Skin development Flashcards
Precursors of skin
Head: neural crest, head mesoderm
Trunk and limbs: somatic mesoderm
Back: dermatome
Beginnings of epidermis development
week 3
Week 4-8
Week 11-12
month4-6
week 3- ectoderm, mesenchyme
Week 4-8- peridermal cell, ectoderm, mesenchyme
Week 11-12- peridermal, intermediate layer, basal layer
month4-6- cornified layer
piebaldism
autosomal dominant
Mutation of the KIT proto-oncogene
impaired migration of melanocytes
Clinical- depigmented patches (congenital) often with speckles within
Stable, nonprogressive
White forelock typical
Waardenburg
Rare disease
Multiple genes implicated, result in abnormal development of melanocytes
Achromia: white patches of skin and hair with other features (deafness, heterochromia irides, dystopia canthorum)
port wine stain
malformed, ectatic, dilated capillary to venule sized blood vessels
always present at birth
Occur in about .3%-.6% of newborns
Tend to darker and thicken over time
on face follow V1, V2 and V 3 with V1 worst
Sturge Weber syndrome
Most commonly associated with V1 dermatome port wine stain
Neurologic: seizures, developmental delay, migrain headaches, tram track calcifications in occipital or temporal cortex
other: congenital glaucoma, increased chordial vascularity
Infantile Hemangioma
infantile hemangioma is the MOST COMMON VASCULAR TUMOR (with an incidence estimated between 4-5%
composed of proliferating endothelial like cells that become clinically visible within the first months of life
At birth, white flat patch with fine vessels, 2 weeks to 9 months growth , vasoconstriction, they slowly involute
PHACE syndrome
P-posterior fossa abnormalities
H- hemangioma (segmental)
A- arterial anomalies
C- cardiac anomalies
E- eye anomalies
S- sternal clefting/supraumbilical raphe
ectodermal dysplasia
over 150 rate syndrome alterations in 2 or more of the structures that derive from the embryonic ectoderm:
developmental defects in hair, teeth, nails, sweat glands, and lens of the eye
Hypohidrotric Ectordermal dysplasia (HED)
X linked recessive
most common ectodermal dysplasia)
Ectodysplasin signaling pathway: Ectodysplasin A1 (EDA-A1), Eda-A1 receptor (EDAR), EDAR associated death domain (EDARADD)
square forehead with frontal bossing, flattened nasal bridge, low lying ears, skin is thin and dry, sparse hair, hypoanodontia/peg teeth, decreased ability to sweat
Treatment: avoid overheating, consult dentistry