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Persistent ‘postherpetic neuralgia’ and well-demarcated plaque

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References

Treatment: First, stop the offense

Treatment of both variants of contact dermatitis includes avoidance of the causative substance and symptomatic treatment with topical steroids, antihistamines, and possibly oral steroids depending on the severity.1

For our patient, a viral swab was taken and submitted for varicella zoster virus polymerase chain reaction testing to rule out persistent herpes zoster infection; the result was negative. The patient was counseled to discontinue use of the lidocaine patch.

Given the severity and protracted duration of the patient’s symptoms, he also was started on high-potency topical steroids (clobetasol 0.05% ointment to be applied twice daily under occlusion for 2 months), a 4-week prednisone taper (60 mg × 1 week, 40 mg × 1 week, 20 mg × 1 week, 10 mg × 1 week, then stop), and hydroxyzine (25 mg nightly as needed for pruritus). The patient’s rash and symptoms improved dramatically within the first few doses of prednisone and completely cleared by Week 4 of the prednisone taper. At his follow-up appointment 1 month after completing the prednisone taper, he stated that the pain on his back had resolved.

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