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SULFONAMIDE PSORIASIFORM DERMATITIS

OSGOODE S. PHILPOTT, M.D.
Arch Derm Syphilol. 1947;55(4):525-534. doi:10.1001/archderm.1947.01520040094010.
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IT IS WELL known that members of the sulfonamide group of drugs may produce untoward cutaneous reactions. Further reference to this fact may seem unnecessary, but I have observed during the last few years a cutaneous eruption due, I think, to sulfonamide compounds and not, to my knowledge, previously reported. This is a type of psoriasiform dermatitis, exhibiting many of the essential features of psoriasis, and in at least 1 of 4 cases may be true psoriasis.

Costello, Rubinowitz and Landy1 reported twenty-nine dermatoses attributed to the local or internal use of sulfathiazole, but in this group there is no mention of any resembling psoriasis. The literature, while rich in references to a wide variety of sulfonamide dermatoses, does not include any of the type I wish to report in this paper.

My first contact with this interesting condition was in 1941, when a woman was seen in my

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