Dermatopathology Flashcards

1
Q

list 3 reasons to take a skin biopsy for inflammatory skin disease

A
  1. make diagnosis
  2. confirm a diagnosis before starting therapy
  3. rule out other conditions
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2
Q

list 4 reasons to take a skin biopsy of neoplasia

A
  1. identify and confirm neoplasia
  2. confirm excision
  3. prognosis
  4. monitor progression or effect of therapy
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3
Q

how long should you ideally remove a patient from treatment for prior to biopsy

A

2-3 weeks prior

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4
Q

how many skin biopsies should you take to sending in

A

multiple (3-5)

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5
Q

how should a skin biopsy be fixed

A

in 10-20x volume buffered formalin

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6
Q

name the pattern of skin disease

very common pattern but as a consequence is the least diagnostic;
caused by hypersensitivity reactions, response to ectoparasites, bacterial infections, etc

A

perivascular dermatitis

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7
Q

name the pattern of skin disease

lesion targets the upper level of dermis/dermato-epidermal junction / lower levels of epidermis;
there is hydropic degeneration and apoptosis of cells in the stratum basale;
can be cell poor or cell-rich;
caused by drug eruptions, discoid and systemic lupus erythematosus, erythema multiforme

A

interface dermatitis

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8
Q

name the pattern of skin disease

reaction is targeted AGAINST blood vessels themselves so there will be evidence of vascular endothelial cell damage

A

vasculitis

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9
Q

name the inflammatory cell type involved

abscess, cellulitis

A

neutrophils

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10
Q

name the inflammatory cell type involved

Mycobacterial infections,
Leishmaniasis,
foreign body ractions

A

macrophage

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11
Q

name the inflammatory cell type involved

fungal infections

A

neutrophils & macrophages
(pyogranulomatous)

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12
Q

name the inflammatory cell type involved

eosinophilic granuloma complex

A

eosinophils

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13
Q

name the inflammatory cell type involved

vaccine reactions

A

lymphocytes

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14
Q

name the pattern of skin disease

these can form either by an extension of spongiosis, hydropic change, acantholysis or frictional cleavage;
may be dominated by neutrophils or eosinophils

A

intraepidermal vesicular and/or pustular dermatitis

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15
Q

what cell dominates the intraepidermal vesicular / pustular dermatitis

superficial bacterial infection,
Pemphigus foliaceous

A

neutrophil

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16
Q

what cell dominates the intraepidermal vesicular / pustular dermatitis

parasitic disease,
allergic reactions

A

eosinophils

17
Q

name the pattern of skin disease

RARE;
top of the bulla/vesicle comprises the entire epidermis;
ex: bullous pemphigoid

A

subepidermal vesicular and/or pustular dermatitis

18
Q

name the pattern of skin disease

subcutaneous adipose tissue is involved in the inflammatory reaction;
often in assoc. with deep dermal infection;
most common type: pyogranulomatous (assoc. with foreign body, vaccine reactions, deep fungal infections, etc)

A

panniculitis

19
Q

name the pattern of skin disease

atrophy of hair follicles and adnexal structures;
can also affect dermis and epidermis;
most important cause: endocrinopathies

A

atrophic dermatosis

20
Q

name 4 typical features associated with endocrinopathies

(skin)

A
  1. follicular atrophy
  2. sebaceous gland atrophy
  3. diffuse orthokeratotic hyperkeratosis
  4. secondary bacterial infection
21
Q

name the term

loss of cohesion between epidermal cells

A

acantholysis

22
Q

name the term

increased thickness of stratum spinosum specifically (thickening of non-cornified cells, often accompanied by rete peg formation)

A

acanthosis

23
Q

name the term

circumscribed fluid filled cavity either within or beneath the epidermis greater than 0.5 cm diameter

A

bulla

24
Q

name the term

circumscribed fluid filled cavity either within or beneath the epidermis less than 0.5 cm diameter

A

vesicle

25
Q

name the term

surface accumulation of keratin, serum and cellular debris (often pyknotic) +/- bacteria

A

crust

26
Q

name the term

penetrating or perforating folliculitis resulting in hair follicle rupture

A

furunculosis

27
Q
A
28
Q
A
29
Q

name the term

intracellular oedema leading to vacuolated cytoplasm;
usually focal in stratum basale or spinosum

A

hydropic degeneration

30
Q

name the term

thickening of the stratum corneum

A

hyperkeratosis

31
Q

name the term

excessive deposition of melanin in epidermal cells

A

hyperpigmentation

32
Q

name the term

band of inflammatory cells just below epidermis

A

lichenoid band

33
Q

name the term

leakage of melanin granules from pigmented basal layer of epidermis into the underlying dermis;
melanin often seen in macrophages in that zone (melanophages)

A

pigmentary incontinence

34
Q

name the term

sapce filled with proteinaceous fluid and inflammatory cells (neutrophils and possibly acantholytic cells);
in or just below the epidermis

A

pustule

35
Q

name the term

cores or peg-like formations of hyperplastic epidermis projecting downwards into the dermis

A

Rete peg

36
Q

name the term

literally: abnormal flow of sebum;
used to indicate altered keratinization producing syndromes ranging from dandruff to pruritic inflammation with scaling and crusting

A

seborrhea

37
Q

name the term

intercellular oedema leading to separation of cells or sponge-like appearance histologically

A

spongiosus