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Medline ® Abstract for Reference 93

of 'Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis: Pathogenesis, clinical manifestations, and diagnosis'

93
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Toxic epidermal necrolysis. Granulocytic leukopenia as a prognostic indicator.
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Westly ED, Wechsler HL
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Arch Dermatol. 1984;120(6):721.
 
Drug-induced toxic epidermal necrolysis is a disease of severe morbidity and high mortality. In the ten cases reported herein, therapeutic measures, including antibiotics, closed mechanical ventilation, maintenance of fluid and electrolyte balance, and management in special burn-care units, failed to alter a poor prognosis. The administration of corticosteroids was of no apparent benefit and may have been detrimental. Young age seemed to have a favorable influence on survival. There developed a pattern of leukopenia due to severe granulocytopenia that proved to be of prognostic importance. Persistence of the granulocytopenia portended a fatal outcome, whereas recovery of the granulocyte count to normal indicated, overall, a more favorable trend. The cause of the granulocytopenia could not be determined.
AD
PMID