Derm Flashcards
unique adverse drug reaction:
amoxicillin & concurrent EBV infection
=> “morbiliform”/maculopapular rash on torso,
w/ pruritis & eosinophils on histo
*ONE time rxn! bc of mono infection.
(other cutaneous drug reactions will occur every time take that med)
Defn of urticaria
Well-defined dermal swelling, individual lesions last <24 hrs!
- acute = viral or allergy
- chronic = autoimmune or secondary to underlying disease
Auspitz’s sign and Koebner phenomenon
BOTH = sign of Psoriasis (epidermal growth rate = too fast)
Auspitz: pinpoint bleed w/ removal of scaly plaque
Koebner: site of minor trauma = most commonly affected (ie: where hat rests on forehead)
Psoriasis variants (3)
all = autoimmune rxn;
- psoriatic arthritis (*HLA B27, = complication in 25% of psoriasis pts)
- Impetigo Herpetiformis = pustular psoriasis of pregnancy
- Guttate psoriasis = “splatter” on back, w/ strep infection
Lichen Planus
appearance, assoc., risks
flat, dark papules on wrists & ankles; lymphocytes @ derm-epiderm j(x)
“P disease” bc Polygonal, Planar, Pruritic, Papular
* assoc. w/ HepC
** increased risk oral malignancy if EtOH or smoke exposure during active oral lesions!
Lesler-Trelat Sign
sudden appearance of many sebhorrheic keratoses (waxy/greasy, “stuck on”); = sign of underlying malignancy!
*common in elderly/parkinson’s pts
** different from pre-malignant “actinic keratosis”
Junctional vs. Intradermal nevus
= benign, “melanocytic”
Junctional = flat.
Intradermal = papular
* risk for malignancy if giant or atypical
Dermatitis Herpetiformis
IgA deposition in tips of dermal papillae
=> pruritic papules/vesicles @ elbows.
Assoc. w/ Celiac disease!
viruses that cause unique skin diseases (3)
- parvo B19 - fifth’s disease/erythema infectuosum. (red cheeks, hydrops fetalis if pregnant)
- Coxsackie A16 - Hand, Foot, Mouth disease
- HHV-8 –> Kaposi’s sarcoma (purple lesions, look like chronic bruises)