Skin Lesions and Rashes Flashcards

1
Q

Melasma - appearance

A

Melasma (aka Mask of Pregnancy)
Hyperpigmented patches typically on sun-exposed areas-cheeks, upperlip, nasal bridgeand forehead

Moth-eaten appearance, feathery edge

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2
Q

Melasma contributing factors, treatment?

A

Contributing factors
Hyperestrogenism (pregnancy, contraception)
oThyroid autoimmunity
oUltraviolet radiation
oAnti-epileptic medications

Rarely reported in males

Usually resolves within a year of delivery
Limit sun exposure and use UVA/UVB SPF 30 or higher
Consider topical bleaching creams –if OK with OB

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3
Q

Atopic Eruptions of Pregnancy (AEP)

3 types?

treatment?

A

Eczema of Pregnancy
Prurigo of Pregnancy “Prurigo” = condition that itches(aka “pruritus”)
Folliculitis of Pregnancy

Low strength topical steroid +/-systemic antihistamine if OK w/ OB

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4
Q

Linea Gravidarum, aka Linea Nigra (latin for blackline)

What is it? When is it seen?

Treatment?

A

Midline abdomen
Increased likelihood in darker complections
2nd or 3rd trimester
Clinical dx as are all the pregnancy related skin changes

Tends to fade after delivery, but may not completely resolve
Reassurance, no meds recommended

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5
Q

Acne Vulgaris

A

Chronic inflammatory disease of pilosebaceous follicles

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6
Q

Atopic Dermatitis (eczema):

A

Chronic, relapsing, pruritic condition often associated with allergic rhinitis and/or asthma;
tends to run in families;

Symptoms include intense pruritis (itching) leading to excoriated skin lesions and lichenification;

Lesions are susceptible to secondary infections (Staph aureus) impetigo.

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7
Q

Seborrheic dermatosis: aka seborrheic dermatitis

A

Ranges from ‘dandruff’ to fulminant rash.
Dryness, pruritus, erythema, and fine, greasy scaling lesions;
Characteristically on scalp, eyebrows, glabella, nasolabial folds, ears, eyelid margins.

Occurs in 2-5% of adults

Infantile variant: Cradle-cap

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8
Q

Seborrheic Keratosis

A

Stuck-on appearance with a course waxy scale; may appear verrucous; well circumscribed;

Color is variable even within a single lesion; variesfrom tan to pink to dark brown to black.

Age: Increasedincidence and number with increasing age; common in middle-aged and elderly

May start as a flat lesion and grow to a specific size
Verrucous (warty) scaly lesion
With trauma, surface lesion may fall off and regrow in the same site.

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9
Q

Dermatofibroma

A

Firm 0.5 –2 cm papules or nodule
Colors: flesh, tan, pink, yellowish, blue, brown, red or black
Typically round or ovoid with well-defined border

Typically on extremities especially the legs

Squeezing the margin, the lesion with dimple –the ‘dimple sign’ or ‘Fitzpatrick sign’ which confirms the diagnosis

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10
Q

Rosacea

A

Chronic inflammatory condition with relapsing-remitting course

Facial flushing and localized erythema, telangiectasias, papules, and pustules on the nose, cheeks, brow and chin.
Nasolabial folds are typically spared.

One variant affects the nose primarily with inflammation edema and sebaceous hyperplasia resulting in an enlarged, cobblestoned appearance (rhinophyma).

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11
Q

Sebaceous Cyst or Epidermoid cyst

A

Cyst wall composed of squamous epithelium containing macerated keratin and lipid-ric debris

Commonly located on face, trunk, extremities, in the mouth or on the genitals

Occurs in all ages

Usually asymptomatic unless they become infected
Dome-shaped, firm, flesh-colored nodule
Usually has a pore-like opening (central punctum)

The contents of the cyst have a distinctive foul odor

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12
Q

Nevus (mole)

A

Age: typically arise during childhood, adolescence or very early adulthood

During pregnancy may darken and become more noticeable
The appearance of a new pigmented lesion in adulthood is less common after the age of 50

The appearance is dependent on the location of the melanocytic nests. Junctional nevi are flat (macular). Compound nevi are elevated relative to the surrounding skin(popular)

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13
Q

Erythema Multiforme

A

Classic target lesions

Well-defined, circular, erythematous macules or papules that are < 3 cm
3 distinct color zones and a central zone that has bulla or crust
Appears violaceous on dark skinned individualsCan appear on palms and soles

Classically, first appear in symmetrical distribution on acral sites and progress in a centripetal fashion.

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14
Q

Eruptive Xanthoma

A

Appear abruptly—rapid onset with all lesions at the same stage of development
Pruritusor pain may be present
Dome shaped yellow-orange, firm papules and associated redness

Dark-skinned individuals may appear as tan to dark brown; erythema is difficult to identify

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15
Q

Dermatomyositis

A

Multiple skin changes are possible (heliotrope rash)

Systemic manifestations include fatigue, malaise, myalgias
Proximal muscle weakness (difficulty rising from chair)
Dysphagia due to esophageal muscle involvement

Respiratory: 15-30% of patients have some level of pulmonary involvement

Cardiac: tachy-or bradycardia, bundle branch block, cardiomegaly, CHF

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16
Q

Nail fold telangiectasia:

A

erythema and telangectasias at the base of the nails with prominent capillary loops - indicates malignancy

17
Q

Actinic keratosis(AK) OR Solar keratosis

A

Pre-cancerous lesion found on sun-exposed areas
Usually begin as ‘rough’ localized lesions

Develops a characteristic white-to-yellow surface scale

May coalesce to form plaques

Generally asymptomatic

Age:increase in frequency of appearance with age

Location: sun exposed areas

18
Q

Solar Lentigo:

A

AKA senile lentigo, age spot or liver spot
Benign pigmented macule related to ultraviolet radiation most often as sunexposure

Associated with multiple sunburns in fair-skinned individuals

Smooth, flat macules
Hyperpigmented, tan to brown

19
Q

Basal Cell Carcinoma(BCC)

A

Most common cancer of the skin

M > W

Increased incidence with age
Sun exposed area; 85% appear on the head and neck region;
The most common site is the nose.
Smooth pearly papule or nodule with rolled borders and overlying telangiectasia; ulceration and pigmentation can occur.

20
Q

Infiltrating BCC

A

May present as slightly raised or depressed, indurated, thin, pink to white scar-like plaque with possible scale, crust, erosionand overlying telangiectasias.

21
Q

Superficial BCC

A

Well defined red patch or thin plaque with or without scale, crust, and rolled borders

Expands horizontally over time

Several superficial changes such as atrophy hypopigmentation, or associated pigmentation may be seen.

22
Q

Melanoma

A

Age: Median age at diagnosis is 60’s
Location: any skin with melanocytes
Most melanomas are pigmented
Morphology varies: flat, nodular; macule or patch
Can appear on palms, soles or nail

23
Q

Cutaneous Squamous Cell CA(cSCC)

A

Presence of Actinic keratosis (AK) indicates an individual is at higher risk of developing SCC

Fair/lighter skin types are 80X more likely
Age: increase with age; average onset mid-60’s
Location:any skin surface including mucosa but most common areas are sun-exposed: head, neck, arms and hands
Can also arise from scars or chronic ulcers (non-healing lesions)

Presentation:variable; hyperkaeratotic papule or nodule; may be smooth, plaque-like, exophytic, or papillamotous; color is variable; secondary changes such as scale, crust, erosion and ulceration may be present.