Published in:
01-08-2006 | Case Report
Abdominal-wall postherpetic pseudohernia
Authors:
Pedro Dantas Oliveira, Paulo Vicente dos Santos Filho, João Eduardo Marques Tavares de Menezes Ettinger, Isabel Cristina Dantas Oliveira
Published in:
Hernia
|
Issue 4/2006
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Abstract
Herpes zoster affects 10–20% of the general population. Motor complications sometimes occur in the segments corresponding to the involved sensory dermatomes causing abdominal wall pseudohernias. We present a case of a 57-year-old woman with herpes zoster characteristical rash following T11–T12 right dermatomes. Ten days after dermatologic manifestations onset, she had developed a protrusion at the abdominal wall on the right flank. The electroneuromyography confirmed axonal motor commitment, and morphological defects were ruled out by ultrasonography. The bulge totally disappeared after 4 months of observation. Postherpetic pseudohernia must be suspected when a patient develops signs and symptoms of motor dysfunction that coincide with or follow a herpes zoster eruption resulting in abdominal-wall herniation. A review of the literature concerning these extremely exceptional sequelae of herpes zoster is presented.