From Mdwiki A blistering skin condition or immuno-bullous disease generally refers to an autoimmune disease that presents with one or more blisters; small vesicle or large bulla.[1] Diseases in this group share the feature of having demonstrable antibodies against particular components of the skin.[1] Epidermolysis bullosa is not autoimmune and is excluded from this group.[1] Other skin conditions not included in this group that also classically feature blisters of varying sizes include eczema, impetigo, insect bites, erythema multiforme, drug eruptions.[2]
| Condition | Features | Image |
|---|---|---|
| Bullous pemphigoid |
| |
| Pemphigoid gestationis |
| |
| Cicatricial pemphigoid |
| |
| Dermatitis herpetiformis |
| |
| Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita |
| |
| Fixed drug eruption |
| |
| Lupus erythematosus | ||
| Pemphigus | ||
| Pemphigus foliaceus | Endemic pemphigus foliaceus with its three variants, Fogo Selvagem, the new variant endemic pemphigus Foliaeus and Tunisian endemic pemphigus foliaceus | |
| Pemphigus vegetans | Pemphigus vegetans of Hallopeau | |
| Pemphigus vegetans of Neumann | ||
| Pemphigus vulgaris |
| |
| Pemphigus erythematosus or Senear–Usher syndrome | ||
| Paraneoplastic pemphigus | ||
| IgA pemphigus | ||
| Subcorneal pustular dermatosis |
| |
| Intraepidermal neutrophilic IgA dermatosis |