Dermpath Diagnosis
Hailey-Hailey Disease
Hailey-Hailey disease typically presents as suprabasal blisters with a perivascular and interstitial lymphocytic infiltrate. The differential...
Katherine S. Redding, MD, MSPH; Emily H. Jones, MD; Tejesh Patel, MD; Robert B. Skinner, MD
From the Department of Dermatology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis.
The authors report no conflict of interest.
Correspondence: Emily H. Jones, MD, 930 Madison Ave, Ste 840, Memphis, TN 38163 (emjones25@gmail.com).

We believe this case highlights the importance of considering SSSS in both atopic and pregnant patients with desquamating eruptions. In the case of pregnant patients, it is important to consider the risks and benefits of any medical treatments for both the mother and infant. Vancomycin is a pregnancy category B drug and was chosen for its known effectiveness and safety in pregnancy. One study compared 10 babies with mothers who were treated with vancomycin during the second and third trimesters for MRSA to 20 babies with mothers who did not receive vancomycin and did not find an increased risk for sensorineural hearing loss or nephrotoxicity.11 There is no known increased risk for preeclampsia with vancomycin, but some studies have suggested that maternal infection independently increases the risk for preeclampsia.12 Other treatment options were not as safe as vancomycin in this case: doxycycline is contraindicated (pregnancy category D) due to the potential for staining of deciduous teeth and skeletal growth impairment, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole is a pregnancy category D drug during the third trimester due to the risk of kernicterus, and linezolid is a pregnancy category C drug.13
Hailey-Hailey disease typically presents as suprabasal blisters with a perivascular and interstitial lymphocytic infiltrate. The differential...
No abstract available.