Papular, eczematous and pruritic eruptions Flashcards

1
Q

Verruca vulgaris etiology

A

caused by HPV
transmitted by skin-to-skin contact
breaks in stratum corneum facilitate epidermal infection
Risk factors: immunocompromised, meat handlers

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2
Q

Verruca vulgaris histology

A
papillomatosis (undulation of epidermis)
hyperkeratosis and parakeratosis
blood/serum in the stratum corneum
coarse keratohyaline granules
perinuclear vacuolation
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3
Q

Verruca vulgaris clinical features

A

Firm hyperkeratotic papules with dull, clefted surface and vegetations
Red or brown dots caused by thrombosed capillary loops
Minimally elevated flat papules: verruca plana

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4
Q

Molluscum Contagiosum etiology

A

caused by a pox virus
spread through skin to skin contact
common in children and HIV patients
also in genital areas of sexually active adults

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5
Q

Molluscum Contagiosum clinical features

A

skin coloured umbilicated papules
central punctum/depression pearly appearance
Mollusca undergoing spontaneous regression may have an erythematous halo
Molluscum often have surrounding eczema

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6
Q

Scabies etiology

A

hypersensitivity to mite (Sarcoptes scabiei)
can take 6 weeks from exposure to develop
Pruritus is often nocturnal
Spares head and neck except in infants and elderly
Spread through skin to skin contact and fomite

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7
Q

Norwegian scabies

A

heavy infestation of scabies mite in immunocompromised hosts

Highly contagious and require repeated treatments

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8
Q

Scabies clinical features

A

Widespread pruritic eczematous eruption
Burrows: serpiginous track with spot at end - scrape for diagnosis
Nodules: red-brown nodules in axillary area and groin which can persist after clearing infection

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9
Q

Scabies Dx

A

Clinical: web space burrows and nodules in axillary and groin areas
Skin scraping: for confirmation. Place the dark spot at the end of the burrow on slide
Finding of mite confirms, finding of eggs/feces is suspicious
Skin biopsy can also be suggestive but can have very few mites on body

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10
Q

Pediculosis corporis etiology

A

Louse infestation (pediculosis humanus humanus)
secondary infection common
Crowded conditions, poverty
Can transmit other infections: trench fever and epidemic typhus

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11
Q

Pediculosis corporis clinical features

A

no primary lesions
secondary eczematous erruptions only
Look in seams of clothing for louse and nits

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12
Q

Intertrigo

A

rash of body folds

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13
Q

Tinea cruris etiology

A

caused by TInea rubrum and Tinea mentagrophytes

Risk factors: warm weather, obesity, tight clothing, topical steroid use, male, tinea pedis or tinea unguium

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14
Q

Tinea cruris histology

A

hyperkeratosis and parakeratosis
numerous inflammatory cells in the dermis and epidermis
sparse fine branching hyphae

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15
Q

Tinea cruris clinical features

A

well-marginated scaling red plaques with central clearing
papules and pustules may present at margins
occurs in inguinal region and on thighs

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16
Q

Tinea cruris Dx

A

DDx erythrasma, inverse psoriasis, candida

Diagnosis by KOH showing hyphae and culture

17
Q

Candida intertrigo etiology

A

found in moist environment

risk factors: immunocompromised, topical steroids, diabetes

18
Q

Candida intertrigo clinical features

A

erythematous plaques with satellite papules and pustules

19
Q

Candida intertrigo Dx

A

DDx: contact dermatitis, seborrheic dermatitis, inverse psoriasis, dermatophyte infection
Dx: swab for gram stain and culture

20
Q

Erythrasma etiology

A

caused by Corneybacterium minutissimum

adults, humid weather, obesity, tight clothes

21
Q

Erythrasma clinical features

A

sharply marginated patch
no satellite papules/pustules
Body folds: toe web spaces, groin, axillae, intergluteal, inframammary

22
Q

Erythrasma diagnosis

A

coral red fluorescence on wood’s light, bacterial culture

absence of fungi on KOH