Coexistence of Granuloma Annulare and Castleman’s Disease: A Case Report
Main Article Content
Keywords
granuloma annulare, castlemans disease, lymphoproliferative, interleukin 6, unicentric, multicentric
Abstract
Granuloma annulare (GA) is a self-limited disorder that may present as localized or general. Localized GA, the most common form, presents as an erythematous annular plaque without scale. The generalized form of GA presents as widespread erythematous papules and plaques over the trunk and extremities. A cross-sectional study in the United States found a female to male prevalence ratio of 3:1 with a higher prevalence in the fifth decade of life.1 The etiology of GA is largely unknown; however, a number of potential inciting factors have been reported including viral infections, drug exposure, trauma, and insect bites.
Castleman’s Disease is a rare heterogenous lymphoproliferative disorder that encompasses a spectrum of clinicopathologic manifestations. Unicentric disease affects one lymph node or chain of lymph nodes with primarily hyaline vascular changes. The multicentric form affects multiple chains of lymph nodes with primarily plasmacytic changes. The pathogenesis is related to hypercytokinemia due to dysregulated interleukin-6 (IL-6) activity in unicentric disease and dysregulated IL-6 and human herpes virus-8 in multicentric disease.
We report a case of concomitant granuloma annulare and Castleman’s Disease.
References
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