Skin lesions and Skin cancer Flashcards
How do you describe a skin lesion?
Site Shape Size Colour Palpate - mobility, surface changes, temperature and consistency
What are seborrhoea keratoses and how do they present and what is the treatment?
(turtle shells) Benign, commonly referred Warty growths - "stuck on appearance" Patients often have multiple Generally left untreated, but if troublesome - cryotherapy and curettage.
What is Cryotherapy?
Liquid nitrogen
+ cheap and easy to perform on the day
- Can scar, failure and reoccurrence
How is seborrhoea linked to Leser-trelat?
Paraneoplastic phenomonenon
- abrupt onset of widespread seborrhoeic keratosis, particularly in young
Sis remain benign but may indicate underlying solid organ malignancy - GI adenocarcinoma
What are viral warts and how are they treated?
Due to Human papilloma virus
Rough hyperkeratotic surface
Difficult to treat - will clear when immunity developed to virus.
Cryotherapy or wart paints can stimulate immune system slightly
Can curette in severe cases.
What are cysts, how do they present and how do you treat them?
Encapsulated lesion containing fluid or semi-fluid material. Usually firm and fluctuant. Common.
Many different types:
Can rupture and cause inflammation of surrounded skin - may become secondary infected.
Treat with excision
If inflamed/infected - antibiotics, intralesional steroid, incision and drainage.
What are Dermatofibroma?
Benign fibrous nodule, often on limbs.
Firm nodule, tethered to skin but mobile over fat. Pale pink/brown. often paler in centre.
What is Lipoma?
Bening tumour consisting of fat cells
Common
smooth and rubbery subcutaneous mass
What is an Angioma?
Vascular lesion
Overgrowth of blood vessels in the skin due to proliferating endothelial cells.
Pregnancy and liver disease.
What is pyogenic Granuloma?
Vascular lesion rapidly enlarged red/raw growth, often at site of trauma. Common on head and hands Bleed easily Removed by curettage and cautery.
What are Actini Keratoses?
What is the treatment?
Pre-malignant lesion
Rough scaly patches on sun damaged skin
Low risk of transformation to SCC
Treatment = Cryotherapy, Curettage, Diclofenac gel, Imiquimod.
What is Bowen’s disease?
What is the treatment?
Squamous cell carcinoma in situ.
Full thickness dysplasia, entire contained within the epidermis, no metastatic potential.
Potential to become malignant (5%)
Irregular, scaly erythematous plaque.
Treatment = Cryotherapy, Curettage, photo-dynamic therapy, and Imiquimod
What is photo-dynamic therapy?
Photochemical reaction to selectively destroy cancer cells.
Topical photosensitising agent applied.
Red light applied.
What is Imiquimod?
Immune response modifier - stimulates cytokine release - inflammation and destruction of lesion.
+ useful where surgery not wanted, good cosmetic result.
- treatment is 6 weeks, significant inflammation.
What are the 2 non-melanoma skin cancers?
Basal cell cancer (70%) (146 to 788/100000)
Squamous cell cancer (38 to 250 / 100000)