CM: Blistering Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

What are the pathogenic mechanisms that lead to blistering?

A

spongiosis
acantholysis: primary or secondary
ballooning degeneration
minor: absent or defective keratin (leads to intraepidermal blister formation) or type VII collagen (causes defect anchoring BM to papillary dermis)

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2
Q

What is spongiosis?

A

widening of intercellular space between epidermal cells causing sponge-like appearance of epidermis
keratinocytes get fluid in b/w them - hang on by desmosomes until they finally break apart

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3
Q

What is acantholysis?

A

loss of coherence b/w epidermal or epithelial cells
primary is due to dissolution of intercellular substance
keratinocytes have a fried egg appearance

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4
Q

What is ballooning degeneration?

A

epidermal degeneration resulting in marked swelling of cells and secondary acantholysis, common in Herpes
intracellular edema can cause bursting of cells and formation of multilocular bullae = reticular degeneration

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5
Q

What is the difference in pathology b/w pemphigus vulgaris and bullous pemphigoid?

A

pemphigus vulgaris - antibodies against cadherins in desmosomes
bullous pemphigoid - antibodies against hemidesmosomes
pemphigus has cell-poor appearance on histology

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6
Q

What are examples of inflammatory blistering disorders?

A

bullous pemphigoid

erythema multiforme

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7
Q

What are examples of non-inflammatory blistering disorders?

A

epidermolysis bullosa simplex

pemphigus

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8
Q

What are important features of pemphigus vulgaris?

A

flaccid bullae that break easily and leave denuded areas that increase in size
oral lesions - do not involve vermillion border (herpes does)
Nikolsky sign

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9
Q

What are important features of pemphigus foliaceus?

A

flaccid bullae on erythematous base, leaves more superficial erosions, in seborrheic distribution
usually no oral lesions
Nikolsky sign
better prognosis than pemphigus vulgaris

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10
Q

What is the Nikolsky sign?

A

lateral pressure applied to normal skin at periphery of active lesions causes skin to shear away

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11
Q

What are the histologic features of pemphigus?

A

supra-basal blisters in vulgaris w preservation of basal cell layer
more superficial sub-corneal blisters in foliaceus
intercellular edema w acantholysis
little inflammation - lymphocytes and eosinophils

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12
Q

What does immunofluorescence of pemphigus show?

A

direct: IgG antibodies between keratinocytes (chicken-wire)
indirect: circulating IgG in blood

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13
Q

What are important features of bullous pemphigoids?

A

large, tense bullae esp on extremities, which upon breakage leave denuded areas that DON’T increase in size
more often in elderly pts than pemphigus - also more inflammation, no Nikolsky, itchy

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14
Q

What is herpes gestationis?

A

variant of bullous pemphigoid during pregnancy that starts on distended abdominal skin
usually goes away after birth

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15
Q

What is the histology of bullous pemphigoid?

A

mixed infiltrate - lymphocytes and eosinophils in papillary dermis
subepidermal blister

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16
Q

What does immunofluorescence of bullous pemphigoid show?

A

direct and indirect: linear IgG in epidermal-dermal jxn

17
Q

What are important features of dermatitis herpetiformis?

A

pruritic, symmetrical grouped papules and vesicles surrounded by erythema
extensor surfaces of extremities, shoulders, buttocks
oral mucosa NOT affected
may be associated with celiac sprue

18
Q

What does histology of dermatitis herpetiformis show?

A

sub-lamina densa blisters

19
Q

What does immunofluorescence of dermatitis herpetiformis show?

A

granular IgA along dermoepidermal jxn w concentration at papillary tips

20
Q

What are important features of erythema multiforme?

A

can manifest as many different skin conditions
characteristic lesions are target-like
includes erythema multiforme minor, erythema multiforme, major, stevens johnsons, and toxic epidermal necrolysis
= hypersensitivity rxns

21
Q

What is erythema multiforme minor?

A

self limited or recurrent, skin lesions only, no mucous membrane involvement
less than 10% of BSA involved
most common cause is Herpes

22
Q

What is erythema multiforme major?

A

less than 10% BSA involved
mucous membranes ARE involved - erythematous macules or erosions
same causes as EM minor

23
Q

What is Stevens Johnson syndrome?

A

affects skin and 2 or more mucous membranes
up to 30% BSA involved
most common cause is drugs

24
Q

What is toxic epidermal necrolysis?

A

more than 30% BSA involved
erythema and sloughing of large sheets of skin
2 or more mucous membranes involved
most common cause is drugs

25
Q

What is the histology of erythema multiforme?

A

epidermal (basal layer) blisters

26
Q

What is porphyria cutanea tarda?

A

dominantly inherited def of uroporphyrin decarboxylase (required for synthesis of heme)
accumulation of porphyrin metabolites that become active after exposure to UVA light = photosensitive

27
Q

What are the clinical manifestations of porphyria cutanea tarda and what can trigger an attack?

A

acquired factor damaging to liver (estrogen, ethanol)
80% antibody positive for HCV
vesicles and bullae on sun-exposed skin
hypertrichosis = increased facial hair

28
Q

What is the histology of porphyria cutanea tarda?

A

subepidermal (sublamina densa) blisters

29
Q

What are important features of herpes simplex virus?

A

type 1 = orofacial, type 2 = genital
recurrence can be triggered be exposure to sunlight, febrile illnesses or arise spontaneously
grouped vesicles on erythematous base
Tzanck prep or gram stain shows multinucleated giant cells and acantholytic keratinocytes

30
Q

What is the histology of herpes?

A

intraepidermal (stratum spinosum) vesicle w profound ballooning of keratinocytes resulting in secondary acantholysis
multi-nucleated epithelial giant cells and necrotic keratinocytes
maybe eosinophilic inclusion bodies in center of enlarged nuclei of balloon cells

31
Q

What are the clinical manifestations of varicella zoster (chicken pox)?

A

fever, malaise, generalized vesicular eruption
lesions begin as erythematous vesicle (dew drops on rose petals) and progress to larger vescile, umbilicated pustule, superficial erosion and crusted papule

32
Q

What are the clinical manifestations of herpes zoster (shingles)?

A

painful grouped vesicles along dermatome
usually elderly patient
due to varicella virus dormant in dorsal root ganglia
lesions resolve in 2-3 wks but post-herpetic neuralgia may remain for months or years

33
Q

What is the histology of herpes zoster and varicella zoster?

A

stratum spinosum blisters

34
Q

What is bullous impetigo?

A

toxins produced during inf w S. aureus cause vesicles and bullae
more common in neonates and older infants
no Nikolsky sign
bullae contain clear yellow fluid that then becomes dark yellow and turbid
well circumscribed and non-erythematous, rupture in 2-3 days, leave light brown or golden yellow crust
diabetics more prone to dev bullae

35
Q

What is the histology of bullous impetigo?

A

sub stratum corneum blisters