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Apex Nursing

Chart — Med-Surg

Stevens-Johnson Syndrome vs TEN Chart

Same disease, two scales. SJS and toxic epidermal necrolysis differ mainly by how much skin detaches — and both start with the same action: stop the drug.

Educational use only. SJS/TEN is a life-threatening emergency. Drug discontinuation and ICU/burn-unit management are urgent and provider-directed. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Side by Side

FeatureStevens-Johnson (SJS)Toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN)
Skin detachment (%BSA)< 10%> 30% (10–30% = SJS/TEN overlap)
Severity / mortalitySevereMost severe; high mortality
TriggerDrug reaction (sulfa, anticonvulsants, allopurinol, NSAIDs)Same drug triggers — more extensive reaction
Onset~1–4 weeks after the culprit drug; flu-like prodromeSame; then rapid widespread sloughing
Hallmark signsPositive Nikolsky sign, painful skin, ≥2 mucosal sites (eyes/mouth/genitals)Same, with full-thickness epidermal loss in sheets
ManagementSTOP the drug; supportive/wound careSTOP the drug; ICU/burn unit; fluids, sterile wound care, infection prevention

Exam Traps

  • SJS <10% BSA, TEN >30% BSA detachment; 10–30% is overlap — it's one spectrum.
  • First action for both: STOP the offending drug.
  • Positive Nikolsky sign + mucosal involvement + painful sloughing skin after a new drug = SJS/TEN.
  • Manage like a major burn — fluids, sterile wound care, infection prevention; sepsis is the main killer.
  • Document the culprit drug as a lifelong allergy and teach avoidance of it and cross-reactors.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses (AMSN) · Current medical-surgical nursing standards. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →