morphea Flashcards
what are the subtypes?
plaque (most common adult) linear (most common Peds) generalized bullous deep nodular morphea-LSA combo profunda guttate variants (coup de sabre, parry-romberg, atrophoderma of passini and pierini, linear atrophoderma of moulin)
plaque morphea
erythematous to violaceous patches on trunk and extremities –> hyperpigmented or ivory plaques (hairless, anhidrotic) +/- lilac-violaceous inflammatory rim (sign of persistent disease)
linear morphea
similar to plaque morphea but linear distribution, along blaschko’s lines; a/w poor morbidity ( + contractures, permanent undergrowth of limbs)
epidemiology
most cases present in childhood.
pathogenesis
genes, trauma, radiation, medications, borrelia infx
who should we refer pediatric patients with head/neck morphea to ?
ophthalmology
what are the associations with parry-romberg syndrome (progressive hemifacial atrophy)?
a/w epilepsy, exophthalmos, headache, trigeminal neuralgia, myopathy of eye muscles, cerebral atrophy, white matter hyper intensity, or alopecia
generalized morphea
expansive, involves trunk&limbs, a/w muscle atrophy and difficulty breathing
deep morphea
resides in subq, poor response to steroids; may develop osteoma cutis; complications: deformity, ulcers, SCC, contractures,
what is the target autoAb
anti-topoisomerase II
*unlike systemic scleroderma which is Scl-70/topoisomerase I
where do we see melorheostosis?
in linear morphea; this is roughening of long bone surface underlying area of linear morphea, on XRAY looks like wax dripping down side of candle
TX
mild: topical CS/CI, phototherapy (will only penetrate to dermis, so not beneficial for deeper lesions)
moderate-severe disease: MTX + prednisone