Children (Oct 2021)
A Case of Disseminated Herpes Zoster Presenting as Vesicles Limited to Skin Lesions with Lymphoma Cutis Involvement
Abstract
After primary infection, varicella zoster virus (VZV) causes prolonged latent infections that may reactivate, depending on the immunologic status of the host. We present a case of VZV reactivation in a 10-year-old male patient that underwent unrelated peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (uPBSCT) for T-lymphoblastic lymphoma with lymphoma cutis lesions. This patient had a history of herpes zoster involving the right L2-5 dermatome and trigeminal V1 dermatome prior to uPBSCT. Three months post-uPBSCT, the patient’s underlying disease relapsed, and the patient presented with lymphoma cutis lesions. A few days after a skin biopsy was performed to pathologically confirm skin relapse, vesicles appeared only involving the skin areas with lymphoma cutis. This case illustrates how decreased areas of epidermal immune mechanisms may cause atypical presentations of varicella infection.
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