Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Absence of gammaoglobin (Proton's disease).. Congenital skin infections include boils, abscesses and cellulitis



Absence of gammaoglobin (Broughton disease):
Is a rare male immunodeficiency disorder that occurs as a sex-linked trait during the first 6 months. The child is usually protected by the antibodies that come from his mother during pregnancy.
Clinical manifestations:
- Eczema can not be separated from atopic eczema may appear in the infant with low levels of IgE Gallic.
- Infected children have a willingness to have parenchymal lesions affecting the middle ear, sinuses and lungs.
- Congenital skin infections are also common and include boils, abscesses and cellulitis. These forms of infection often occur with staphylococcus aureus and group A.
Chronic pulmonary diseases.
- Lack of hearing.
- Growth failed.