Dermatology Flashcards
Give an example of each of the following strengths of steroid cream
- Mild
- Moderate
- Potent
- Very potent
What is clobetasol propionate?
What is clobetasone butyrate?
What is betamethasone valerate?
Hydrocortisone
Eumovate
Betnovate
Dermovate
“He Buys donuts”
Explain what causes the following;
- Erythema
- Scale
- Lichenification
- Exudate
- Vesicle
Name the condition
Cause?
Treatment?
Seborrhoeic eczema
What is the treatment for eczema?
- Emollients
- Mild steroids
- antibiotics / antifungals / antivirals if relevant
- PUVA
- Oral altretinoin
- Oral azathioprine, ciclosporin
What is PUVA?
PUVA is a combination treatment consisting of taking a drug PSORALEN (P) and then exposing the skin to long-wave ultra- violet light (UVA) – hence the term PUVA. Psoralen is a drug that makes the skin temporarily sensitive to UVA. It may be taken as pills by mouth or by applying it directly to the skin.
Also called phototherapy, photo chemotherapy, or UVradiation treatment.
Treatment for eczema
What are some risk factors for allergies / atopy?
Name 5 different types of eczema
Name the 8 functions of the skin
What are the two types of skin and where are they located on the body? Differences?
Thin/hairy - everywhere else. Hair.
Thick/hairless - palms and soles. No hair. Epidermis is thicker. Stratum lucidum present. Doesn’t tan.
What conditions are highly responsive to corticosteroids?
Psoriasis
Atopic dermatitis (eczema)
Seborrhoeic dermatitis
Intertrigo
Eczema - differential diagnoses? What can present like eczema?
Scabies, Psoriasis, Tinea, drug erruption, bullous pemphigoid
What colours can melanoma present as?
Black, brown, red, dark blue and grey
What is the condition?
Describe the lesion.
Prognosis?
Basal Cell Carcinoma
Pearly, well-circumscribed, elevated, pigmented (pink), ulcerated in middle (sometimes)
Prognosis - Slow-growing, rarely metastasises
What is the condition?
What type of cells are involved?
Describe the lesion.
Prognosis?
Malignant melanoma
Involves melanocytes
Asymmetrically shaped
Borders - irregular
Colours - multiple
Diameter - over 6mm
Evolving rapidly
Metastasises easily
Most aggressive / deadly
What is the condition?
Describe the lesion.
Prognosis?
Squamous cell carcinoma
Involves squamous keratinocytes
Well circumscribed. Red/flesh coloured.
Can metastasise. Less severe than MM.
What is the pre-cancerous stage of malignant melanoma?
What does it look like?
Lentigo maligna
Brown patch, usually on face or other sun exposed area.
Lentigo maligna is a type of growth that develops in areas of long-term sun exposure, such as your face, arms or legs. Lentigo maligna starts as a brown flat spot with an irregular shape that slowly gets bigger.
What is the pre-cancerous stage / early stages of squamous cell carcinoma called?
Solar / actinic keratosis - pre-cancerous lesion (this is FLAT whereas SCC is RAISED).
Bowen’s disease or squamous cell carcinoma in situ - early stage
Name the three skin cancers from most to least deadly?
Diagnosis?
Treatment?
What is this called?
Can turn into what?
Melanocytic naevus
Melanoma
What is this called?
Can turn into what?
Pre-cancerous lesion - SCC
(SCC is raised, AK is flat)
What is the scale called to assess different skin types?
What is a skin type 1?
Skin type 6?
Fitzpatrick
Skin type 1 - pale
Skin type 6 - darkest
What things do you have to ask for a skin cancer history?
eg. a patient has booked a GP appointment with you to discuss a lesion they’ve found on their skin.
Things I forget
- Rate of growth / change
- Surgical considerations: pacemaker, anticoagulants, level of independence, home situation
- Site. Where is it?
- Duration. How long has it been there?
- Rate of growth/change. Is it growing / changing? How quickly?
- What does it look like? ABCD(E).
- Associated symptoms - pain? Itch? Affecting nearby structures eg eye?
- UV exposure
- PMH of cancer, FH of skin cancer
- Relevant surgical considerations in case excision is needed eg anticoagulation
What questions to ask for history of rash?
eg. a patient books a GP appointment with you to discuss a rash.
- Where
- When
- Better / worse
- Itch, pain?
- TRIGGERS eg new medication, pet, occupation, travel
- PMH atopy? Eczema, asthma, hay fever, allergies.
- Family hx - anyone else itchy in the household? genetic - eczema.
- Effect on life
What things to ask for eczema history?
Things I forget - better/worse, triggers, effect on life
- Where did it first appear? Where did it subsequently spread to?
- When did it first start.
- Does anything make it Better / worse.
- Itch, pain?
- TRIGGERS Does anything seem to trigger it?
- PMH atopy? Eczema, asthma, hay fever, allergies.
- Family hx - anyone else had eczema, asthma, hay fever, allergies?
- Effect on life
What things to ask for history of psoriasis?
Remember to ask about nail changes and joint pain
FH of psoriasis
What things to ask for in history of acne?
What I forget
- psychological impact
- Severity
Site - face, chest, back
Note the severity.
Triggers - hormonal?
Treatments tried - hormonal eg. pill. Topical
Ask about psychological impact
What things to ask for in history of urticaria?
Ask about lip swelling, mouth swelling / tingling, (worried about angioedema, airway compromise, anaphylaxis).
How to take a history for ‘disfiguring rashes’ eg. vitiligo, alopecia
Make sure to ask patient how they feel about the problem - don’t assume.
Ask about effect on their life - social, occupational, psychological
What to ask for in history of fungal infections?
Check for
- Spreading
- Immunosupporession
- Drugs eg steroids
- FH of fungal infections (current household members)
What is the difference between erysipelas and cellulitis? Describe erysipelas.
Most common causative organism?
Treatment? Give examples.
Erysipelas - SUPERFICIAL, well defined. Shiny, red, raised tender plaques, usually legs or face.
Cellulitis - DEEP.
Most common cause of both -
1. Group A streptococcus
2. Staphylococcus aureus.
Both - oral or IVABX.
1. Flucloxacillin
2. Doxycycline
3. Erythromycin
Scabies!
Symptoms?
What questions to ask in a history?
Treatment?
Itching ++ particularly in webspace between fingers
Permethrin, twice, 7 days apart. Applied to skin as a cream.
Change bedding etc, treat close contacts.
Name three syndromes that are related to drug reactions in the skin. Name from less to most severe.
What area of the body should you always check in these patients?
Usual cause of these syndromes?
Erythema multiforme
Stevens-Johnson syndrome - milder version of TEN
Toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN)
SJS and TEN can be fatal
*MUST check mucosa (eyes/mouth also genitals) on examination. Use pen torch
Usually drug reaction eg antibiotics, NSAIDS, anti-epileptics, allopurinol
History for skin infections
- Triggers? How did the bacteria/virus etc get there?
- Predisposing factors? Is the host vulnerable
.
What are the names for
- Cold sores
- Chicken pox
- Shingles
- Eczema + herpes
What are these?
Treatment?
Benign moles (naevi)
If no change - no action needed.
If mole has recently been changing - monitor.
Have pigment network
What are these?
Nodular Basal Cell Carcinoma
(Differential diagnosis for 117 is malignant melanoma, but note how it is translucent/pearly)
BCC is a locally invasive skin tumour
- Slow growing
- Skin coloured, pink or pigmented
- Varies in size from a few millimetres to several centimetres in diameter
- Spontaneous bleeding or ulceration.
Nodular BCC
- Most common type of facial BCC
- Shiny or PEARLY nodule with a smooth surface. May be translucent.
- May have central depression or ulceration, so its edges appear rolled
- Blood vessels cross its surface
- Usually firm nodule, growing within the skin and below it, rather than on the surface
- Cystic variant is soft, with jelly-like contents
What are these?
How to describe this type of lesion?
Infiltrative Basal Cell Carcinoma
- Scar like
- Shiny
- Difficult to define edges of lesion
- Telangiectasia
NB. The patient with two arrows - infiltrative BCC on cheek, nodular BCC on eyelid
What is this?
Superficial BCC
Differential diagnosis - Patch of Bowen’s disease.
Localised red plaque on trunk, scaly.
Usually occurs by itself or few - asymptomatic
Slowly enlarge - shiny surface and narrow raised border
What are these?
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Proliferation of epidermal keratinocytes in a deranged manner – with a visible degree of differentiation into epidermal cells
First change is thickening of the skin with scaling or hyperkeratosis of the surfaces. More differentiated tumours have warty, keratotic crust whereas others may be nodular.
Generally solitary. Fleshy, indurated base. May have moist or crusted surface rather than formed keratosis. Asymmetry of ulceration
What is the difference between actinic keratosis and squamous cell carcinoma?
Similarities?
Both can be rough and keratotic
Actinic keratosis is flat
SCC is raised
What are these?
Actinic Keratosis
What is this?
Bowen’s disease
Pre-cursor to SCC
Bowen’s –
superficial intra-epidermal tumour
Slow radial expansion. Localised erythematous, scaly or crusted plaque
Bowen’s is not usually ulcerated, moist or thickened. If it is consider ?SCCs
What are these? Give two options.
What is the difference?
- SCC
- Keratoacanthoma – Precise symmetry. Bolstered shoulder of skin stretched around tumour.. Formed central horn. Stop growing after 2-3 months
Keratoacanthomas will stop growing and then recede, whereas SCCs will keep on growing.
What is this?
What are these?
Actinic keratosis / solar keratosis
Sun exposed sites –face, back of hands, bald scalp Rough area of skin / raised, keratotic lesion Usually multiple, have a hard, spiky keratinous surface. Not indurated or thickened at the base
What are these?
What are the signs of this on dermoscopy?
Malignant melanoma. The bottom one is ‘nodular melanoma’.
Dermoscopy of melanoma
- dots
- globules
- branched streaks (brown steaks going outward)
- asymmetry
- blue veil
- milky red
- scar like
- disrupted pigment network
Malignant melanoma vs naevus
A clear history of an individually changing lesion is best discriminator in early melanoma
Increasing size, irregular edge and varied and asymmetric pigmentation
Many ordinary naevi have more than one shade of brown, but black colours are uncommon
Varied colours, if present are usually symmetrical about long or short axis
Change in elevation is a common and normal maturation change in naevi
Stands out amongst other moles
What are these?
How can you tell?
Seborrhoeic keratosis
- Seb K’s more rounded than moles, sharply defined rounded margin
- Fissured hyperketatotic plaque
- Karatin plugs.Seb Ks occur infrequently below 30 years of age, whereas most naevi develop below this age.
Typical crusted appearance of seborrheic keratosis / warty surface
Stuck on appearance. Common on trunk. Flat lesions on legs are not uncommon. Seb Ks have a more keratotic surface than solar lentigos – small white dots formed by pearls of keratin may be visible. Margin is usually sharply defined.
In lesions without significant keratinisation, there is typically a fairly uniform yellowish brown colour and a greasy cobblestoned surface, and small white (pearls ) of keratin are usually visible. Keratin plugs (with pseudofollicular appearance)
If naevi are elevated – rubbery or fleshy feel
What is this?
How would you describe it?
How to tell the difference between this and naevus?
Dermatofibroma - a benign tumour
Flesh-coloured papule (papule means raised and less than 0.5cm. Raised and > 0.5cm would be a nodule eg BCC).
Dermatofibroma vs naevus
Dermatofibromas are firmer than naevi
Dermatofibromas are tethered within the dermis (gives rise to dimple sign). mainly on limbs
What is a dermatofibroma? A dermatofibroma is the name we give to a common and harmless knot of fibrous tissue which occurs in the skin. Dermatofibromas are firm bumps which feel like small rubbery buttons lying just under the surface of the skin.
Sometimes a dermatofibroma is confused with a mole. The way to tell the difference between the two is to pinch the bump. If you pinch a dermatofibroma, it creates a dimple because it is attached to the underlying subcutaneous tissue.1 On the other hand, if you pinch a mole, it projects up away from the skin. Moles appear when skin cells grow in clusters.
While dermatofibromas are usually red, brown, or purplish, moles can be tan, black, blue or pink in addition to the typical dermatofibroma’s color. Moles can appear in both exposed and unexposed areas of the body, including the armpits or even under nails.
Benign - not normally excised
What are these?
Pyogenic granuloma
Contains no pus – it is vascular and grows rapidly. Tend to bleed. Fingers is a common site.
Top one could also be an ‘amelanotic melanoma’ - rapidly evolving friable nodule.
What are these?
Haemangioma - vascular.
Differ from melanoma in that their colour is more purple, pink and yellow.