Treatment of Bullous systemic lupus erythematosus.. Dapson. Antihypertensive drugs. Drills. Steroids. The prednisone. Azothioprine. Cyclophosphamide. Prednisolone. Chlorpromazine. Indomethacin. Corticosteroid

Treatment of Bullous systemic lupus erythematosus
In severe cases and during extreme frenzy.
- Comfort in bed: required.
- Prevention of exposure to the sun The patient is advised to wear caps with a wide frame to cover the region, especially the region "V" of the neck and arms and use sunscreen.
- Neurological tensions: Avoid excessive physical exercise and secondary infection.
Incidental treatment:
- Anemia must be fixed.
- Medications may be required for topical treatment and should avoid drugs that may raise the situation, especially antibiotics that need to prevent infection.
- Calibration of "CRP" "reactive protein C" may be useful.
- The highest level of 60 mg indicates the possibility of infection.
- Dapson: It gives some relief from the pests of urinary and bubonic eruptions and to treat thrombocytopenia.
- Antihypertensive drugs: pressure must be treated. Hydralazine can be used safely in most SLE patients.
- Hemorrhoids: Nephrotic syndrome or heart failure needs diuretics. "C3" deficiency often refers to severe kidney disease.
- Steroids: It should be noted that all patients need steroids.
- Some cases are treated with high doses of steroids but the benefits of these treatments were rarely the most likely of the risks.
- Prednisone: 60 mg / day is the steroid chosen initially. When the condition appears to be under control, we may gradually reduce the dose until we get the maintenance dose that lasts about 5-15 mg daily. It has been shown that a single dose daily or day after day before food or with milk before bedtime has fewer side effects and does not affect the therapeutic response.
- Prednisone, azothioprine, prednisone and cyclophosphamide can also give good results in kidney injury.
ESR can not be relied upon as an indicator of improvement.
The ANA caliber often remains unchanged despite clinical cures.
DNA antibodies and supplementation with serum "C3" may serve as an indicator of the disease outbreak.
Muscular dystrophy may occur with high doses of steroids.
- High and long doses of corticosteroids such as: 60 mg prednisolone daily for 6 months were said to improve renal lesions more than a few inhibitory doses. This improvement in life is not seen in patients with high blood insulin before starting treatment.
There is no evidence that steroids are preventative or that long-term treatment prevents the development of other manifestations.
Serum enzymes are normal but urinary creatin is high.
Anticonvulsants for the treatment of epilepsy.
- Chlorpromazine: A good sedative for every condition associated with psychological disorders.
Aspirin may be very useful, especially in arthritic injury, and there is a high risk of hepatic hepatic toxicity in SLE.
- Indomethacin: may lead to improved arthritis, and steroids are indicated in acute cases and must be given in sufficient doses.
Antimalarial drugs: In mild cases, administration of chloroquine or hydroxychloroquine may help decrease the dose of corticosteroid.
- Antimalarial drugs are less useful than DLE and may be dangerous in long-term treatment, causing an allergic reaction. Pregnancy is not contraindicated. As well as healthy living parents born from mothers who are treated with antimalarial drugs during pregnancy.
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