This past spring, I started developing a rash on my
back. It was macular and itchy and
swelled and turned red when I touched it.
“It looks like urticaria pigmentosa except it’s not dark,”
one doctor told me. It’s important to
note here that my rash pigmentation has been unusual for my entire life. I have, on several occasions, had rashes
misdiagnosed because they were “too pink” or “too faint.” I don’t know the reason for this, but it
happens. “I’m sure it’s some kind of
mast cell issue, your skin is very reactive,” he followed up.
“That is definitely urticaria pigmentosa,” another doctor
told me. He touched the spots and they
puffed up and got itchy. “See, it has a
positive Darier’s sign.” My skin will
urticate will very little provocation so I was not convinced. But I figured I was probably bound to have UP
eventually, so I wasn’t very concerned.
“It is probably a mast cell rash, but you should get it
biopsied just in case,” a third doctor told me.
By this point, the rash was all over my back and shoulders. It was itchy, but not all the time. I scheduled an appointment with a
dermatologist.
I saw the dermatologist on Thursday. She took one look at it and said, “Oh, that’s
not cutaneous mastocytosis. That’s a
harmless fungal rash. It’s more common
in people who are immunosuppressed. I’ll
give you a cream.”
We had a good laugh over the fact that when you have a rare
disease, everyone assumes it is the cause of all your symptoms. She told me a funny story about a patient
with several rare diseases who had a “mysterious rash” that the residents
couldn’t identify. It was tinea
versicolor, a very common fungal rash.
The residents had assumed it was something exotic and had not considered
more mundane options.
Then there was a small fire in the building while I was
dressed only in a gown, educating the visiting PCP about systemic mast cell
symptoms from skin reactions. I threw my
clothes on and ran outside as the fire department arrived. Always lively.
Mast cell disease is hard to manage in part because it can cause
so many problems. But just because it
can cause all of them doesn’t mean it does.
Mast cell patients are zebras, often many times over. But even zebras mingle with horses once in a
while.
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