Dermatitis Herpetiformis (Duhring’s Disease)

Figure 3.28 A: Epidermolysis bullous a acquisita (EBA)* B: Dermatitis herpetiformis* C: Dermatitis herpetiformis, DIF* *Courtesy of Dr. Paul Getz
Figure 3.28
A: Epidermolysis bullous a
acquisita (EBA)*
B: Dermatitis herpetiformis*
C: Dermatitis herpetiformis, DIF*
*Courtesy of Dr. Paul Getz
(Figure 3.28B, C)
  • Recurrent chronic pruritic disease associated with gluten-sensitive enteropathy
  • Gluten: general name for storage proteins found in wheat, rye, and barley
    • NOT found in rice, oats or corn
    • Gliadin: soluble fraction; likely antigenic component
  • Autoantigen: epidermal transglutaminase (TG-3), tissue transglutaminase (endomysial)
  • Clinical: erythematous grouped papules or vesicles over elbows, knees, buttocks; intensely pruritic, so primary lesions typically not visible due to excoriations
  • Histology: neutrophilic microabscesses in dermal papillae, ± subepidermal vesicles
  • DIF: granular IgA > C3 deposition in dermal papillae
  • IIF: negative
  • Labs: anti-gliadin/anti-endomysial antibodies in DH/celiac disease
  • Treatment: dapsone (immediate skin improvement), referral to GI (>90% with gluten-sensitive enteropathy and ↑ risk of small bowel lymphoma)
  • ↑ Incidence thyroid disease (Hashimoto’s thyroiditis), IDDM, enteropathyassociated T cell ymphoma