Volume 34, Issue 2 pp. 178-182

Severe exfoliative erythema of malnutrition in a child with coexisting coeliac and Hartnup’s disease

C. S. Sander

C. S. Sander

Departments of Dermatology

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J. Hertecant

J. Hertecant

Paediatrics, Tawam Hospital in affiliation with Johns Hopkins Medicine, Al Ain, UAE

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Y. M. Abdulrazzaq

Y. M. Abdulrazzaq

Department of Paediatrics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, UAE University, Al Ain, UAE; and

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T. G. Berger

T. G. Berger

Departments of Dermatology

Department of Dermatology, University Hospital of Erlangen, Erlangen, Germany

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First published: 21 January 2009
Citations: 5
Dr Christina Sander, Division of Dermatology, Tawam Hospital, PO Box 15258, Al Ain, UAE.
E-mail: [email protected]

Conflict of interest: none declared.

Summary

Exfoliative erythema of malnutrition is a collective term for skin lesions caused by a combination of multiple deficiencies in vitamins, microelements, essential fatty acids and amino acids. We report a 3-year-old Iraqi girl with malnutrition due to coexisting coeliac and Hartnup’s disease. On admission to hospital, she presented with kwashiorkor, anaemia, hepatitis and hypoalbuminia. She had severe skin changes with erythema, desquamation, erosions and diffuse hyperpigmentation involving the whole integument, particularly the perioral area, trunk and legs. She also had angular cheilitis, glossitis, conjunctivitis and diffuse alopecia. After treatment with a high-protein gluten-free diet and supplementation with vitamins and microelements there was a rapid improvement in the skin lesions. The severity of the skin lesions in this case can be explained by the coexistence of two metabolic diseases causing complex malnutrition.

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