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Journal ArticleDOI

Bullous pemphigoid and internal diseases: A case-control study.

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TLDR
In this article, the authors conducted a case control study assessing the frequency of selected diseases -diabetes mellitus, neurological diseases, malignant tumors, benign prostate hyperplasia, hypertension and ischemic heart disease in patients with pemphigoid.
Abstract
To study associations of bullous pemphigoid (BP) with internal diseases, we conducted a retrospective case control study assessing the frequency of selected diseases - diabetes mellitus, neurological diseases, malignant tumors, benign prostate hyperplasia, hypertension and ischemic heart disease in patients with BP. 89 patients with BP, whose data were retrieved from the register of the Centre of bullous diseases from the period of 1991-2006, were matched with 89 controls of the same age and gender, recruited from patients treated for other skin diseases. The frequency of internal diseases at the time of the onset of BP was evaluated by unconditional logistic regression adjusted for age and gender and maximum likelihood test for contingency tables. Neurological disease was found in 42.7% of the patients and in 19.1% of controls. This difference was statistically significant (p value = 0.001). Moreover, regression analysis has shown that patients with neurological disease in the age group >or= 80 years have significantly higher risk of pemphigoid than patients without neurological disease (odds ratio 10.55; 95% confidence interval 2.68 to 41.49). Most frequent were cerebral stroke in men and dementia in women. For other diseases and other age groups, no statistically significant influence was found.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Drug-induced pemphigoid: a review of the literature.

TL;DR: Patients who present with bullous pemphigoid and receive multiple regimens should always be suspected of suffering from the drug‐induced variant of the condition, as after the withdrawal of the suspect medication most patients respond rapidly to treatment and do not experience relapses.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between neurological disease and bullous pemphigoid: a population-based case-control study.

TL;DR: In this paper, a matched case-control analysis was conducted to assess the risk of bullous pemphigoid (BP) in patients with neurological diseases. But, the association was only observed where neurological disease was diagnosed before the onset of pemophigoid.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bullous Pemphigoid: A Review of its Diagnosis, Associations and Treatment

TL;DR: The diagnosis of BP relies on immunopathologic findings, especially based on both direct and indirect immunofluorescence microscopy observations, as well as on anti-BP180/BP230 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs).
Journal ArticleDOI

Comorbidity profiles among patients with bullous pemphigoid: a nationwide population‐based study

TL;DR: This large-scale population‐based study of different comorbid diseases in patients with BP found no clear link between BP and neurological and psychiatric diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autoimmune Subepidermal Bullous Diseases of the Skin and Mucosae: Clinical Features, Diagnosis, and Management.

TL;DR: The clinical and immunopathological features as well as the pathophysiology of this group of organ-specific autoimmune diseases are reviewed, which involves a number of different autoantigens in the basement membrane zone, are reviewed.
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