Pemphigus vulgaris
Background
- Chronic autoimmune mucocutaneous disease against desmosomes in epidermis (bind keratinocytes)
Clinical Features
- Painful but rarely pruritic
- Mucosal involvement common
- Presenting complaint in 50% of cases.
- Primary lesions
- Tense and clear vesicles/bullae on head, trunk, mucosa.
- Become flaccid and turbid 2-3 days later
- Rupture and leave sensistive denuded area of skin
- Slow to heal and prone to secondary infection.
- Nikolsky's sign: Sliding pressure applied to normal skin adjacent to blister causes further ulceration.
- Intraepidermal acantholyis: Keratinocytes separated at the basal layer from one another.
- Gives appearance of lesion expanding into adjacent tissue.
- Transudate accumulate between keratinocyte and basement membrane which gives rise to new blisters.
