The British journal of dermatology
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A young female developed persistent nodules at sites of ear piercing with gold earrings and patch testing demonstrated a positive allergic response to gold sodium thiosulphate. Histological examination of the nodules demonstrated a prominent sarcoidal-type granulomatous tissue reaction. This is in contrast to previous reports of lymphocytoma cutis type histology and was associated with the occurrence of epithelioid granulomata at the site of a strongly positive and long-lasting patch-test reaction.
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Letter Review Case Reports
Juvenile nodulocystic acne responding to systemic isotretinoin.
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Treponema pallidum can be detected by conventional techniques such as dark-field microscopy, immunofluorescence or the rabbit infectivity test, in large numbers in the skin lesions of primary and early secondary syphilis. In the skin lesions of late secondary and tertiary syphilis, conventional techniques fail to detect spirochaetes in general, perhaps due to increasing degeneration and the disappearance of treponemal spirochaetes in late syphilitic skin lesions. We used the highly sensitive technique of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to prove the presence of Treponema pallidum-specific DNA in six lesions of late secondary syphilis and seven lesions of tertiary syphilis, including one syphilitic gumma. ⋯ Treponema pallidum-specific DNA was amplified by PCR in four of six cases of secondary syphilis and in the syphilitic gumma. These results are in favour of a direct cell-mediated immune reaction directed against treponemal antigen rather than the concept of an Id-reaction. Beside the usefulness of a PCR-based assay for understanding the aetiology of lesions of late syphilis, the assay described can be of clinical importance in various situations where traditional methods fail to detect Treponema pallidum because of lack of sensitivity.