Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

76
Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck

Transcript of Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Page 1: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Dermatology in Family Medicine 1

Clerkship Briefing

Dr. Clayton Dyck

Page 2: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Dermatology in Family Medicine 1(Or, How To Suck Less in Derm)

Clerkship Briefing

Dr. Clayton Dyck

Page 3: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Objectives

1. Use appropriate terminology to describe common skin presentations seen in family medicine

2. Apply a systematic approach to their diagnosis

3. Know the modalities used in their treatment

4. Understand basic principles of topical therapy

Page 4: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

A call from Victoria Beach…

Page 5: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Dermatologic Diagnosis

Approach is same as for any other medical condition: History Examination Formulate differential diagnosis Apply investigations to confirm/rule out

Page 6: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Dermatologic Diagnosis

Use whatever algorithm you like: TTIINNMAP VITTAMIN DD CITTIN VD

Page 7: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Tools Used in Dermatologic Assessment Our ears Our eyes Our hands Our noses (thankfully infrequently!) Lab tests

Biopsies Scrapings/clippings Blood and urine samples

Page 8: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Questions to ask Onset Pattern Skin symptoms Systemic symptoms Related factors

Environmental Occupational Other medical conditions Drugs Others affected? To name a few…

Page 9: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

An overview of terms…

Page 10: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

macule

Page 11: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

papule

Page 12: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

plaque

Page 13: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

nodule

Page 14: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

pustule

Page 15: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

vesicle

Page 16: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

bulla

Page 17: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

ulcer

Page 18: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

wheal

Page 19: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

purpura

Page 20: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

excoriation

Page 21: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

papulosquamous

Page 22: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Some Common Conditions

Page 23: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 24: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 25: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Herpes Zoster VZV reactivation Pain may precede rash Usually dermatomal Crusts usually fall off in 2-3 weeks Worse in immunocomprimised, elderly

Page 26: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Herpes Zoster - Treatment Wet dressings Antivirals

May reduce post herpetic neuralgia Within 48-72 hours of vesicle appearance Eg famcyclovir 500 mg tid x 7 days

Page 27: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Ophthalmic Zoster - Treatment Hutchinson’s sign Refer to ophthalmologist urgently 50% complications if antivirals not given

Page 28: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 29: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 30: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Tinea infections Dermatophytes, candida Topical antifungals Keep dry! If resistant/severe consider

Scraping DM, immunocomprimised PO antifungals

Page 31: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 32: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Onychomycosis Trichophyton sp., Candida Do KOH prep, culture first Topical treatment only in simple cases Usually needs oral treatment

Eg Lamisil 250 mg od x 12 weeks Watch for toxicity

Page 33: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 34: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Dyshydrotic Eczema Common if hands frequently moist/wet Consider other irritants, allergens, fungi Watch for superinfection Treatment:

Moisturize x 3 Topical steroids (usually moderate to high

potency) Topical immune modulators

Page 35: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 36: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 37: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Psoriasis Peaks in 20s and 50s Multifactorial Exacerbated by trauma, infections,

drugs, winter 5-8% have psoriatic arthritis

Page 38: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Psoriasis - Treatment Topical tar (ick!) High - ultrahigh potency steroids Vitamin D analogues Phototherapy Immunosuppressive agents

Page 39: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Topical Therapy Choice of vehicle important:

Powder Paste Solutions (water or alcohol based) Gels Lotions Creams Ointments

Page 40: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Topical Therapy Usually only a thin layer needed 1 gram = 10 cm x 10 cm area OD to BID usually sufficient

Page 41: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 42: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Topical Steroids Consider thickness of skin, thickness of

lesion, moistness of area Choose one drug of each potency Consider occlusion with lower potency

steroids Avoid extended periods of treatment

Page 43: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Topical Steroids - Examples (by potency)Low Hydrocortisone 1 %

Medium Betamethasone 0.1%

High Mometasone

Ultrahigh Augmented betamethasone

Page 44: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Topical Steroids - Adverse Fx Irritation Hypopigmentation Skin breakdown Rebound phenomenon Atrophy Striae Systemic adsorbsion And many more!

Page 45: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Nevus

Page 46: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Superficial spreading melanoma

Page 47: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Basal cell carcinoma

Page 48: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Cherry hemangioma

Page 49: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Actinic keratosis

Page 50: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

When to biopsy Change in:

Colour Size (<6 mm) Shape Especially if weeks to months, rather than months

to years Bleeding Any doubt

Page 51: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 52: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Impetigo S. aureus, S. pyogenes, or both Common in schools, daycares Treatment

Bactroban tid x 10 days Cloxacillin 250 qid x 5-10 days Keflex 250 qid x 5-10 days Resistance common, may need swab

Consider Bactroban in nares bid x 5 days

Page 53: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 54: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Fifth’s Disease Parvovirus B19 Peaks in school age children Mild flu-like symptoms Arthritis in 10% Teratogenic, especially before 20

weeks

Page 55: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 56: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Erysipelas Group A Streptococci Sudden onset, can be painful Fever, sick Penicillin V po/iv for 2 weeks Macrolide if penicillin allergic

Page 57: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 58: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 59: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Hand Foot and Mouth Disease Coxsackie A16 virus Mild flu Sx, fever Usually children < 5 years Self limited, resolve within 10 days

Page 60: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 61: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 62: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Scabies Itchy - worse at night Usually more than one family member A great mimic - consider if:

Impetigo Eczema Idonomata

Page 63: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Scabies - Treatment Treat family concurrently Wash all clothes/bedding/towels Permethrin cream

Everywhere but hair, mouth, eyes Rinse after 12 hours

Infants - precipitated sulfur Consider 2nd treatment Itchiness persists days to weeks later

Page 64: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Some short snappers

Page 65: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Pityriasis rosea

Page 66: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

paronychia

Page 67: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Molluscum contagiosum

Page 68: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

rosacea

Page 69: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Stasis dermatitis

Page 70: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

wart

Page 71: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Subungual hematoma

Page 72: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Take home “berries” Know your terminology When in doubt - back to first principles Always keep a differential diagnosis Use the right topical for the job Don’t be afraid to overbiopsy

Page 73: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.
Page 74: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Objectives

1. Describe common skin presentations seen in family medicine

2. Apply a systematic approach to their diagnosis

3. Know the modalities used in their treatment

4. Understand basic principles of topical therapy

Page 75: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

ReferencesSkin Diseases: Diagnosis and Treatment, T P

Habif et al, Elsevier 2005Color Atlas and Synopsis of Clinical

Dermatology, T B Fitzpatrick, McGraw-Hill, 1997

Images.MD (NJM Library Database)http://missinglink.ucsf.edu/lm/DermotologyGlossary

Page 76: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck.

Questions? Or itching to leave?