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Revista Española de Enfermedades Digestivas

versión impresa ISSN 1130-0108

Rev. esp. enferm. dig. vol.107 no.4 Madrid abr. 2015

 

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

 

Herpes zoster following percutaneous liver biopsy

 


Key words: Percutaneous liver biopsy. Herpes zoster.


 

Dear Editor,

A 40-years-old male patient, with a medical history of chronic hepatitis C, came to our department to perform a liver biopsy for staging and grading disease activity. The procedure did not have any immediate complication, and a fair sample of liver was recovered with a single passage using Menghini-type suction needle (Hepafix®, B. Braun Melsungen AG, Germany). Our patient was discharged asymptomatic after 6 hours.

One week later, he started to notice pain and pruritus in the site of the puncture, and two days afterwards a vesiculo-papular rash was elicited (Fig. 1). He came to our department and the lesions were found in the puncture site and in the same dermatome where the liver biopsy was performed, consistent with a diagnosis of herpes zoster. He was prescribed acyclovir for 8 days, with complete resolution of the lesions and symptoms. He had not developed post-herpetic neuralgia within 6 months of follow-up.

 

 

Liver biopsy is overall a safe procedure. In a recent review of 1,412 blind percutaneous thick-needle liver biopsies (1), complications were verified in 259 (18.3%), being pain at the puncture site or right shoulder the most frequent (15.3%). However, there were only nine serious complications (haemorrhage or biliary peritonitis), with no fatalities.

Primary infection with varicella-zoster virus usually happens during childhood, causing the acute and self-limited clinical syndrome of chickenpox. After the first exposure, VZV became latent in neural cells, particularly in the dorsal root ganglia. When the immune system is compromised, for instance in patients with HIV, transplantation, malignancies or immunosuppressive therapy, the virus may replicate in the nerve cells, with virions spreading within the axons to the area of the skin that is innerved from that ganglion, causing inflammation and formation of vesicles (herpes zoster).

Herpes zoster has a reported incidence of 1.2-4.8 cases/1,000 population/year, raising to 7.2-11.8 cases/1,000 population/year in persons older than 60 years (2). Its diagnosis may only require visual inspection, since this dermatomal pattern is usually not seen in other entities.

In the literature we can find some old reports of herpes zoster following a traumatic injury (3-6). A recent case-control study (7) found that patients with zoster had more trauma in the previous week, particularly with a strong association between head trauma and cranial zoster. Its occurrence after a liver biopsy was reported once (8), with the use of a 13.5-gauge needle, with puncture local guided by CT-scan. In that patient severe pain started the day after the procedure, in contrast to what we report.

The mechanisms underlying VZV reactivation after local injury should be different from herpes zoster related with immunosuppression, and are still not understood. A stimulation of local sensory nerves and a disruption of cutaneous immunity can be implied, as well as non-local mechanisms that are not yet defined (7).

The treatment of herpes zoster is intended to reduce the severity of the pain and the duration of the disease, and consists in antivirals as acyclovir or valaciclovir and analgesics.

 

João Santos-Antunes1,2, Susana Lopes1 and Guilherme Macedo1
1Gastroenterology Department. Faculty of Medicine. Hospital de São João. Porto, Portugal.
2Department of Biochemistry (U38-FCT). Faculty of Medicine. University of Porto. Portugal

 

References

1. Szymczak A, Simon K, Inglot M, et al. Safety and effectiveness of blind percutaneous liver biopsy: Analysis of 1412 procedures. Hepat Mon 2012;12:32-7.         [ Links ]

2. Reynolds MA, Chaves SS, Harpaz R, et al. The impact of the varicella vaccination program on herpes zoster epidemiology in the United States: A review. J Infec Dis 2008;197(Supl. 2):S224-7.         [ Links ]

3. Foye PM, Stitik TP, Nadler SF, et al. A study of post-traumatic shingles as a work related injury. Am J Ind Med 2000;38:108-11.         [ Links ]

4. Percival NJ. Shingles following axillary nerve block. A case report. J Hand Surg Br 1986;11:115-6.         [ Links ]

5. Stahl RS, Frazier WH. Posttraumatic herpes zoster. Arch Surg 1980; 115:753-4.         [ Links ]

6. Wilson JB. Thirty one years of herpes zoster in a rural practice. Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 1986;293:1349-51.         [ Links ]

7. Zhang JX, Joesoef RM, Bialek S, et al. Association of physical trauma with risk of herpes zoster among Medicare beneficiaries in the United States. J Infec Dis 2013;207:1007-11.         [ Links ]

8. Levy JM, Smyth SH. Reactivation of herpes zoster after liver biopsy. J Vasc Interv Radiol 2002;13:209-10.         [ Links ]

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