DDx
Differential Diagnoses
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Community-acquired MRSA skin infection
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Cutaneous anthrax
Media Gallery
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Classic finding of a vesicle with surrounding erythema at 24 hours following brown recluse envenomation. Photo by Thomas Arnold, MD.
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Illustration of a brown recluse spider with the fiddle displayed prominently on its dorsum.
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Spider envenomations, brown recluse. Envenomation site on inner thigh untreated at 1 week. Photo by Thomas Arnold, MD.
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Typical appearance of a male brown recluse spider. Photo contributed by Michael Cardwell, Victorville, Calif.
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Female brown recluse with size scale. Photo contributed by Michael Cardwell, Victorville, Calif.
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Spider envenomations, brown recluse. Close-up image of dorsal violin-shaped pattern. Photo contributed by Michael Cardwell, Victorville, Calif.
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Spider bite, brown recluse. Within an hour, the bite area swelled to the size of a quarter. The area turned blue and dark red by the evening of the first day, exceeding the boundaries of a circle drawn around the area of initial swelling by the patient's physician. Courtesy of Dale Losher.
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Spider bite, brown recluse. The third day after the bite. The skin continues to die. Courtesy of Dale Losher.
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Spider bite, brown recluse. Another view of the wound 3 days after the bite. Courtesy of Dale Losher.
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Spider bite, brown recluse. Nine days after the bite. The patient endured 8 days with an open wound to drain the spider's toxins and needed multiple doses of intravenous antibiotics and pain medication. Courtesy of Dale Losher.
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Spider bite, brown recluse. Eleven days after the bite. A 5-inch wide area of dead tissue was excised, necessitating skin grafting. Courtesy of Dale Losher.
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Spider bite, brown recluse. Waiting to see skin graft results 38 days after the bite. Courtesy of Dale Losher.
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Spider bite, brown recluse. Skin graft results 38 days after the bite. Courtesy of Dale Losher.
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Spider bite, brown recluse. View of healed wound approximately 10 months after bite. Courtesy of Dale Losher.
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Dermonecrotic arachnidism represents a local cutaneous injury with tissue loss and necrosis.
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Brown recluse spider. Courtesy of US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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Brown recluse spider. Courtesy of US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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Complete distribution range of wild and domestic Loxosceles reclusa (brown recluse spider). Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons (By ReliefUSA_map.gif: Public domain, U.S. government derivative work: Bob the Wikipedian).
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