Pigmented Lesions Flashcards

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1
Q

How late into age do normal moles usually develop and how big are they?

A

6 mos to late 30s

<6mm (pencil eraser)

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2
Q

How late into life do atypical moles usually develop and how big are they?

A

6 mos to 20s

> 6 mm but maybe smaller

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3
Q

When do melanomas usually develop in life?

A

adulthood but can occur in children

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4
Q

What is this lesion?

A

congenital melanocytic nevus (CMN)
- small, medium, large, giant
- increased risk for melanoma
- raised
- can darken over time
- hypertrichosis common
- surgical resection should be attempted before 6 mos

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5
Q

Hypertrichosis

A

excessive hair

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6
Q

What is this lesion?

A

Intradermal Nevus
- melanocytes in the dermis
- common in adults

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7
Q

What are these examples of

A

Common acquired nevi

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8
Q
A

Junctional Nevi
- melanocytes located at dermoepidermal junction
- start in childhood as freckle
- can become more raised and lose pigment throughout age

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9
Q
A

Compound nevi
- features of both junctional and intradermal nevi
- melanocytes in the dermoepidermal junction AND dermis
- raised, uniform, light brown

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10
Q
A

Nevus Spilus
- presents 1st year of life
- hairless, speckled
- vary in size
- transformation to melanoma is rare
- can biopsy areas that are suspicious

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11
Q
A

Becker’s Nevus
- common in males
- onset around puberty
- light brown, slightly elevated, verrucous
- hypertrichotic
- no reported malignancy

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12
Q
A

Halo Nevus
- white border
- children and adults
- located on back usually
- consider biopsy if irregular/suspicious

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13
Q
A

Spitz Nevus
- acquired, solitary, rapidly growing
- pink/red papulonodule
- difficult to distinguish from melanoma
- usually benign and can convolute, treatment controversial

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14
Q
A

Blue Nevus
- macule/papule
- usually <1cm
- dark blue, gray/black
- common on scalp and distal extensor extremities
- can resemble melanoma

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15
Q
A

Actinic Keratosis
- PRE-CANCEROUS
- pink/erythematous papules/thin plaques
- rough, gritty scale
- sun exposed areas, male, age, fair skin
- Tx: Cryo, or refer to derm for Efudex/Aldera, PDT, chemical peel

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16
Q

How many Fitzpatrick skin types are there?

A

6 (very fair, fair, medium, olive, brown, black)

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17
Q

AK can turn into which cancer?

A

Squamous cell carcinoma

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18
Q
A

Squamous Cell Carcinoma In Situ (Bowen’s Disease)
- erythematous, hyperkeratotic
- well demarcated patch/plaque
- can resemble eczema/psoriasis
- Tx: ED & C, cryo, 5-FU/Imiquimod, PDT, surgical excision

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19
Q
A

Invasive Squamous Cell Carcinoma
- erythematous, scaly papulonodule/plaque with adherent white scale, eroded
- sun explosed areas
- Tx: wide local excision, Moh’s, ED&C, radiation

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20
Q
A

Basal Cell Carcinoma
- most common skin cancer
- pink pearly papule with central depression, telangiectasias, rolled borders
- common on nose
- slow growing, rarely metastasize
- Tx: dependent on type/location, Moh’s, WLE, ED&C, radiation, 5-FU for superficial, Vismodegib for inoperable/metastasized

21
Q

Identify the lesion on the left vs on the right

A

Left: BCC
Right: SCC

22
Q

What are the ABCDEs

A

Asymmetry
Border
Color
Diameter
Evolving

23
Q

What are the subtypes of melanoma

A

Superficial spreading
Nodular
Lentigo Maligna
Acral lentiginous

24
Q
A

Subungual melanoma

25
Q

Treatment of melanoma

A

Initial
- WLE
- sentinel lymph node biopsy
Advanced
- immunotherapy
- inhibitors
- radiation/chemotherapy

26
Q
A

Melanoma

27
Q
A

Kaposi Sarcoma
- often affects those with immunodeficiencies (HIV/AIDS)
- slow growing violaceous patches
- Tx: depends on cause and localization/dissemination

28
Q

What are the types of sunscreen

A

Physical (blocks/scatters UV and visible light)
Chemical (absorbs light and re-emits energy as heat)

29
Q
A

Superficial spreading melanoma
- excisional biopsy

30
Q
A

Nevus spilous
- watch/reassure

31
Q
A

Halo Nevus
- watch/reassure (biopsy if concerning)

32
Q
A

Becker’s Nevus
- reassurance/cosmetic follow up

33
Q
A

Atypical nevus
- punch biopsy

34
Q
A

Spitz vs Basal CC
- biopsy or refer to derm

35
Q
A

Seborrheic keratosis

36
Q
A

Intradermal nevus

37
Q
A

Seborrheic keratosis

38
Q
A

Nodular Melanoma
- biopsy

39
Q
A

Seborrheic keratosis

40
Q
A

melanoma
- biopsy

41
Q
A

intradermal nevus

42
Q
A

melanoma
- biopsy

43
Q
A

SCC
- biopsy

44
Q
A

SCC
- biopsy

45
Q
A

SCC
- biopsy

46
Q
A

BCC
- refer to derm (location)

47
Q
A

Melanoma
- refer to derm

48
Q
A

Blue nevus vs melanoma
- biopsy or refer to derm