Abstract
Keloids are a dermal fibroproliferative disorder and can arise from trauma, acne, vaccination, and herpes zoster. Pyoderma gangrenosum (PG) is a painful ulcerative skin disorder that is associated with neutrophilic dysfunction. However, the pathophysiologies of keloids and PG are not fully understood. The authors encountered an unusual case of a 24-year-old woman who presented with an anterior chest keloid that bore an ulcer. The keloid was resected along with the ulcer, and histology revealed the ulcer to be a neutrophilic PG ulcer. A year after surgery, another ulcer developed in the scar. The ulcer met the PARACELSUS criteria of a postsurgical PG ulcer. After treatment with systemic prednisone and adalimumab for 250 days, the ulcer re-epithelialized. However, relapsed keloids were then observed at the PG site. Corticosteroid taping may be the safest therapy for patients with a history of PG. Conversely, if there is suspicion that a patient is prone to keloid development, diagnostic biopsies and surgical management of PG ulcers should be avoided or conducted with care.