Vesiculobullous Disease Flashcards

1
Q

immunological oral disease

A

LOCAL - aphthous ulcers, lichen planus, OFG (tend to fall under cell mediated immunity)
SYSTEMIC with local effects - erythema multiforme, pemphigus, pemphigoid, lupus erythematosis, systemic sclerosis, sjogren’s (tend to fall under antibody mediated immunity)

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2
Q

immunological skin disease

A

skin and oral / genital mucosa share many common antibodies & epitopes
many blistering skin conditions therefore also affect the mouth
auto antibody attack on skin components causes loss of cell-cell adhesion
‘split’ then forms in skin that fills with inflammatory exudate & forms a vesicle/blister

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3
Q

desmosome vs hemidesmosome

A

Desmosomes facilitate adhesion between adjacent epithelial cells, whereas hemidesmosomes, named for their ultrastructural resemblance to half a desmosome, mediate adhesion between basal cells of epithelial tissues and the substratum

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4
Q

direct v indirect immunofluorescence

A

direct = antibody mediated tissue disease; antibody bound to tissue; targeted in DIF
indirect = circulating antibody not yet bound to tissue, detected by immunofluorescence from a plasma sample, not always useful for diagnosis - often good for monitoring disease activity

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5
Q

erythema multiforme

A

spectrum disorder of immunogenic related skin & mucosa ulceration with variable orofacial involvement
acute onset M>F; skin target lesions & in mucosa is ulcers
aetiology = drugs, herpes simplex, mycoplasma
lips & anterior part of mouth - normally heals in 2wks but very painful; unable to eat / drink
stevens-johnson syndrome - severe multisystem involvement i.e. skin, conjunctivae, nose, pharynx, mouth, genitals

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6
Q

tx of erythema multiforme

A

for oral lesions:
urgent medical therapy - systemic steroids (up to 60mg/day i.e. high dose), systemic aciclovir
encourage fluid intake - may require admission for IV fluid if unable to drink
encourage analgesia
if recurrent - consider prophylactic aciclovir daily, allergy test, sometimes infective agent i.e. mycoplasma

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7
Q

angina bullosa haemorrhagica

A

commonest oral blistering condition
described as blood blisters in mouth
buccal mucosa & soft palate are common sites
rapid onset (a few mins)
last about 1hr then burst
relatively painless
possibly initiated by minor trauma
heal with no scarring within days

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8
Q

diagnosis of ABH

A

non specific ulceration
DIF, IIF negative
no platelet / coagulation defect
CHX mouthwash
may recur

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9
Q

management of ABH

A

no tx available at present
reassure pt that disease is benign
explain known triggers & course of disease

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10
Q

pemphigoid

A

relatively common
sub epithelial antibody attach
thick walled blisters (full epidermis) usually persist to be seen, clear or blood filled blisters

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11
Q

different forms & presentations of pemphigoid

A

bullous pemphigoid - skin
mucous membrane pemphigoid - all mucous membranes i.e. eye, genital, oral
cicatritial pemphigoid - mucosal with scarring

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12
Q

histopathology of pemphigoid

A

sub epithelial split - epithelial / connective tissue junction
hemi desmosomes involved at basement membrane

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13
Q

immunofluorescence in pemphigoid

A

linear staining along basement membrane
C3 and IgG detected in this area in ‘standard’ pemphigoid
IgA occasionally found
- linear staining with C3 is called liner IgA disease
- granular IgA and C3 deposits seen in dermatitis herpetiformis

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14
Q

pemphigoid signs & management

A

oral & skin lesions - both can cause lesions in both but bullous usually skin & mucous membranes usually mouth/eye/genital
scarring is a feature in some cases while healing
manage with immunosuppressants i.e. steroids / immune modulating drugs (azathioprine, mycophenolate)

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15
Q

pemphigus

A

commonest form is pemphigus vulgaris
intraepithelial blue
clinical - uncommon <50yrs, F»M
sites - skin, mucosa, both eventually involved
blisters burst then spread
rarely see intact bullae due to intra epithelial blister & surface easily lost
fatal without tx

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16
Q

pemphigus histopathology (2)

A

supra basal split
tzank cells

17
Q

pemphigus immunofluorescence

A

basket weave pattern of staining found around each of the epithelial cells
C3 and IgG in pemphigus vulgaris

18
Q

summary on vesiculobullous disorders

A

uncommon in primary care
pemphigoid is least uncommon & should be considered if pt reports blistering disease
can be fatal & should be referred for specialist care