Histopathology 6 - Skin pathology Flashcards

1
Q

Where does the dermis sit relative to the basement membrane?

A

The dermis sits below the BM

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2
Q

What features are seen in the dermis layer?

A

Blood vessels, sweat glands, hair follicles, sebaceous glands and nerve fibres

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3
Q

Layers of skin “come lets get some beers”

A

Stratum corneum, stratum lucidum, stratum granulosum, stratum spinosum, stratum basale

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4
Q

Features of palmar-plantar skin

A

No sebaceous glands, very thick corneal layer

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5
Q

Name 3 vesiculobullous skin diseases

A

Bullous pemphigoiD
Pemphigus vulgariS
Pemphigus folliaceous

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6
Q

Clinical features of bullous pemphigoid

A

Elderly, flexural surfaces, tense bullae

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7
Q

What would be seen on immunofluorescence of patient with bullous pemphigoid?

A

IgG and C3 deposition at dermoepidermal junction

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8
Q

Pathophysiology of bullous pemphigoid

A

Autoimmune disorder caused by IgG and C3 attack of the basement membrane, causes the epidermis to lift off the BM. Eosinophils also recruited which cause further damage to anchoring proteins which are anchoring the lower keratinocytes to the BM. (anti-hemidsemosome IgG)

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9
Q

Clinical features of pemphigus vulgaris

A

Flaccid blisters which rupture easily

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10
Q

Pemphigus vulgaris pathophysiology

A

IgG antibodies attack between the keratinocyte layers (Acantholysis) –> IgG deposits in epidermo-epidermal junction (need immunofluorescence to confirm diagnosis)

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11
Q

Which is most superficial of the vesiculobullous conditions?

A

Pemphigus foliaceous

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12
Q

Pemphigus foliaceous pathophysiology

A

IgG against desmoglein of the stratum corneum, v thin top layer of skin
Diagnosed with immunofluorescence

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13
Q

Pattern of inflammation in eczema

A

Spongiotic as you get oedema between the keratinocytes

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14
Q

Pathophysiology of psoriasis

A

Much faster turnover of keratinocytes –> thickened epidermis + layer of parakeratosis at the top

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15
Q

The inflammatory cell in eczema and psoriasis, respectively

A

Eczema: eosinophils
Psoriasis: Neutrophils

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16
Q

Which layer of skin disappears in psoriasis?

A

Stratum granulosum, there is not enough time for it to form

17
Q

What are Munro’s micro abscesses and what condition are they seen in’/

A

In psoriasis, neutrophil recruitment forms Munro’s micro abscesses

18
Q

Which cell mediates lichen planus?

A

T cell mediated

19
Q

How does lichen planus appear on the wrist and how does it appear in the mouth?

A

on wrist = purple/red papule and plaques

Mouth: white lines known as WICKHAM STRIAE

20
Q

Pathophysiology of lichen planus

A

T-cells have destroyed bottom keratinocytes –> band-like inflammation

21
Q

Pyoderma gangrenosum type of disease

A

Vasculitis, not gangrenous

22
Q

“stuck on” appearance + benign

A

Seborrhoeic keratosis

23
Q

What kinda cysts are seen in seborrheic keratosis

A

Keratin “horn” cysts

24
Q

Name a disease which is a pre-malignant skin neoplasm?

A

Bowen’s disease (SCC in situ)

25
Q

When Bowen’s disease invades the dermis, what is this?

A

SCC

26
Q

What causes a junctional naevus?

A

Melanocytes in the epidermis (they normally reside in the basal layer of epidermis)

27
Q

Most important prognostic factor for malignant melanoma?

A

breslow thickness

28
Q

The histopathology of melanoma, what kind of spread?

A

PAGETOID SPREAD (BAD), mitotic figures