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A recent study investigated acute inflammatory responses in patients with inflammatory bowel disease.1 Subjects received 1 mg of heat killed Escherichia coli subcutaneously into each forearm. The magnitude of the ensuing local inflammatory responses, measured as increases in local blood flow, peaked in healthy individuals by 24 hours and resolved within 48 hours. In contrast, the response in two patients with ulcerative colitis was abnormally protracted (supplementary fig 1⇓; supplementary fig 1⇓ can be viewed on the Gut website at http://www.gutjnl.com/supplemental).
Macroscopic and microscopic appearances of the skin lesions. (A) A prolonged erythematous reaction developed at each injection site in this patient. These subsequently (B) blistered and (C) ulcerated. (D) Ulcers completely re-epithelialised after sequential treatment with infliximab, clobetasol, and topical tacrolimus. (E) Biopsies taken from the margin of the lesion showed granulation tissue, active inflammation in the subcutis, fibrin exudation into the superficial dermis, and pseudoepithelialomatous hyperplasia. High power images (inset) revealed a predominantly neutrophilic leucocyte …
Footnotes
We thank the Wellcome Trust for financial support. The funding source had no involvement in the study design, collection, analysis, or interpretation of the data, writing of this report, or the decision to submit the paper for publication.
Conflict of interest: None declared.