Inflammatory Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Papulosquamous conditions

A
Psoriasis
Atopic and contact dermatitis
Seborrheic dermatitis
Pityriasis rosea
Lichen planus
Drug eruptions
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2
Q

5 cardinal signs of psoriasis

A
Plaque
Well-circumscribed
Bright red colour
Silvery scale
Symmetric
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3
Q

Common places for plaque type psoriasis

A

Scalp
Elbows
Knees
Palms and soles

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4
Q

3 nail signs in psoriasis

A

Nail pitting
Lifting of the nail plate (onycholysis)
Oil drop sign

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5
Q

Types of psoriasis

A
Plaque type
Guttate variant
Inverse psoriasis
Pustular psoriasis
Erythrodermic psoriasis
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6
Q

What type of T cells are involved in

  1. Psoriasis
  2. Eczema
A
  1. Th1 or Th17

2. Th2

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7
Q

Atopic dermatitis

A
Eczema
Ill defined margins, erythema
Mostly on flexor surfaces
Scale
Can see lichenification
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8
Q

Seborrheic dermatitis

A

Commonly found on the scalp, eyebrows, around the ears, nasolabial folds, and can be on the trunk
Not well demarcated
Fine scale

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9
Q

Pityriasis rosea

A

Always on the trunk where the shirt is
Never involves the face and scalp
Plaques tend to be oval and follow the skin lines
Has Herald’s patch (first lesion, largest)
Fine scale within the plaque

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10
Q

5 P’s of lichen planus

A
Papules
Polygonal (not true circles)
Purple
Planar (flat topped)
Pruritic (can have excoriation)
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11
Q

Most common presentation of a drug eruption

A

Morbilliform rash

Combo of macules and papules

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12
Q

Bullous pemphigoid

A
Age > 60 years old
Tense bullae
Surrounding erythema
Very itchy
Antibodies are targeting antigens in the basement membrane
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13
Q

Pemphigus vulgaris

A

Age 40-60
Flaccid bullae
Erosions present
Oral mucosa often involved
Higher mortality rate that bullous pemphigoid
Antibodies target antigens in the stratum spinosum
Positive Nikolsky sign (skin will slough if you press on it)

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14
Q

Steven Johnson’s syndrome

A
Necrosis of epidermis
Hemorrhagic crusted erosions
Mucosal involvement
Life threatening
Mostly caused by medications
Dark hemorrhagic crust on the lips is very classic
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15
Q

Toxic epidermal necrolysis

A
Necrosis of epidermis
> 30% of body surface area involvement
An extension of Steven Johnson's
High mortality rate (heat loss, blood flow, infection)
Have to be transported to a burn unit
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16
Q

6 causes of well defined scaly plaques

A
Psoriasis
Contact dermatitis
Seborrheic dermatitis
Pityriasis rosea
Lichen planus
Drug eruptions
17
Q

2 causes of poorly defined red scaly plaques

A

Atopic dermatitis

Other forms of ezcema

18
Q

3 causes of tense bullae

A

Bullous pemphigoid
Bullous impetigo
Arthropod assault

19
Q

3 causes of flaccid bullae/erosion

A

Pemphigus vulgaris
Steven Johnson’s syndrome
Toxic epidermal necrolysis