Surgical excision remains the best treatment for
hidradenitis suppurativa. (Abnormal Hair Follicles)
COPYRIGHT 2003 International Medical News Group
HOUSTON -- Surgery remains the treatment of choice for patients plagued by
anogenital hidradenitis suppurativa, Dr. Peter J. Lynch said at a conference
on vulvovaginal diseases sponsored by Baylor College of Medicine.
Surgical excision is the only approach that truly eliminates the painful,
inflamed, disfiguring nodules characteristic of this disorder, he said.
Antibiotics are of limited efficacy Corticosteroids administered
systemically for 5-7 days relieve inflammation only temporarily
Dermatologists rarely perform this type of surgery so often the task falls
to the gynecologist or gynecologic surgeon.
"It's better to do a narrow excision and leave active disease on the margins
than a more extensive procedure because the disease will recur at the
surgical site anyway," Dr. Lynch said.
It's important to warn patients that the condition usually recurs, so
they'll probably need surgery more than once.
The nodules have a significant impact on quality of life because they hurt,
rupture, leave scars, rub against clothing, and interfere with sexual
intercourse. Most patients are "deliriously happy" to have them removed with
surgery and generally are willing to undergo surgery again later if needed,
said Dr. Lynch, professor emeritus of dermatology at the University of
California, Davis.
Hidradenitis suppurativa occurs in hair follicles above apocrine ducts in
the "milk line"--the axillas, breasts, central abdomen, and anogeniral
area--that become blocked and cannot normally discharge accumulated
keratinous and bacterial debris.
The lesions, which are usually 1-4 cm in diameter, may also appear on the
upper inner thighs and over the buttocks.
The debris inside the nodules builds up until the duct and the follicle
rupture and spew it into the surrounding tissue, setting up an inflammatory
foreign-body reaction. Drainage of purulent material may continue for days
or even weeks, and some patients develop regional lymphadenopathy, marked by
mild fever, arthralgia, and malaise.
Furunculosis is the differential diagnosis, but in that condition the
lesions are isolated and scattered and don't occur in the milk line. When in
doubt, look for the diagnostic hallmark of hidradenitis suppurativa: twin
comedones in the affected area, the result of an abnormal Y-shaped
bifurcation of the follicular outlet.
That bifurcation is one of the factors that makes it difficult for the
follicle to dispel its accumulated debris. Heat and swear retention and
friction caused by rubbing of clothing or skin also contribute to the
occlusion. Obese women and African Americans seem to be at especially high
risk.
Untreated, the lesions may heal but new ones develop, and the condition
remains active until scarring eliminates all the involved follicles. In
severe cases, frank genital mutilation may occur, he said.
Patients with hidradenitis suppurativa also frequently have cystic acne,
which occurs through an analogous process. Rare cases of squamous cell
carcinoma have been associated with long-standing hidradenitis suppurativa.
