Aylin Dizi Işık, Ahmet Hamdi Sakarya, Pınar Canizci Erdemli, Zeynep Ergenc, Seyhan Yılmaz, Sevgi Aslan Tuncay, Burcu Parlak, Ömer Doğru, Ahmet Koç, Feyza İnceköy Girgin, Eda Kepenekli
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Purpura fulminans (PF) is a rare, life-threatening condition involving consumptive coagulopathy and intravascular thrombosis, causing purpura and necrosis in the skin and soft tissue.
Case report: A 4-year-old Tajik girl with PF secondary to varicella-zoster virus (VZV) infection presented with purplish red, diffuse, painful lesions localized to the entire right leg. Her vaccination status was unknown, and she did not have concurrent chronic illness. Ten days before admission, the girl was admitted to another hospital in Tajikistan with a diagnosis of chickenpox and PF. She was then transferred to the hospital of the authors of the current report due to the enlargement of lesions to the gluteal region, a change in the color of lesions from red to black, and the detection of arterial thrombosis via Doppler ultrasonography. Multiple surgical debridements were performed to manage tissue necrosis, and the patient's right leg was amputated at the 18th week of admission. The patient was discharged after 26 weeks of hospitalization.
Conclusion: Although VZV infections mostly cause mild and self-limiting eruptive disease, they can progress, with life-threatening complications, including PF. To prevent VZV infection and resulting complications, immunization with live attenuated vaccines and maintaining population immunity above a certain threshold are the most important strategies to prevent the circulation of the virus.
期刊介绍:
Wounds is the most widely read, peer-reviewed journal focusing on wound care and wound research. The information disseminated to our readers includes valuable research and commentaries on tissue repair and regeneration, biology and biochemistry of wound healing, and clinical management of various wound etiologies.
Our multidisciplinary readership consists of dermatologists, general surgeons, plastic surgeons, vascular surgeons, internal medicine/family practitioners, podiatrists, gerontologists, researchers in industry or academia (PhDs), orthopedic surgeons, infectious disease physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants. These practitioners must be well equipped to deal with a myriad of chronic wound conditions affecting their patients including vascular disease, diabetes, obesity, dermatological disorders, and more.
Whether dealing with a traumatic wound, a surgical or non-skin wound, a burn injury, or a diabetic foot ulcer, wound care professionals turn to Wounds for the latest in research and practice in this ever-growing field of medicine.