Dermatology Flashcards

1
Q

How to reach a diagnosis in dermatology? (4)

A

● History! ex - alopecia
● Clinical examination
● Lesions and patterns
● Diagnostic tests

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2
Q

Dermatological examination includes (5)

A

● Basic thorough clinical examination
● General skin and hair condition

● Check the ears, paws, between toes,
claws, under the tail…

● Otoscopy
● Describe the lesions

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3
Q

myringotomy

A

is a procedure to create a hole in the ear drum to allow fluid that is trapped in the middle ear to drain out.

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4
Q

Lesion distribution can be described as (5)

A

● Local
● Focal/Multifocal
● Generalized/diffuse
● Symmetric/Asymmetric
● Singular - annular (ring) - linear

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5
Q

Understanding which lesions are
primary
secondary
or both

A
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6
Q
A

Alopecia - hair loss

Could be primary or
secondary (self induced)

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7
Q
A

Alopecia with erythema (self induced (licking), inflammatory)

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8
Q
A

Hypotrichosis - thinning of hair
(a form of alopecia, only partial hair loss)

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9
Q
A

Macule - flat area of color change, less 1 cm

(if its large, then its a patch)

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10
Q
A

Papule - solid elevated lesion, less than 1 cm

(if the lesion contains pus, its a pustule)

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11
Q

diascopy

A

Diascopy is used to determine whether erythema in a lesion is due to blood within superficial vessels (inflammatory or vascular lesions) or is due to hemorrhage (petechiae or purpura).

A microscope slide is pressed against a lesion (diascopy) to see whether it blanches.

If it blanches - its erythema, if it doesnt blanche - its hemorrhage aka bruising.

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12
Q
A

Plaque - flat elevation in skin, more than 1
cm

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13
Q
A

Wheal - elevated, soft lesion, filled with
edema. (urticaria)

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14
Q
A

Epidermal collarette - circular flaky rim

(with hyperpigmentation)

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15
Q

vesicle vs bulla

A

Vesicle - elevation, filled with clear fluid,
less than 1 cm

Bulla - more than 1 cm

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16
Q
A

Scale - loose fragments/flakes of horny
layer

17
Q
A

Crust- dried exudate, pus, blood etc. ointments and other care products can contribute to the crust accumulation.

18
Q
A

Excoriation - self induced erosions/ulcers

19
Q
A

Erosion - shallow epidermal defect, loss
of epidermis, moist, no bleeding, won’t
leave a scar.
e.g. hotspot

20
Q
A

Ulcer - break in continuity of epidermis,
exposure of dermis.

21
Q
A

Fissure - linear cleavage into epidermis/dermis

22
Q
A

Hyperkeratosis - thickening of the stratum
corneum

23
Q
A

Lichenification - thickening and hardening
of the skin

24
Q
A

Follicular casting

(a type of hyperkeratosis)

25
Q
A

Comedones - keratin filled hair follicles

(a type of hyperkeratosis)

26
Q

Skin cytology aims to

A

To evaluate cells (infections, inflammation, neoplasias etc).

You need glass slides, STAINS and technique depending on the area: Dry or moist lesion? Crusts or scales? Paws, lip folds, fistulas?

On microscope use high magnification (100x) and immersion oil!

A few malassezia, bacteria (mostly cocci) is normal!

1-3 per view (100X). Abnormal amounts, inflammatory cells, phagocytosis are all finds.

27
Q

How to collect cytology (4) options:

A

1) Tape strip/acetate tape
2) Q-Tip
3) Direct smear
4) Fine needle aspirate FNA

Your technique will depend on the nature of the lesion and the location.

28
Q

Skin scrape Often used for

A

diagnosing ectoparasites (demodicosis, sarcoptosis, cheyletiellosis, notoedrosis).

You need mineral oil, scalpel blade, glass slide + cover slide.

(Pinch the skin), moisten the scalpel blade with mineral oil, scrape until capillary bleeding. Hold 45 to 90 degree angle,
direction of hair growth.

You put the sample onto the glass slide, that has a drop of oil on it. NO STAINS!

Look with low power objective (5X, 10X), low light or close iris diaphragm (more contrast)
Look through whole slide either horizontally or vertically.

Deep vs surface. Method and area of interest depends on suspected disease.

Example, for sarcoptic mange - at least 5 deep scrapes (until capillary bleeding). Neg. result does not rule it out.

29
Q

Where to collect your ear sample from?

A

Take the sample from the point where vertical ear canal turns to o horizontal ear canal.

30
Q

Ear swabs for parasites. Explain technique.

A

For parasites - use mineral oil, coverslide, low power (5-10X).

31
Q

Ear swabs taken for cytology..

A

Cytological evaluation - may need to be heated (be cause cerumen melts and stain gains access to cells). STAINING. High power (100X).

32
Q

Flea Comb Test, explain the steps.

A

● You take wet white paper.
● You comb the animal with a flea comb, and place all the hair, scales, dirt on the white
paper.
● Fleas are not always visible!
● Flea dirt bleeds into the paper!

33
Q

Dermatophyte test is a

A

test to culture dermatophytes.

DTM - agar (dermatophyte test medium) for growing dermatophytes.
Contains indicator that changes color.

34
Q

Dermatophyte test:
McKenzie technique

A

(toothbrush method)

Comb the animal for several minutes with sterile toothbrush (new brush). Put
all the hairs, scales onto DTM (dermatophyte agar).

Roth technique: Press acetate tape to colonies growing on the agar, stain them (blue) and microscope.

35
Q

Bacterial culture and sensitivity

A

Most of the bacterial skin diseases in dogs are caused by Staphylococcus pseudintermedius.

Culture and sensitivity is used when treatment is failing, there are rod shaped bacteria seen on skin cytology, long antibiotic courses in furunculosis.

Sample is collected with q-tip and transport medium is used to send to laboratory.

Good places to sample are intact pustules, draining tracts.

To evaluate deep infections, sometimes biopsy is taken and used for culture.

36
Q

Treatment trials are used to

A

rule out some parasites (canine scabies, fleas in cats).

37
Q

Elimination diet is

A

diet trial is used to investigate food allergy. There are no reliable tests/blood
tests to diagnose food allergy!

Animal must go through elimination diet with completely new components/hydrolyzed dry food.

Diet will last for 8 weeks. All food, treats, medication, tooth paste must be new or ruled out.

Provocation must be done afterwards!

38
Q

Allergy skin testing/serum testing

A

Is used for therapy - allergen specific
immunotherapy.

Animal must be weaned from
corticosteroids!

39
Q

hyperestrogenism

A

occurs in male dogs due to testicular sertoli cell tumor (sometimes origin other cells)

these dogs are frequently old cryptorchids

can manifest as skin issues, anemia etc.