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Sweet syndrome (SS), or acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis, [1] [2] is a skin disease characterized by the sudden onset of fever, an elevated white blood cell count, and tender, red, well-demarcated papules and plaques that show dense infiltrates by neutrophil granulocytes on histologic examination.
Early linear IgA bullous dermatosis Subepidermal blister formation. [26] Early febrile neutrophilic dermatosis (Sweet's syndrome) Neutrophilic and lymphohistiocytic infiltrate and edema. [27] Connective tissue disorders Usually associated with epidermal changes. [2] (Systemic lupus erythematosis pictured) Cutaneous small-vessel vasculitis
Behr did not have a fever but felt hot to the touch. ... Lupoid Dermatosis. ... Sauvé F, Blais MC, Bongrand Y. Canine sterile neutrophilic dermatitis (resembling Sweet's syndrome) in a Dachshund ...
Reactive neutrophilic dermatoses are a spectrum of conditions mediated by neutrophils, and typically associated with underlying diseases, such as inflammatory bowel disease and hematologic malignancy.
A hereditary disorder driven by pyrin mutation, called PAAND (Pyrin-associated autoinflammation with neutrophilic dermatosis), [7] is characterized by neutrophilic dermatosis, recurrent fever, increased acute-phase reactants, arthralgia, or myalgia. Patients with PAAND have a serine-to-arginine substitution at position 242 in pyrin.
Bowel-associated dermatosis–arthritis syndrome (bowel bypass syndrome, bowel bypass syndrome without bowel bypass, intestinal bypass arthritis–dermatitis syndrome) Marshall syndrome; Neutrophilic dermatosis of the dorsal hands (pustular vasculitis of the dorsal hands) Neutrophilic eccrine hidradenitis; Pyoderma gangrenosum
Familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome; Familial Mediterranean fever; Familial partial lipodystrophy; Familial Adenomatous Polyposis; Fanconi syndrome; Favre–Racouchot syndrome; Febrile infection-related epilepsy syndrome; Febrile neutrophilic dermatosis; Fechtner syndrome; Feingold syndrome; Feline hyperesthesia syndrome; Felty's syndrome ...
LPIN2, D18S60. Synonyms: Majeed syndrome. Complement component 2 deficiency: Possibly symptomatic of autoimmune diseases, but not a disease. Congenital heart block: May be related to autoimmune activity in the mother. Contact dermatitis: A hypersensitivity. Cushing's syndrome: No consistent evidence of association with autoimmunity.