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Dr. John H. Stone: A 47-year-old woman was seen in the Rheumatology Clinic of this hospital because of numbness and pain in the legs and a rash.
The patient had been well until approximately 2 years earlier, when numbness developed, first on the lateral aspect of the left leg, ankle, and foot, and then in an identical distribution on the right. Approximately 3 months later, pain developed on the medial aspect of the left foot, followed by pain in the same distribution on the right foot. During the next 9 months, the pain spread to involve both lower legs diffusely.
Differential Diagnosis
Livedo Reticularis
Atrophie Blanche
Xerophthalmia
Mononeuritis Multiplex
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Sjögren's Syndrome
Antiphospholipid-Antibody Syndrome
Cutaneous Polyarteritis Nodosa
Livedoid Vasculopathy
Summary
Clinical Diagnosis
Dr. Daniela Kroshinsky's Diagnosis
Pathological Discussion
Discussion of Management
Anatomical Diagnosis
Source Information
From the Departments of Dermatology (D.K.); Rheumatology, Allergy, and Immunology (J.H.S., D.B.B.); and Pathology (A.S.), Massachusetts General Hospital; and the Departments of Dermatology (D.K.), Medicine (J.H.S., D.B.B.), and Pathology (A.S.), Harvard Medical School.
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