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Review
. 2020 Feb;147(2):135-139.
doi: 10.1016/j.annder.2019.09.605. Epub 2019 Dec 9.

[Sebotropic drug eruption after ingestion of bee pollen]

[Article in French]
Affiliations
Review

[Sebotropic drug eruption after ingestion of bee pollen]

[Article in French]
C Vermersch et al. Ann Dermatol Venereol. 2020 Feb.

Abstract

Introduction: The medical literature contains five cases of exanthema with sebaceous tropism induced by consumption of kava-kava extract filed under the name of sebotropic drug reaction. Herein we report a new case following consumption of bee pollen.

Patients and methods: A 37-year-old man consulted for erythemato-papular and fixed plaques of the face, upper trunk and shoulders present for 3 days. Standard blood tests were normal except for neutrophil leukocytosis at 9.8 G/l and eosinophilia at 1.4 G/l. Cutaneous biopsy of a facial plaque revealed folliculocentric lesions with necrosis of sebocytes in the sebaceous gland, associated with an eosinophil-rich infiltrate. The patient had begun consuming bee-pollen granules 3 weeks before the onset of symptoms. The rash regressed within 3 weeks of cessation of pollen consumption. Patch tests (ICDRG battery, propolis 1% Vaseline dilution and bee pollen provided by the patient, both pure and in a 30% dilution in Vaseline) were negative at 48 and 72h.

Discussion: The clinical-pathological correlation was consistent with a diagnosis of sebotropic drug reaction induced by the consumption of bee pollen. The diagnosis was based on papular exanthema of the seborrheic zones occurring 2 to 3 weeks after initial intake of the offending substance, with histological evidence of inflammatory necrosis of the sebaceous glands.

Conclusion: We report what is to our knowledge the first case of sebotropic drug reaction following ingestion of bee pollen.

Keywords: Bee pollen; Exanthema; Pollen d’abeille; Sebotropic drug reaction; Éruption à tropisme sébacé.

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