A 29-year-old man presented with a three-year history of a painful and recurrent left posterior calf wound. The patient had a past medical history of Factor V Leiden, chronic bilateral lower extremity deep vein thromboses, and HIV. The patient was never a smoker, but did use marijuana. When the wound first appeared in 2015, it was healed with local wound care. However, in 2017, there was a spontaneous recurrence of the wound that occurred while wearing compression stockings.
Left posterior/distal calf wound measuring 9 x 7 cm. The wound had erythematous undermined edges and an ulcerated center with fibrinous exudate. No bone or tendon exposure was found.
Pyoderma gangrenosum is a diagnosis of exclusion. Routine workup included complete blood count, inflammatory markers erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and C-reactive protein (CRP), skin biopsy, and wound cultures. Other studies included doppler venous and arterial ultrasounds, liver and renal function tests, hepatitis screen, vasculitis, and hypercoagulability workups. Colonoscopy was considered but deemed not necessary in the absence of any signs of malignancy.
Optimize wound care, avoid surgical trauma, manage pain adequately, and choose effective medical management to reduce the aberrant inflammatory response.
Follow Up: