Dermatology Flashcards

1
Q

What is the treatment for tinea versicolor?

A
  • For limited are topical selenium sulfide, clotrimazole or ketoconazole
  • For larger areas use oral itraconazole or fluconazole
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2
Q

What is the treatment for onychomycosis of the toenails and what is its mechanism of action?

A
  • Terbinafine

- It inhibits squalene epoxidase, reducing fungal cell membrane ergosterol synthesis

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3
Q

What is the treatment for onychomycosis of the fingernails ?

A
  • Griseofulvin
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4
Q

What causes tinea versicolor and how does it present?

A
  • Caused by Malassezia furfur
  • Presents as tan, brown or white scaling macular lesions that coalesce
  • Usually on the chest, neck, abdomen, back or face.
  • Lesions do not tan
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5
Q

How do you diagnose tinea versicolor?

A
  • KOH 10% prep

- See classical “spaghetti and meatballs” referring to hyphae and spores

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6
Q

What is the most common cause of impetigo?

A
  • Group A beta hemolytic Streptococcus

- Staphylococcus Aureus

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7
Q

What is impetigo?

A
  • Superficial, pustular skin infection seen in children
  • Limited to the epidermis and not spreading below the epidermal-dermal junction.
  • Common in impoverished and crowding of children.
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8
Q

What are the complications of Impetigo?

A
  • Can progress to lymphanginitis, furunculosis, or cellulitis.
  • Can progress to acute glomerulonephritis but not to rheumatic fever
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9
Q

How do you treat impetigo?

A
For severe disease:
- First generation cephalosporin or semisynthetic penicillin such as oxacillin, cloxacillin, dicloxacillin
For mild cases:
- Mupirocin, bacitracin or repatamulin
For those allergic to penicillin:
- Macrolides such as erythromycin or azithromycin
To cover MRSA:
- TMP/SMZ, clindamycin or doxycycline
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10
Q

What is Erysipelas?

A
  • Bacterial infection if the deeper layer of the skin
  • Involves the dermis and epidermis
  • Caused by group A Streptococcus
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11
Q

How does Impetigo clinically present?

A
  • More common in the arms, legs or the face.
  • Begins as maculopapules and rapidly progresses to vesicular pustular lesions
  • Lesions may be oozing, crusting, honey colored or draining.
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12
Q

How does Erysipelas clinically present?

A
  • More likely to result in fever, chills and bacteremia.
  • Bilateral shiny red, indurated edematous tender lesion on the face, arms or legs.
  • Gives a bright red, angry and swollen appearance.
  • Legions are sharply demarcated from normal skin
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13
Q

How do you treat Erysipelas?

A

Semisynthetic penicillin or first generation cephalosporin

Penicillin if Strep is certain

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14
Q

What is cellulitis?

A

Bacterial infection of the dermis and subcutaneous tissues with Staphylococcus and Streptococcus

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15
Q

How does cellulitis present?

A

Redness, swelling, warmth and tenderness of the skin.

No oozing, crusting, weeping or draining of the skin.

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16
Q

How do you treat cellulitis?

A

Moderate disease:
- First generation cephalosporin or semisynthetic penicillin such as oxacillin, cloxacillin or dicloxacillin
Severe disease (fever, hypotension, sepsis):
-IV oxacillin, nafcillin or cefazolin
For MRSA
- Clindamycin, TMP/SMX or Doxycycline

17
Q

What causes folliculitis, furuncles and carbuncles?

A
  • Staphylococcus infection around the hair follicle

- Can also be caused by Pseudomonas in hot tubs

18
Q

What is the mechanism of action of penicillin?

A
  • It is a beta lactam ring
  • Halts peptidoglycan cell wall synthesis
  • Actively binding to penicillin binding proteins, preventing removal of the terminal D-alanine and causing cell wall destruction
19
Q

What is penicillin useful against?

A
  1. Streptococcus Pyogenes
    - Rheumatic fever
  2. Streptococcus viridans and Streptococcus bovis
    - Left sided endocarditis
  3. Streptococcus Agalactiae
    - Given intrapartum for newborn prevention
  4. Actinomyces Israelii
  5. Clostridium Perfringens
    - Gangrenous lesions
  6. Pastourelle Multocida
    - Dog bites
  7. Treponema Pallidum (Use Benzathan Penicillin G)
    - Syphilis (Primary, Secondary or Early Latent)
  8. Neisseria Meningitidis
    - Only gram negative and if susceptible
20
Q

What are the side effects of penicillin?

A
  1. Type I hypersensitivity
    - Mediated by IgE
  2. Drug induced autoimmune hemolytic anemia
    - Positive direct Coombs test, antibodies against penicillin binding to surface of red blood cells (IgG)
  3. Interstitial Nephritis
    Mononuclear cells enter interstitum of kidney
21
Q

Medication that increases squamous cell skin cancer in transplant patients?

A

Voriconazole