Dermatopathology Flashcards

1
Q

Skin

A

Epidermis = Stratified keratinocytes
-Stratum corneum (Pink keratin in anucleate cells)
-Stratum granulosum (With granules)
-Stratum spinosum (Desmosomes)
-Stratum basalis (Stem cells)

Basement membrane (Hemidesmosomes)

Dermis

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2
Q

Atopic Dermatitis (Eczema)

A

HSR 1 with pruritic, ery, oozing rash with vesicles and edema

FACE & FLEXOR surfaces
+Asthma, allergic rhinitis

Topical steroid

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3
Q

Contact Dermatitis

A

Pruritic, ery, oozing rash with vesicles and edema

Upon exposure to allergen or irritant

-Poison ivy, nickel jewelry (Type 4 HSR)
-Detergents
-Drugs, ie PCN

Remove offending agent
Topical steroid

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4
Q

Acne Vulgaris

A

Comedones, pustules, nodules

Chronic inflammation of follicles & sebaceous glands
-Hormone-increase in sebum
-Excess keratin blocks follicles
-Forms comedones

P. acnes
-Causes inflammation
-Forms pustules or nodules

BP (Antimicrobial)
Vit A (Decrease keratin prouced)

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5
Q

Psoriasis

A

Well-circumscribed, salmon colored plaques with silvery scale

SCALP & EXTENSOR surfaces, pitting nails

Due to excessive keratinocyte proliferation
Possibly autoimmune (HLA-C & triggered by trauma)

Steroids
Immune-modulating therapy
UVA light with psoralen (PUVA)

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6
Q

Lichen Planus

A

Pruritic, planar, polygonal, purple papules
+Reticular white lines, Wickham striae

Oral mucosa, elbows, wrists

Associated with chronic hep C infection, but etiology unknown

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7
Q

Pemphigus Vulgaris

A

Autoimmune destruction of desmosomes; IgG against desmoglein

Acantholysis of stratum spinosum
“Tombstone appearance”
Bullae rupture easily

Skin & oral mucosa

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8
Q

Bullous Pemphigoid

A

Autoimmune destruction of hemidesmosomes; IgG against basement membrane

Supepidermal blisters, bullae do NOT rupture easily
Oral mucosa is spared

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9
Q

Dermatitis Herpetiformis

A

Autoimmune deposition of IgA at tips of dermal papillae

Pruritic vesicles and bullae in groups, resembling HSV
Seen in celiac disease

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10
Q

Erythema Multiforme

A

HSR with targetoid rash & bullae
~HSV infection

Steven-Johnson Syndrome (SJS)
-Skin + oral mucosa + fever

Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis (TEN)
-Diffuse sloughing of skin, resembling SSS
-Adverse drug rxn
-Medical emergency!

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11
Q

Seborrheic Keratosis

A

Benign proliferation of SQ cells with pseudocysts
Classic “stuck-on” appearance
Common in elderly

Leser-Trelat Sign
-Sudden onset of mulitple SK’s
-Underlying carcinoma of GIT

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12
Q

Acanthosis Nigricans

A

Epidermal hyperplasia with darkening of skin, “velvet-like” skin

Axilla, groin

Seen in insulin resistance or malignancy

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13
Q

Basal Cell Carcinoma

A

Malignant proliferation of stratum basalis
Especially on UPPER lip

“Peripheral palisating” ***

Surgical excision

Risk: Prolonged exposure to sunlight, albinism, xeroderma pigmentosum

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14
Q

Squamous Cell Carcinoma

A

Malignant proliferation of SQ cells
Ulcerated, nodular
LOWER lip

Surgical excision

Risk: Same as BCC’s
+ Immunosuppressive therapy
+ Arsenic poisoning
+ Chronic inflammation (burn scars, draining sinus tracts)

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15
Q

Actinic Keratosis

A

Hyperkeratotic, scaly papule/plaque
Precursor to SCC

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16
Q

Keratoacanthoma

A

Well-differentiated SCC
Develops rapidly & regresses spontaneously

“Cup-shaped” tumor with keratin debris

17
Q

Melanocytes

A

Derived from neural crest
Found in stratum basalis
Synthesize melanin in melanosomes
Transfer melanosomes to keratinocytes

18
Q

Vitiligo

A

Autoimmune destruction of melanocytes
Loss of skin pigmentation & tanning

19
Q

Albinism

A

Congenital defect in tyrosinase; Impaired melanin production

Ocular or oculocutaneous

Increased risk of skin cancer

20
Q

Freckle

A

Small tan-brown macule
Darkens when exposed to sunlight

Due to increased number of melanoSOMES

21
Q

Freckle

A

Small tan-brown macule
Darkens when exposed to sunlight

Due to increased number of melanoSOMES

22
Q

Melasma

A

Mask-like hyperpigmentation of cheeks
Seen in oral contraceptives & pregnancy

23
Q

Nevus (Mole)

A

Benign neoplasm of melanocytes

May be congenital (with hair growing from it)
***Melanoma would NOT have hair

May be acquired
-Along epidermal-dermal junction (Junctional Nevus)
-Extends into dermis (Compound Nevus)
-Loses junction (Intradermal Nevus)

Dysplasia within nevus, precursor to melanoma

24
Q

Melanoma

A

Malignant neoplasm of melanocytes
Know the ABCDE’s, Diameters > 6 mm

Risk: Same as BCCs
+ Dysplastic Nevus Syndrome (AD)

25
Q

Melanoma Subtypes

A

Superficial Spreading Melanoma
-Dominant early radial phase
-Good prognosis

Nodular Melanoma
-Early vertical phase
-Poor prognosis

Acral Lentiginous Melanoma
-On palms, soles
-Often of darker skin patients
-NOT related to UV light exposure

26
Q

Impetigo

A

S. aureus or S. pyogenes
Seen in kids, especially face

Erythematous macules to pustules
Erosions with dry honey-crusted serum

27
Q

Cellulitis

A

(Deep infxn of dermis) S. aureus or S. pyogenes
Ery, swollen, tender rash
+Fever

Risk: Trauma, surgery, insect bite

***Necrotizing fasciitis
-Progress to necrosis of subq tissue
-Anaerobic “flesh-eating” bacteria
-CO2 production, crepitus
-Surgical emergency!

28
Q

(Staphylococcal) Scalded Skin Syndrome

A

(Superficial infxn) Staph aureus
Exfoliative A & B toxins separate skin at stratum granulosum***

Sloughing of skin with RED rash
+Fever

DDX: Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis (TEN)

29
Q

Verruca

A

Flesh-colored papule with rough surface
Especially at hands, feet

Due to HPV infection of keratinocytes

30
Q

Molluscum Contagiosum

A

Firm, pink, UMBILICATED papule

Seen in kids, sexually active adults, immunocompromised patients

Due to POXvirus

“Molluscum bodies” seen within keratinocytes