EoY4 - General Flashcards
What’s the difference between eczema herpeticum and dermatitis herpetiformis?
Eczema herpeticum
Systemic infection of HSV1 or 2 due to pre-existing condition (commonly eczema)
Features monomorphic mucopurulent/blood filled pustules with central dimpling. Older blisters crust over and heal over 2-6 weeks. May leave scarring if bad.
Can affect multiple organs including eyes, brain, lung + liver. Can cause hepatitis, encephalitis, DIC and, rarely, death.
Diagnose using viral PCR, antibody staining or viral culture.
Manage with oral aciclovir/valaciclovir unless too unwell to tolerate PO meds, then IV antivirals. Watch out for secondary infections - treat with abx.
Dermatitis herpetiformis
Immune response to gliadin fraction in gluten - therefore strongly associated with coeliacs (>90%).
Seen as symmetrical lesions over scalp, shoulder, buttocks, elbows + knees. Lessions appear initially appear as clusters of crusty blisters (due to the intense itching) that lead to hypopigmented scars after resolution.
Can lead to dry skin, nail/hair abnormalitis, aphthous ulcers, ataxia, epilepsy, pericarditis, cardiomyopathy, recurrent miscarriages, NAFLD + NHL
Can diagnose on skin biopsy or IgA blood tests.
Treat by abolishing gluten from diet + consider dapsone (sulfonamide abx), steroids + immunosuppressors
What are the common causes of erythema nodosum?
No - idiopathic D - drugs (NSAIDs + anti-TB) O - OCP S - sarcoidosis U - UC/Crohn's M - microbes (GABHS, TB, leprosy, etc) + malignancy (lymphoma)
What are the common causes of erythema multiforme?
Commonest = HSV (1 > 2)
Infections: mycoplasma, parapoxvirus, HVZ, adenovirus, hepatitis, HIV, CMV + viral vaccines
Drugs: barbituates, NSAIDs, penicillins, sulphonamides, nutrofurantoin, phenothiazines + anticonvulsants
What is the Fitzpatrick scale?
Spectrum of skin types graded from 1 to 6 based on how easily an individual burns or tans
Type 1 = always burns + never tans Type 2 = mostly burns + tans poorly Type 3 = Tans after initial burn Type 4 = minimal burn + tans easily Type 5 = rarely burns + tans dark easily Type 6 = never burns + always tans darkly
For commonly prescribed topical steroids, what is the order of potency?
WEAKEST Hydrocortisone Eumovate (clobetasone butyrate) Betnovate (betamethasone valerate) Dermovate (clobetasol proprionate) STRONGEST
What is the breslow thickness and what is it used for?
Distance from granular layer to the base of the tumour
Used in malignant melanomas as a strong indicator of prognosis or metastasis risk
How do you assess a malignant melanoma?
A = asymmetry B = border (irregular) C = colour (more than 2 colours) D = diameter (>5mm) E = elevation F = firm G = growing