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Page 9

Journal of Skin

Notes:

September 18-20, 2017 SAN ANTONIO, TX, USA

World Dermatological Congress

Dermatology Congress 2017

http://dermatology.cmesociety.com

Hyper IgE syndrome: A case report

Gabriela Torres

and

Carla Rosero

Central University of Ecuador, Ecuador

T

his case report describes about a syndrome of recurrent staphylococcal abscesses, sinopulmonary infections,

and severe eczema. The condition was initially called Job syndrome. It was speculated that the immune defect

in Job syndrome lay in an abnormality in nonspecific mechanisms of local bacterial resistance and perhaps in

abnormalities of mediators of the acute inflammatory response. This disorder was termed hyperimmunoglobulin

E syndrome (HIES) when an associated increase in serum levels of immunoglobulin (Ig) E was described. HIES

is rare; the precise incidence is not known. It is found equally among males and females, and is observed in

members of succeeding generations. It has been reported in Caucasians as well as in individuals of Asian and

African origin. HIES is characterized by dermatitis, recurrent infections (principally bacterial), and elevated

serum IgE, although there is significant variation in the constellation of symptoms and signs among individual

patients. Classification of HIES into two subtypes has been proposed. We present an 11-year-old male patient

with a history of recurrent pneumonia, a history of cutaneous eczema that begins at birth, with severe to mild

seizures; presents prominent front, broad nasal bridge, hypertelorism, fleshy nose, prognathism, statural decrease

and scoliosis. It was detected: IgE of 2620. The clinical scale of Grimbacher criteria was applied to the patient,

scoring 47 points with a high probability of diagnosis of Hyper Ig Syndrome. It was treated with short and

sporadic cycles of steroids, antihistamines, vitamin C and antibiotic therapy, 1 monthly dose. He received three

sessions of phototherapy weekly, achieving clinical improvement of the dermatological picture for several

months; nevertheless the patient dies from complications due to a new episode of pneumonia.

Biography

Gabby Torres has completed his PhD in Medicine and Surgery from the Central University of Ecuador. She has taken her specialization in Dermatology from

University of Guayaquil. She is the Member of the Ecuadorian Society of Dermatology. She has named as the Best Ecuadorian Dermatologist by the International

Organization for Training and Medical Research. she has received the first place in the second contest for Ecuadorian Dermatological Research. She is the

University Assistant of the Coordination of the Postgraduate of Dermatology at the Central University of Ecuador. She is working as a Physician and the Head

of Teaching at Hospital Gonzalo Gonzalez. She is the Member of the Ibero-Latin American College of Dermatology, Bolivarian Society of Dermatology and

Mesoamerican Academy of Dermatology and Cosmetic Surgery.

gabby_torres83@hotmail.com