HISTO: Skin Pathology Flashcards
What are the layers of the skin? How thick is it?
Epidermis, dermis and subcutaneous fat = ~6 mm thickness
Under this there is a supportive matrix of collagen and elastic fibres. With age both layers become thinner.

Where are sebaceous glands not found?
palmar-plantar skin
Label this diagram.


Label this diagram.


List the types of inflammatory reaction patterns.
Epidermis:
- Spongiotic
- Lichenoid
- Psoriasiform
- Vesiculobullous
Dermis
- Vasculitis
- Granulomatous
Subcutis
- Pannicullitis (e.g. erythema nodosum)
Give examples of spongiotic reactions in the skin.
Eczema -

What are the features of spongiotic reaction on histology?
Spongiosis = intraepidermal oedema
Superficial perivascular lymphocytic infiltrate
Spongiosis with exocytosis of lymphocytes into the epidermis; vesicles containing antigen presenting Langerhan cells and T cells
Give an example of lichenoid inflammation.
- Lichen planus
- Erythema multiforme - targetoid lesions
- Toxic epidermal necrolysis
- Stevens-Johnson syndrome
In the last few, lymphocytes attack the base of the epidermis causing basal vacuolation.
What are the charactristics of lichen planus?
Shiny, purple, flat topped scaly papules and plaques
Wickham striae
Autoimmune disease where T cells attack the epidermis
What are the histological features of lichen planus?
- Irregularly thickened epidermis
- Degenerative skin cells
- Liquefaction degeneration of the basal layer of the epidermis
- End of inflammatory cells just beneath the epidermis
- Melanin (pigment) beneath the epidermis
- There is damage to the epidermis and vacuolar degeneration of keratinocytes and cell death (i.e. loss of nucleus causing the pink cells shown below)

Which cells mediate lichen planus?
T lymphocytes form a band at the junction between the epidermis and dermis and create band-like inflammation so that it is difficult to distinguish the junction between dermis and epidermis
What is the name given to white lines in the mouth seen in lichen planus?
Wickham striae
Give an example of a psoriasiform reaction.
Psoriasis
What are the characteristics of psoriasis and its histology findings?
Abnormally rapid turnover of the epidermis results in accumulation of thick scale over sites of frequent trauma and irritation like extensor surfaces. Silver plaques form.
- Acanthosis
- Hypogranulosis (less granular layer)
- Parakeratosis (cells in the stratum corneum retain their nuceli as there is no time to lose them)
- Neutrophils in the stratum corneum forming Munro’s microabscesses

What is the normal time for keratinocyte turnover and what is the turnover in psoriasis?
Normal - 28-56 days
Psoriasis - 7 days (much shorter than normal)
What is an example of vesiculobullous reaction pattern?
Autoimmune vesiculobullous disorders i.e. antibodies attacking the epidermis
- Pemphigoid
- Pemphigus
What part of the skin layers is affected in bullous pemphigoid vs pemphigus vulgaris?
Bullous pemphogoid = dermo-epidermal junctions
Pemphigus vulgaris = epiderma-epidermal junctions
Describe the pathophysiology of bullous pemphigoid.
- Epidermal basement membrane is destroyed by autoantibodies (IgG and C3)
- Eosinophils recruited to release elastase which damages anchoring proteins
- Direct immunofluorescence will show linear IgG (anti-hemidesmosome)
- Fluid fills the gap between the BM and epithelium

What is the difference between bliseters in pemphigoid and pemphigus?
Pemphigoid - tense
Pemphigus - flaccid
Who is most affected by bullous pemphigoid? Where do lesions form? What is the mortality rate?
- Elderly, autoimmune, high mortality rate (10-20%)
- Flexor surfaces, tense bullae
What are the two types of pemphigus?
- Pemphigus foliaceous - superficial form
- Pemphigus vulgaris - deep form

What is the pathophysiology of pemphigus vulgaris?
- IgG attacks between the keratin layers (epiderma-epidermal junctions) and the cell connections between keratinocytes fall apart by acantholysis
- Top epidermis sloughs off
- Immunofluorescence shows intercellular deposits of IgG in a chicken wire pattern (IgG is surrounding individual keratinocytes)

What are the clinical features of pemphigus?
- Flaccid blisters which rupture easily
- Also affects mucous membranes
What are the features of pemphigus foliaceus?
- Top layer is affected
- IgG mediated - outer layer of stratum corneum shears off
- Never blisters as the top layer of skin is very thin











