Psoriasis Flashcards
psoriasis
- chronic, inflm disorder
- variable course of progression
- recurrence
- lesions develop
what age is peak of psoriasis
16-22 & 57-60 yrs
etiology
- largely idiopathic
- autoimmunity (HLA & MHC gene mutation)
patho
- lesions on surface of body
- no infection present
- cell cycle in epidermis –> rapid cell division & replacement of dead cells
basal layer cell cycle
cells grow & get pushed up to surface as dead cells are continuously sloughed off
psoriasis cell cycle duration (cell turnover)
~3-4 days
normal is ~30 days
rapid cell cycle consequence
incomplete division & differentiation –> cells don’t slough off at top, but remain on surface & stack to form scaly patches on the skin
4 components of psoriasis patho
1) autoimmunity
2) inflm
3) accelerated cell cycle & epidermal thickening
4) remissions & exacerbations
autoimmunity in psoriasis
skin trauma triggers T-cell response –> T-cells activated –> mediators release that target keratinocytes & cells in blood vessels –> triggers growth in these cells
(more keratinocytes = more keratin [protein])
inflm in psoriasis
influx of inflm cells (d/t skin trauma) –> inflm damage further traumatizes skin (initiates cycle)
accelerated cell cycle & epidermal thickening in psoriasis
hyperkeratosis –> abn growth of keratinocytes & inc epidermal cell turnover –> scaly patches
remissions & exacerbations in psoriasis
exacerbations triggered by varying things (ex. emotional stress, physical trauma, infection, drugs)
mnfts
- psoriatic patches
- nail dystrophy, erosion & pitting
- psoriatic arthritis in distal joints (cmplx)
common areas for psoriatic patches
knees, elbows, scalp
cause of nail dystrophy, erosion & pitting
d/t abn amount of keratin