Eczemas Flashcards
1
Q
Eczematous dermatitis
A
- Inflammation of the skin
- Can be due to too much hygiene, too little infection, allergies, genetics (multi-factorial etiology)
- Onset usually around 6 mod
- Broad range of inflammatory conditions
2
Q
Atopic dermatitis (AD)
A
- The itch that scratches
- Along w/ asthma and allergic rhinitis forms atopic triad
- Genes controlling AD related to inflammation and immune response
- Characterized by: pruritus, dry/scaly skin, crusted rashes, small weeping papules, thickening of skin (lichenification), redness and swelling
3
Q
Stages of AD
A
- More acute in infancy, usually in face, scalp, extensor surfaces
- In adulthood moves to flexor folds
- Infantile (0-2 yrs), childhood (2-12 yrs), adulthood (puberty onward) stages
- In adults chronic hand AD is most common
4
Q
Associated manifestations of AD
A
- Ichthyosis vulgarism (dry rectangular scales)
- X-linked ichthyosis (male only)
- Deanie-morgan fold (lower eyelid dermatitis)
- Hertoghe sign (loss of lateral part of eyebrow)
- hyper linearity of palms
- Increased risk of cataracts
5
Q
Immunology of AD
A
- Increased IgE production (type I hypersensitivity rxn), decreased CD8 but increased CD4 T cell number
- Leads to elevated TH2 cell number and release of IL4 and IL10
- Increases susceptibility to infections due to decrease in antimicrobial peptides (defensins and cathelicidins)
- Mutation in filaggrin predisoposes to AD and asthma. Leads to more permeable skin
6
Q
Dx criteria for AD
A
-Pruritus, lichenification, chronic or relapsing course, personal or family history of atopic triad
7
Q
Rx for AD
A
- Avoid triggers (cold, stress, irritants, allergens, food, infection)
- Control dry skin (emollients/moisturizers, ceramics to restore stratum corneum)
- Rx infection/inflammation (antibios, bleach baths, antivirals, topical steroids)
- For itching use antihistamine as a sedative
8
Q
Associated diseases of AD
A
- Eczema herpeticum (HSV superinfection)
- Eczema vaccinatum (superinfection of vaccinia virus due to smallpox vaccine)
- Staph superinfection
- Molluscum contagiosum (pox virus superinfection)
- Keratosis pilaris (monomorphic keratotic papules)
- Pityriasis alba (post inflammatory hypopigmentation)
- Seborrheic dermatitis
9
Q
Irritant contact dermatitis
A
- More common form of contact dermatitis (CD)
- Non-immunologic (not based on memory, occurs at first exposure)
- Caused by direct toxic effects on skin
- Normal epidermis is disrupted and leads to inflammation
10
Q
Allergic contact dermatitis
A
- Less common, mediated by delayed type IV hypersensitivity reaction (requires memory)
- Langerhans APCs capture Ag and present to naive T cells which become memory T cells
- On second exposure there is a large TH1 response resulting in dermatitis
- Dx is patch testing (TRUE)
11
Q
Allergens vs irritants
A
- Some can be both (plants and latex/rubber)
- Allergens: metals (nickel), fragrances, plastics, topical meds, hair products, clothing dyes, leather
- Irritants: water, skin cleanser, cleaning agents, chemicals
12
Q
Latex/rubber allergy
A
- Causes type I, type IV, and irritant hypersensitivity rxn
- High risk factors: AD, multiple surgeries in 1st year of life (spina bifida)
- Cross rxns: avocado, banana, kiwi, chestnut (BACK)
13
Q
Plant allergic contact dermatitis
A
- Can also be phytophotodermatitis (sunlight cross reacts w/ plant juices)
- poison oak/ivy contains urushiol which causes the most common allergic contact dermatitis
- Rx is to wash off
- Cross reacts w/ cashew, mango skin, gingko, lacquer tree