Pemphigus vulgaris
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Clinic
- Pemphigus vulgaris most commonly presents with oral blisters (buccal and palatine mucosa, especially), but also includes cutaneous blisters. Other mucosal surfaces, the conjunctiva, nose, esophagus, penis, vulva, vagina, cervix, and anus, may also be affected. Flaccid blisters over the skin are frequently seen with sparing of the skin covering the palms and soles.
- It is a rare chronic blistering skin disease and the most common form of pemphigus.
- It is classified as a type II hypersensitivity reaction in which antibodies are formed against desmosomes, components of the skin that function to keep certain layers of skin bound to each other.
- As desmosomes are attacked, the layers of skin separate and the clinical picture resembles a blister.
- Blisters commonly erode and leave ulcerated lesions and erosions.
- These blisters are due to acantholysis, or breaking apart of intercellular connections through an autoantibody-mediated response.
- Lesions increase in size and distribution throughout the body, behaving physiologically like a severe burn.
Before the advent of modern treatments, mortality for the disease was close to 90%. Today, the mortality rate with treatment is between 5-15% due to the introduction of corticosteroids as primary treatment. Nevertheless, in 1998, pemphigus vulgaris was the fourth most common cause of death due to a skin disorder. It is thus still deemed "potentially fatal."
The disease mainly affects middle-aged and older adults between 50–60 years old. There has historically been a higher incidence in women.
Remedies
Banerji protocols | |||
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Tissue Salt Remedies
NS: Yellow discharges
NM: When discharge is Clear / Colorless
Miasm
- ↑ Jang H, Jin YJ, Yoon CH, Kim CW, Kim L. Bullous pemphigoid associated with chronic hepatitis C virus infection in a hepatitis B virus endemic area: A case report. Medicine (Baltimore). 2018 Apr;97(15):e0377. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000010377. PMID: 29642192; PMCID: PMC5908609.