Grover disease - FaamaʻI Grover

FaamaʻI Grover (Grover disease) ose ma'i e fa'afuase'i ona aliali mai e pei o ni mageso mumu i luga o le ogalaau, e masani lava i tama matutua.

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      References Grover Disease (Transient Acantholytic Dermatosis) 19722762
      Grover disease , e ta'ua fo'i o le transient acantholytic dermatosis, ose mageso e aliali mai e pei o patupatu ua tumu i vai i luga o le tino, aemaise lava i tama matutua matutua. E masani ona mageso ae e le umi. E 4 fa'asologa 'ese'ese o suiga o a'a i le Grover disease , ma ua feso'ota'i atu i ma'i 'ese'ese, e pei o le kanesa o le toto. E mafai ona faigata ona siaki ma togafitia aua e masani ona sau ma alu na o ia. Talu ai ona o le Grover disease sa feso'ota'i so'o ma isi tu'uga pa'u dermatologic ma nondermatologic, e mana'omia ai le fa'aesea o isi fa'afitauli fa'atasi, e aofia ai ma'i ma'i hematopoietic.
      Grover disease, also known as transient acantholytic dermatosis, is a rash that appears as bumps filled with fluid on the upper body, mainly in older white men. It's often itchy but doesn't last long. There are 4 different patterns of tissue changes in Grover disease, and it has been linked to various illnesses, like blood cancers. It can be hard to track and treat because it tends to come and go on its own. Because Grover disease has been associated frequently with other dermatologic and nondermatologic skin conditions, to rule out other concomitant disorders, including hematopoietic malignancies is essential.
       Management and Treatment of Grover’s Disease: A Case Report and Review of Literature 35573509 
      NIH
      O lenei lipoti o loʻo talanoaina ai se faʻalavelave e le masani ai o le Grover's disease i se alii papaʻe e 80 tausaga le matua na maua se mageso i lona fatafata mo le tolu i le fa masina talu ai. E iai lona talaaga o le toto maualuga, maualuga le cholesterol, gugu o tulivae, faʻamaʻi faʻamaʻi faʻamaʻi, saoasaoa o le fatu, kanesa prostate muamua, ma le maʻi le mautonu o vae. I le taimi muamua, sa i ai se mageso, mūmū, mageso o le tino i luga o lona tino. E ui i le fa'aaogaina o kulimi ma lotion eseese, e le'i fa'aleleia tele ona auga. Ina ua mae'a ona va'ai se foma'i fa'ama'i ma maua se su'esu'ega o le pa'u, na fa'amaonia le su'esu'ega o le Grover's disease. Ona togafitia lea o ia i se kulimi steroid mo le lua vaiaso.
      This case report details a rare case of Grover's disease in an 80-year-old Caucasian male complaining of a rash across his chest over the last three to four months. The patient has a past medical history of essential hypertension, hyperlipidemia, osteoarthritis of the knee, chronic gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), supraventricular tachycardia, status post prostate cancer, and restless legs syndrome. During his initial evaluation, he was found to have a pruritic, erythematous, papular rash most notably along his upper trunk and chest. The patient utilized multiple lotions, emollients, and anti-itch creams with minimal relief of his symptoms and presentation. Following a referral to Dermatology, a biopsy of the rash was conducted, which revealed intraepidermal acantholysis, the hallmark finding for a diagnosis of Grover's disease. Subsequently, he was treated with a topical triamcinolone acetonide 0.1% cream for 14 days.