Skin And Systemic Disease Flashcards
1
Q
What can skin changes be a sign of?
A
- endocrine disease (eg. Diabetes, thyroid, Cushings etc.)
- internal malignancy
- nutritional deficiency
- systemic infection
- systemic inflammatory disease
2
Q
What skin changes are associated with thyroid insufficiency?
A
- dry skin (hypothyroidism)
- pretibial myxedema: puffy, swollen, velvet-texture with exaggerated skin markings (graves - hyperthyroidism)
- thyroid acropachy (Graves): soft tissue swelling of distal digits and around nail causing bowing/curvature of the nail
3
Q
What skin changes are associated with diabetes?
A
- necrobiosis lipoidica: red and yellow waxy plaques which can split, break and ulcerate, affects shins bilaterally
- diabetic dermopathy: vague inflammatory papules/patches, itch with hyperpigmentation affecting lower limbs
- sclerederma: woody inflammatory infiltrate which is warm to touch, reduction in elasticity so skin cannot be pinched, usually in upper back
- leg ulcers: common over pressure points
- granuloma annulare: circular plaques raised on surface of skin (pockets of histiocytes forming inflammatory margins on histology), tend to be on hands and feet
4
Q
Describe the skin changes associated with steroid levels in the body
A
- steroid excess (eg. Cushings): acne, striae, erythema, gynaecomastia
- steroid insufficiency (eg. Addisons): hyperpigmentation (esp on mucosal surfaces inside of the mouth), acanthosis nigracans
5
Q
Describe the skin changes associated with sex hormone levels in the body
A
- high testosterone (in PCOS, testicular tumours, exogenous testosterone in drug therapy): acne, hirsutism
- high progesterone (in congenital adrenal hyperplasia, contraceptive treatment): acne, dermatitis
6
Q
Describe skin changes associated with internal malignancy
A
- necrolytic migratory erythema/glucognoma syndrome (rare): distinctive scaly red plaques on actral, interiginous and periorifical areas (islet cell tumour of pancreas)
- erythema gyratum repens (rare): red concentric bands whorled pattern with severe itch and raised eosinophil count (lung cancer)
- acanthosis nigricans (sometimes cancer): hyperpigmented velvet-like hyperkeratotic plques in folds of the skin = type 1 associated with adenocarcinoma of GIT
- erythema annulare = red circles
- Sweet’s Syndrome: affects neck and head, redness and ulceration (haematological cancer)
- Sister Mary Joseph nodule (urinary cancer)
7
Q
Describe the skin changes associated with nutritional deficiency
A
- vitamin B: B6/pyridoxine = dermatitis, B12/cobalamin = angular chelitis, B3/niacin = dementia, diarrhoea, dermatitis
- zinc: acrodermatitis enteropathica, blistering and pustules with redness and inflammation
- vitamin C (scurvy): punctate purpura/bruise that is non-blanching, corkscrew spiral hairs on arms and legs, patchy hyperpigmentation, dry skin and hair, non-healing wounds and inflamed gums
8
Q
What are the causes of zinc deficiency?
A
- inherited mutation to intestinal zinc transporter
- infants: low levels in breast milk
- adults: reduced intake due to alcoholism, malabsorption, IBD, bowel surgery
9
Q
What is erythema nodosum and its causes
A
- dermal bruise of shins/lower legs with discolourisation with red/purple changes on skin surface, really uncomfortable so can’t have anything touching it
- causes: strep infection, pregnancy, OC, sarcoidosis, drugs, bacterial/viral infection
10
Q
What is pyoderma gangrenosum and its causes?
A
- deep ulcer over shin/lower leg, with purple overhanging edge
- causes: IBD (Crohns/UC), RA, myeloma, others
11
Q
Describe skin changes associated with hair and nails
A
- autoimmune = alopecia areata hair loss (distinct bald areas, well-defined)
- hair loss (B12, iron deficiency, lupus, hypothyroidism)
- male pattern balding (androgen excess)
- nail clubbing (lung malignancy), nail fold telengectasia (connective tissue disorders)