Diseases of the Skin Diane Hannon Anatomy and Physiology.

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Diseases of the Skin Diane Hannon Anatomy and Physiology

Transcript of Diseases of the Skin Diane Hannon Anatomy and Physiology.

Diseases of the Skin

Diane Hannon

Anatomy and Physiology

Bacterial Skin Infections

1. Folliculitis: Pimple, Sty, Abscess

2. Scalded Skin Syndrome

3. Scarlet Fever

4. Impetigo

5. Acne

6. Boils and Carbuncles

Bacterial Skin Infections Folliculitis

• Inflammation and infection of the hair follicle, can occur anywhere on skin

• “pimples” Almost always caused

by S. Aureus which is always on the skin.

Also called pustules.

Bacterial Skin Infections Folliculitis

• Sty = Infection at the base of the eyelid

• Treatment: warm moist compresses, daily cleansing

Bacterial Skin Infections Folliculitis

• Abscess: localized collection of pus in any tissue of the body

• Encapsulates- prevents the spread of bacteria into the blood, but prevents circulating antibiotics from reaching the abscess

• Must be lanced and drained.

Bacterial Skin Infection Scalded Skin Syndrome

• Caused by S. Aureus• Begins with a slight

reddened area around the mouth

• 24-48 hrs later see easily ruptured vesicles over the whole body

• Skin Peels• Heals in 7 –10 days• Can lead to septicemia:

infection of the blood = death.

Bacterial Skin Infection Boils and Carbuncles

• Inflammation of hair follicles and sebaceous glands.

• Carbuncles are composite boils caused by Staphylococcus aureus.

Bacterial Skin Infection Scarlet Fever

• Caused by Streptococcus pyogenes (also causes strep throat)

• Produces a red toxin that causes the scarlet rash.

Bacterial Skin Infection Impetigo

• Highly Contagious• Pyoderma (pus producing skin

infection)• Transmitted by hands, toys,

furniture, DAYCARE• Symptoms include pustules

that rupture, producing a yellow crust over the lesions

• Tmt: washing, antibiotic ointment

Bacterial Skin Infection Acne

• Affects 80% of teens and adults.

• Primarily caused by male sex hormones which increase the size of the sebaceous glands.

• Microorganisms feed on the sebum

Bacterial Skin Infection Acne

• Cystic Acne• Plugged ducts become

inflamed and rupture.• Bacteria will infect

area and cause scarring.

Bacterial Skin Infection Acne

• Blackheads• Mild form of acne• Hair follicles become

plugged with sebum and keratin.

Bacterial Skin Infection Acne

Treatment:• Frequent cleansing of

skin.• Topical ointment• Tetracyline (controls

the bacterial infection)• Accutane (inhibits

sebum production)

MRSA• Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus:

resistant to antibiotics commonly used to treat Staph infections

• Appearing in healthy people who share personal items such as athletes and students

• 2005- MRSA deaths higher than those due to AIDS

• MRSA- humans have helped build resistance by: over-prescribing antibiotics, also in livestock (meat supply and groundwater)

• Symptoms: small, red bumps, can cause deep abscesses or become blood borne (rash over body, chills, headache, joint pain)

• TMT: Vancomycin (expensive), some bacteria are developing a resistance to this

• Prevention:

• do not share personal items

• frequent hand washing or hand sanitizer (, alcohol works as sanitizer)

• do not overuse antibiotics

Viral Skin Disease

1. Rubella

2. Rubeola

3. Chicken Pox and Shingles

4. Warts

5. Herpes Simplex

Viral Skin Disease Rubella

• Rubella = German Measles (3-day measles)

• Symptom: rash on trunk of body occurring 14-21 days after infection, fever, chills, joint pain

• Vaccine since 1969

Viral skin Infection Rubeola

• Rubeola = Measles• One of most serious

childhood diseases• Immunization since

1963, Koplik’s spots in mouth

• Fever, runny nose, rash

Viral Skin Infection Chicken Pox

• Caused by Varicella Zoster Virus.

• Highly contagious: 3 million + in US

• 10-21 days after exposure, small irregular rose-colored lesions develop

• Can be fatal: virus invades and damages cells that line the small blood vessels = clots. Also leads to pneumonia

• Vaccine since 1995

Viral Skin Infection Shingles

• Caused by Varicella Zoster Virus.

• Latent virus acquired during prior case of chicken pox.

• Virus hides in nerve cells

• Pain and prickling or the skin, mild itching to severe pain.

• Fever, headache, malaise

Viral Skin Infections Warts

• Warts = Papillomas• Caused by HPV Human Papilloma Virus

• Infection lasts a lifetime.• Common warts: on hands

and fingers, transmitted by fomites (inanimate objects) and scratching

• Disappear spontaneously

Plantar warts: sole of feet, grows inward, cauliflower-like appearance, pain with walking

-surgical removal

• Genital warts: one of most common STDs, highly contagious, causes a higher incidence of cervical cancer

Viral Skin Infections Herpes Simplex

• HSV-1: Cold sores / fever blisters.

• Virus localizes in in a cutaneous nerve.

• Blisters itch and sting.

• Herpes Simplex Type 2

-genital herpes

-can be sexually transmitted but not always, can get it from the lips

HSV-1 and HSV-2 cannot be separated clinically

Fungal InfectionsTinea: term used to identify a number of

highly contagious fungal infections of skin

• Athletes Foot

• Ringworm

• Candida

• Madura Foot

Fungal InfectionsAthletes Foot

• Tinea pedis• Dry, scaly lesions that

result from fluid filled lesions on sweaty feet.

• skin cracks and a secondary skin infection results in soggy areas between toes.

Fungal Skin InfectionsRingworm

• Highly Contagious• Infects:

– Body: Tinea corporis

– Groin: Tinea cruris

– Nails: Tinea unguium

– Scalp: Tinea capitis

– Beard: Tinea barbae

Jock itch

Tinea unguium

Tinea capitis

Fungal Infections Candidiasis

• Candida = yeast infection

• Thrush: milky patches of inflammation on oral mucous membranes

• Infants, diabetics, prolonged antibiotic users

Fungal Infections Madura Foot

• Occurs mainly in the tropics, enters body through breaks in skin.

• Causes massive enlargement of the foot

• Amputation may be necessary.

Cancers

• Basal Cell Carcinoma

• Squamous Cell Carcinoma

• Malignant Melanoma

Basal Cell Carcinoma

• Least malignant• Most common Skin

Cancer common in fair-skinned blondes

• Cells of Stratum Basale• Lesions occur on sun

exposed area of face• Shiny, dome shaped

nodules develop a central ulcer

• Full cure in 99% cases

Squamous Cell Carcinoma

• Arises from cells in stratum spinosum

• Scalp, ears, dorsum of hands, lower lip

• Less common, grows more rapidly, metastasizes to lymph if not removed

• Sun induced

• Cure rate good if tx early.

                                                                                                                        

Malignant Melanoma

• Cancer of melanocytes• Only 5 % of skin cancer,

but rising, more common in men

• Develops wherever there is pigment

• Appears spreading brown / black patch

• Metastasizes rapidly to surrounding blood vessels and lymph.

• Survival = 80%

ABCD Rule for Recognizing Melanoma

A Asymmetry: 2 sides of mole do not match

B Border irregularity: borders not smooth but

indented.

C Color: pigmented spot contains areas of

different color.

D Diameter: spot larger than 6 mm