DermaDiagnosis

A "Spider Bite" That Wasn't

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Sore “red bumps” began to appear on this 31-year-old woman’s posterior calves six months ago. They persisted despite a course of cephalexin (500 mg qid for 10 days), prescribed by her primary care provider for “spider bites,” and a few weeks later, a course of double-strength sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim (bid for 10 days), for “staph infection.” When the patient is seen by dermatology, her health history is good, although she mentions a pending appointment with a gastroenterologist to investigate lower abdominal cramping and diarrhea, both of which started several months ago. There has been no weight loss, nausea, or vomiting. The patient is unaware of any bites that could explain the red patches on her legs and denies any breaks in the affected skin. No lesions are evident elsewhere on her body. There is no personal or family history of skin disease, and the patient used no OTC or prescription medication prior to the appearance of the lesions. Examination reveals several deep subcutaneous nodules palpable in the calf, ranging in size from 1.5 to 2.5 cm. There is no broken skin, nor are there other skin changes overlying the lesions, except erythema and induration. There is modest tenderness on palpation, as well as a modest increase in warmth. No nodes are palpable in the groin on that side. Examination of the patient’s skin elsewhere shows no notable changes.

Given the facts at hand, any of the following would be a reasonable next step except:

a) A 10-day course of oral rifampin (300 mg bid)

b) A deep punch biopsy

c) A presumptive diagnosis erythema nodosum

d) A chest radiograph

ANSWER
The one unreasonable choice is a 10-day course of rifampin (choice “a”). One potential explanation for the lack of response to two different antibiotics would be the probability that there was no infection to begin with. See below for further explanation.

DISCUSSION
Erythema nodosum (EN; choice “c”) is the presumptive diagnosis in cases such as this one. The “erythemas” (multiforme, annulare centrifigum, etc) are all secondary reactions to antigenic triggers—such as herpes simplex virus, strep, or other organisms—and not primary conditions.

EN is a type of panniculitis that can be triggered by a number of conditions (eg, sarcoidosis), medicines (eg, penicillin), or organisms (eg, group A β streptococcus). It can also, as in this case, accompany inflammatory bowel disease, paralleling the flares and remissions of Crohn’s or ulcerative colitis and responding to treatment for those diseases. This is why part of the workup for EN includes evaluation for bowel disease.

The absence of breaks in the skin in such cases also speaks loudly for EN, since it involves only the adipose tissues and spares the skin. In this case, given the dearth of other suspicious items in the differential, a presumptive diagnosis of EN was quite reasonable.

Deep punch biopsy (choice “b”), which must include significant adipose tissue (5 mm or surgical wedge), can be crucial in questionable cases. It can show septal panniculitis (as opposed to lobular, which is more consistent with erythema induratum), as well as characteristic Miescher’s granulomas.

A chest radiograph (choice “d”), while not especially indicated in this case, is likewise an intelligent choice. Both tuberculosis and sarcoidosis can lead to radiographic changes and trigger EN.

If local infection were truly suspected as the direct cause of this patient’s lesions, an additional punch biopsy or two might serve to provide sufficient material for aerobic bacterial culture, acid-fast culture, and deep fungal culture—all of which are possible, though unlikely, explanations. Literally, the last thing we’d do is throw yet another antibiotic at this patient, who was in need of one simple thing: a correct diagnosis that would dictate proper treatment.

TREATMENT
A letter was dictated and sent to the gastroenterologist the patient was scheduled to see, to alert him as to our findings. If his workup

(H&P, stool cultures for salmonella, yersinia, and campylobacter, colonoscopy with biopsy) fails to pinpoint a particular trigger for her EN, additional labs will be needed. These would include antistreptolysin-O titer and tuberculosis and coccidioidomycosis skin testing, as well as actual biopsy of the lesions.

As of this writing, the patient’s GI appointment was pending, but the likely outcome will be the diagnosis of Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis. Treatment for either of these conditions will quiet down her EN. Often, however, EN is idiopathic and must be treated as a stand-alone diagnosis, with NSAIDs, antimalarials, or potassium iodide.

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