Henoch-Schoenleine purpura:
Infects children and young adults. Schizophrenia and porphyria with multiple injury to the kidneys, intestines and joints distinguish this type of purpura.
the reasons:
- Damage to the walls of small blood vessels due to the deposition of complex immune materials.
- Village globulins (cold) found more than immune compounds.
- Antigen associated with infection of upper respiratory tracts is expected to be part of the common cause of immune response.
Clinical manifestations:
General features:
- Symptoms usually begin with mild fever, burning pain in the pharynx, and upper respiratory tract infections that may precede rash.
Skin manifestations:
- The first tachycardia appears on the extensor surfaces of the limbs and the buttocks have rapidly become irid and pruritic with central necrosis of lesions.
Systemic manifestations:
- College injury in the form of focal inflammation of the kidney, is a serious manifestation of the disease.
- Bowel injury leads to colic, abdominal cramps and digestive bleeding.
Arthritis: Pain in the joints is another manifestation.
- The course of the disease is chronic, it may take weeks for the skin lesion to decline, but usually there is a recurrence and return to the disease.
Kidney and intestinal manifestations may improve or serious complications may occur.
Infects children and young adults. Schizophrenia and porphyria with multiple injury to the kidneys, intestines and joints distinguish this type of purpura.
the reasons:
- Damage to the walls of small blood vessels due to the deposition of complex immune materials.
- Village globulins (cold) found more than immune compounds.
- Antigen associated with infection of upper respiratory tracts is expected to be part of the common cause of immune response.
Clinical manifestations:
General features:
- Symptoms usually begin with mild fever, burning pain in the pharynx, and upper respiratory tract infections that may precede rash.
Skin manifestations:
- The first tachycardia appears on the extensor surfaces of the limbs and the buttocks have rapidly become irid and pruritic with central necrosis of lesions.
Systemic manifestations:
- College injury in the form of focal inflammation of the kidney, is a serious manifestation of the disease.
- Bowel injury leads to colic, abdominal cramps and digestive bleeding.
Arthritis: Pain in the joints is another manifestation.
- The course of the disease is chronic, it may take weeks for the skin lesion to decline, but usually there is a recurrence and return to the disease.
Kidney and intestinal manifestations may improve or serious complications may occur.
Labels
skin diseases