Dermatopathology Flashcards
list 3 reasons to take a skin biopsy for inflammatory skin disease
- make diagnosis
- confirm a diagnosis before starting therapy
- rule out other conditions
list 4 reasons to take a skin biopsy of neoplasia
- identify and confirm neoplasia
- confirm excision
- prognosis
- monitor progression or effect of therapy
how long should you ideally remove a patient from treatment for prior to biopsy
2-3 weeks prior
how many skin biopsies should you take to sending in
multiple (3-5)
how should a skin biopsy be fixed
in 10-20x volume buffered formalin
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
perivascular dermatitis
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
interface dermatitis
name the pattern of skin disease
reaction is targeted AGAINST blood vessels themselves so there will be evidence of vascular endothelial cell damage
vasculitis
name the inflammatory cell type involved
abscess, cellulitis
neutrophils
name the inflammatory cell type involved
Mycobacterial infections,
Leishmaniasis,
foreign body ractions
macrophage
name the inflammatory cell type involved
fungal infections
neutrophils & macrophages
(pyogranulomatous)
name the inflammatory cell type involved
eosinophilic granuloma complex
eosinophils
name the inflammatory cell type involved
vaccine reactions
lymphocytes
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
intraepidermal vesicular and/or pustular dermatitis
what cell dominates the intraepidermal vesicular / pustular dermatitis
superficial bacterial infection,
Pemphigus foliaceous
neutrophil
what cell dominates the intraepidermal vesicular / pustular dermatitis
parasitic disease,
allergic reactions
eosinophils
name the pattern of skin disease
RARE;
top of the bulla/vesicle comprises the entire epidermis;
ex: bullous pemphigoid
subepidermal vesicular and/or pustular dermatitis
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)
panniculitis
name the pattern of skin disease
atrophy of hair follicles and adnexal structures;
can also affect dermis and epidermis;
most important cause: endocrinopathies
atrophic dermatosis
name 4 typical features associated with endocrinopathies
(skin)
- follicular atrophy
- sebaceous gland atrophy
- diffuse orthokeratotic hyperkeratosis
- secondary bacterial infection
name the term
loss of cohesion between epidermal cells
acantholysis
name the term
increased thickness of stratum spinosum specifically (thickening of non-cornified cells, often accompanied by rete peg formation)
acanthosis
name the term
circumscribed fluid filled cavity either within or beneath the epidermis greater than 0.5 cm diameter
bulla
name the term
circumscribed fluid filled cavity either within or beneath the epidermis less than 0.5 cm diameter
vesicle