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Orofacial granulomatosis in a 12-year-old girl successfully treated with intravenous pulse corticosteroid therapy and chloroquine.

Jovan LalosevicMirjana Gajic-VeljicMilos Nikolic
Published in: Pediatric dermatology (2017)
Orofacial granulomatosis, a rare disease in childhood, is characterized by orofacial swelling in the absence of systemic disease. We report the case of a 12-year-old girl with asymptomatic erythematous infiltration of her upper lip, cheeks, and chin that had persisted for more than 2 years; biopsy confirmed granuloma formation. Because a large area was affected, intralesional corticosteroids were inappropriate and six cycles of 3-day intravenous pulse corticosteroid therapy (dexamethasone 1.5mg/kg), repeated once after 4 weeks, was given. Our patient also received oral chloroquine and topical emollients. At the end of the sixth pulse cycle, the infiltration had completely resolved, leaving slight residual erythema.
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