An Unusual Presentation to the Burns Unit—A Cautionary Tale

Author:

Faderani Ryan1ORCID,Ali Stephen R12,Yarrow Jeremy1

Affiliation:

1. Welsh Centre for Burns and Plastic Surgery, Morriston Hospital, Swansea, UK

2. Reconstructive Surgery and Regenerative Medicine Research Group, Institute of Life Sciences, Swansea University Medical School, Swansea, UK

Abstract

Abstract The authors report a case of a 34-year-old female with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and lupus nephritis who was referred to the regional burns service with a suspected contact burn to the left flank and hypogastrium from a hot water bottle. The patient had been applying a hot water bottle to the area at night for pain relief and after 3 days she noticed a localized area of erythema which became larger and began to blister over a period of 5 days. The blistered areas were erythematous and wet; however, the capillary refill time was sluggish. The lesion was initially diagnosed and treated as a superficial partial thickness burn that had developed secondary to prolonged contact with a hot water bottle. However, due to the history of immunosuppression as well as elements of the lesion being unusual for a burn, we consequently diagnosed this as herpes zoster infection. This case highlights the importance of always thinking of alternative diagnoses. There are several cases in the literature where shingles has been dangerously misdiagnosed, furthermore leading to patients being mistakenly treated and even operated on. In the early stages, abdominal shingles may present very similarly to superficial partial thickness burns, both with neuropathic pain, erythema, and blistering. It is important for the burns surgeon to be aware of this diagnosis as a differential in atypical presentations, and to pay particular attention to the timeline of events is the key to diagnosis.

Funder

Welsh Clinical Academic Training

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rehabilitation,Emergency Medicine,Surgery

Reference6 articles.

1. Ophthalmic zoster as a reason for admission into a regional burns unit;Greenwood;Burns,1995

2. Misdiagnosis of burns: herpes zoster ophthalmicus;Sawyer;J Burn Care Res,2006

3. Herpes zoster masquerading as a chemical burn secondary to hair dye;Crowley;J Burn Care Res,2017

4. Garlic burns mimicking herpes zoster;Farrell;Lancet,1996

5. Herpes zoster: mistaken for radiculopathy and back pain;Nair;J Indian Med Assoc,2012

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