Pemphigoid group (overview)L12.-

Authors:Prof. Dr. med. Peter Altmeyer, Noemi Glarner

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Last updated on: 23.03.2023

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Synonym(s)

Pemphigoid diseases; Pemphigoid Group; Pemphigoids

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HistoryThis section has been translated automatically.

Lever, 1953

s.a. Newsletter: Pemphigoids

DefinitionThis section has been translated automatically.

Group of chronic autoimmune diseases characterized by autoantibodies against hemidesmosal structural proteins (BP230, BP180 and others). Binding of the antibody to the antigen in question results in loss of epithelial adherence. Clinical hallmark of pemmphigoid disease is pruritic, subepidermal, large, turgid blisters. Sometimes association with neurologic disease (e.g., Parkinson's disease).

The most common representative of this group of diseases is bullous pemphigoid.

ClassificationThis section has been translated automatically.

Differentiated according to clinic and target antigen:

Occurrence/EpidemiologyThis section has been translated automatically.

Among the autoimmunologically induced blistering diseases, the diseases of the pemphigoid group are the most common in central European populations. This is different in other populations (such as Iranian). In a larger study (1402 patients) 81% of Iranian patients had pemphigus vulgaris, 11% bullous pemphigoid, 4% pemphigus foliaceus.

For bullous pemphigoid, incidences vary between 1.2-6.6/100,000 population/year.

ManifestationThis section has been translated automatically.

The ages of onset of disease vary. For most pemphigoid variants, these are usually after the 7th decade. For gestational pemphigoid, they naturally occur during the gestational period. The rare bullous systemic lupus erythematosus predominantly affects young women. Linear IgA dermatosis also manifests well before the 7th decade of life. A childhood variant is the most common blistering disease in childhood. Epidermolysis bullosis acquisita can occur in childhood.

Direct ImmunofluorescenceThis section has been translated automatically.

Indirect immunofluorescenceThis section has been translated automatically.

S.u. pemphigoid antibodies. The so-called salt split skin examination facilitates the differential diagnosis of blistering dermatoses.

Differential diagnosisThis section has been translated automatically.

LiteratureThis section has been translated automatically.

  1. Feliciani C et al (2015) Management of bullous pemphigoid: the European Dermatology Forum consensus in collaboration with the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology. Br J Dermatol 172:867-876
  2. Gammon WR et al (1992) Immunofluorescence on split skin for the detection and differentiation of basement membrane zone autoantibodies. J Am Acad Dermatol 27: 79-87

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Last updated on: 23.03.2023