A 45-year-old woman with cirrhosis secondary to alcohol abuse was transferred from an outside hospital for management of a painful cutaneous eruption, progressively worsening over 2 weeks. On examination, the patient was a middle-aged white woman lying in bed in no acute distress, with jaundice and a protuberant abdomen consistent with ascites. The patient was afebrile (98.2°F), heart rate of 79 beats per minute, blood pressure of 105/61 mmHg, respiratory rate of 18 breaths per minute, and oxygen saturation of 93% on room air. She had multiple large stellate lesions of retiform purpura with central hemorrhagic necrosis on both thighs, with surrounding induration (Figures 1 and 2). These purpuric plaques and perilesional skin were exquisitely painful to palpation.
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