Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

P1: RLJ/OZN P2: KUF


0521779407-D-01 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 7:41


508 Drug Eruptions Dubin-Johnson Syndrome

■Patch testing 1–2% in PET for erythroderma, eczematous, pustular,
blistering, and fixed drug eruptions (over area of fixed eruption)
■In vitro testing (lymphocyte transformation and lymphocyte toxicity
test)

Advice to Patient & Family
■Which drug(s) was the most likely cause, potentially cross-reacting
drugs, what drugs are safe, increased risk to first-degree relatives in
hypersensitivity syndrome

Report
■Report potentially severe or unusual reactions to regulatory author-
ities/drug manufacturer.

follow-up
n/a

complications and prognosis
n/a

Dubin-Johnson Syndrome..............................


WILLIAM E. BERQUIST, MD


history & physical
■incidence: uncommon
■inheritance: autosomal recessive
■occasional mild jaundice, normal exam
■increased bilirubin noted with estrogens, oral contraceptive use,
trauma, pregnancy or surgery
tests
Basic Tests
■total bilirubin varies from 1–25 mg/dl and about 60% conjugated
■normal liver enzymes

Specific Diagnostic
■BSP clearance slow (>20% retention at 45 min); late rise at 1.5–2 hours
■urine corproporphyrin pattern: reversed ratio of coproporphyrin III
to coproporphyrin I from 3:1 (normal) to 1:4
■normal total urinary corproporphyrins
■liver biopsy histology: melanin-like hepatocyte pigmentation
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