Abstract
Multiple pathophysiologic and biomolecular processes lead to bullae, including disruption of adhesion molecules, accumulation of cell injury, and traumatic injury. Blistering disorders of the foot can cause symptoms such as pruritus, pain, and drainage and significantly impact quality of life. Microbiologic and histopathologic examination of tissue specimens should be considered for concerns regarding atypical etiology.This retrospective case series describes patients seen in a community hospital outpatient wound center in southeastern Wisconsin between January 2021 and June 2023 for atypical blistering disorders of the foot. The cases herein describe the history, clinical presentation, and treatment of three atypical blistering disorders of the foot. An 86-year-old man presented complaining of intensely pruritic blistering lesions to both feet. Histopathologic findings indicated eosinophilic infiltrate, and the patient was treated for an eosinophilic drug reaction. A 65-year-old man presented complaining of multiple painful blisters to the plantar aspect of both feet. Histopathologic examination of unroofed blister indicated bullous tinea. Finally, a 44-year-old man with long-standing type 1 diabetes presented complaining of a several-week history of a single blister to his anterior right foot of unknown etiology. The patient was diagnosed with bullosis diabeticorum.Blistering disorders of the foot are diagnostic challenges; diagnostic clarity is assisted by thorough history, clinical presentation, treatment response, microbial analysis, and histopathologic findings.