigus
- 1 October 1971
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Dermatology
- Vol. 104 (4) , 380-384
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archderm.1971.04000220038007
Abstract
A patient with recalcitrant familial benign chronic pemphigus was treated with split-thickness grafts to the groin. Postoperative fever and immobilization led to sweating and maceration of the skin, which in turn was followed by widespread clinical disease. This occurrence suggested that in this genodermatosis the susceptible skin is not limited to the neck, axillae, and groin but that hyperhidrosis and subsequent maceration account for this distribution. After surgery, the patient improved but continued to develop occasional cutaneous lesions in the grafted sites following exercise or trauma. We believe that the decreased number of functioning sweat glands (and subsequent decrease in sweating) produced by grafting favorably altered the intertriginous environment and accounted for his clinical improvement.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Surgical treatment of familial chronic pemphigus (Hailey-Hailey disease). Report of a caseArchives of Dermatology, 1968
- Ultraviolet-induced acantholysis in familial benign chronic pemphigus. Detection of the forme frusteArchives of Dermatology, 1967
- Experimentally Induced Acantholysis in Hailey’s benign PemphigusDermatology, 1962
- FAMILIAL BENIGN CHRONIC PEMPHIGUSArchives of Dermatology, 1939