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82 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Cafe-Au-Lait-Spot
A slightly but uniformly pigmented macule or patch with a somewhat irregular border, benign; six or more of these suggest neurofibromatosis

Vitiligo


Depigmented macules appear on the face, hands, feet, extensor surfaces, and other regions and may coalesce into extensive areas that lack melanin

Cyanosis


Somewhat bluish color that is visible in these toenails and toes; may be hard to distinguish

Jaundice


Skin diffusely yellow; seen most easily in the sclera

Carotenemia


Yellow palm; does not effect the sclera; cause is a diet high in carrots and other yellow vegetables or fruits

Erythema


Red hue, increased blood flow ("Fifth disease")

Heliotrope


Violaceous patches over the eyelids in the collagen vascular disease dermatomyositis

Psoriasis


Silvery scaly papules or plagues, mainly on the extensor surfaces

Tinea Versicolor


Tan, flat, scaly plagues

Atopic Eczema


Mainly appeard on flexor surfaces (adult form)

Linear Lesion Pattern


Linear epidermal nevus

Geographic Lesion Pattern


Mycosis fungoides

Serpiginous Lesion Pattern


Tinea corporis

Annular, arciform Lesion Pattern


Annular plaque of tinea faciale

Hemangioma Primary Skin Lesion (Flat, Nonpalpable)


Macule

Hemangioma Primary Skin Lesion (Flat, Nonpalpable)


Patch (Cafe Au Lait Spot)

Vitiligo Primary Skin Lesion (Flat, Nonpalpable)

Psoriasis (Palpable)


Plaque, coalescence of papules

Psoriasis (Palpable)


Plaque, coalescence of papules

Psoriasis (Palpable)


Plaque, coalescence of papules

Dermatofibroma (Palpable)


Nodule; knot-like lesion

Epidermal Inclusion Cyst (Palpable)


Nodule filled with expressible material, either liquid or semisolid

Uriticaria (Palpable)


Wheal; Somewhat irregular, relatively transient, superficial area pf localized skin edema

Herpes Simplex (Palpable Fluid-Filled)

Herpes Zoster (Palpable Fluid-Filled)

Insect Bite (Palpable Fluid-Filled)


Bulla

Insect Bite (Palpable Fluid-Filled)


Bulla

Acne (Palpable Fluid-Filled)


Pustule; filled with pus


Small Pox (Palpable Fluid-Filled)


Pustule; filled with pus

Scabies (Palpable Fluid-Filled)


Burrow; a minute, slightly raised tunnel in the epidermis, commonly found on finger webs and on the side of fingers. Looks like a short, linear or curved line and may end in a tiny vesicle; with a magnifying lens, you can be the burrow of the mite that causes scabies

Ichthyosis Vulgaris (Secondary Skin Lesion)


Scale; thin flake of dead exfoliated epidermis

Dry Skin (Secondary Skin Lesion)


Scale; thin flake of dead exfoliated epidermis

Impetigo (Secondary Skin Lesion)


Crust; dried residue of skin exudates such as serum, pus or blood

Neurodermatitis (Secondary Skin Lesion)


Visible and palpable thickening of the epidermis and roughening of the skin with increased visibility of the normal skin furrows (often from chronic rubbing)

Hyperthrophic Scar From Steroid Injections (Secondary Skin Lesion)


Increased connective tissue that arises from injury or disease

Keloid - ear lobe (Secondary Skin Lesion)


Hypertrophic scarring that extends beyond the borders of the intiating injury

Erosion (Secondary Skin Lesions - Depressed)


Nonscarring loss of the superficial epidermis; surface is moist but does not bleed


Ex: Aphthous stomatitis - moist area after the rupture of a vesicle; chickenpox

Excoriation

Linear or punctate erosions caused by scratching

Fissure (Secondary Skin Lesions - Depressed)


A liner crack in the skin, often resulting from excessive dryness


Ex: Athlete's foot

Ulcer (Secondary Skin Lesions - Depressed)


A deeper loss of epidermis and dermis; may bleed and scar


Ex: Stasis ulcer of venous insufficiency, Syphilitic chancre

Acne Vulagris Primary Lesion


Mild Acne


Open and closed comedones (blackheads), occasional papules

Acne Vulagris Primary Lesion


Moderate Acne


Comedones, papules, pustules

Acne Vulagris Primary Lesion


Severe Cystic Acne

Acne Vulagris Secondary Lesion


Acne with pitting and scars

Vascular Lesion


Spider Vein


Bluish, variable size


Spider shape or linear, irregular, cascading


Most often on legs and near veins


Often accompanies increased pressure in the superficial veins, as in varicose veins

Vascular Lesion


Cherry Angioma


Bright or ruby red; may become purplish with age


Round, flat; maybe surrounded by pale halo


Partial blanching (temporary whitening of skin), especially with pressure applied at edge


Trunk and extremities


Increases in size and numbers with age

Vascular Lesion


Spider Agioma


Fiery red


Central body, sometimes raised, surrounded by erythema and radiating legs


Pressure on the body causes blaching of the spider


Face, neck, arms, upper trunk; almost never below the waist


Liver disease, pregnancy, vitamin B deficiency; also normal in some people

Purpuric Lesion


Petechia/Purpura


Deep red or reddish purple, fading away over time


Rounded, sometimes irregular; flat


No effect from pressure


Variable distribution


Blood outside the vessels; may suggest a bleeding disorder, or, if petechia, emboli to skin; palpable pupura in vasculitis

Purpuric Lesion


Ecchymosis


Puprle or purplish blue, fading to green, yellow, brown with time; variable size


Rounded, oval, or irregular; may have a subcutaneous flat nodule


No effect from pressure


Variable distribution


Blood outside the vessels; often secondary to bruising or trauma, also seen in bleeding disorders


Skin Tumor


Actinic Keratosis


Typical on face and hands


Round or irregular; pink, tan or grayish


Sun exposed skin of older, fair-skinned people


Precancerous


Skin Tumor


Seborrheic Keratosis


Trunk of older people, may also be on face and elsewhere


Raised papules of plaques; whitish-yellow to brown; feel slightly greasy and velvety


Have a "stuck on" appearance

Skin Tumor


Basal Cell Carcinoma


Malignant, but almost never metastasizes


Common in fair-skinned over 40


Appears on face


Initiely red macule or papule; may have depressed center and firm elevated border

Skin Tumor


Squamous Cell Carcinoma


Face and dorsum of hand


On sun-exposed fair-skinned older than 60


Can start in an acitinic keratosis


Firmer and redder than Basal Cell Carcinoma

Typical Benign Nevi


Round or oval shaped


Sharply defined borders


Uniform color, especially skin-coloraed, tan or brown


Diamete <6 mm but >10 mm if congenital


Flat or raised surface

Malignant Melanoma

ABCDEs


Nevi that changes or atypical


May have new swelling or redness beyond the border, scaling, oozing, or bleeding, or sensations such as itching, burning, or pain


On darker skin, look for under the nails, on hands, or on soles of feet

Solar lentigines


Macules on the dorsum of hand, wrist, and forearm

Pseudomonas


Papules and pustules (in hot tub folliculitis)

Pustular psoriasis


Pustules on the palm

Chickenpox

Erythema multiforme

Squamous cell carcinoma

Infected atopic dermatitis

Lichenification and Excoriation on the leg


Atopic dermatitis

Urticaria


Drug eruption in an infant

Combination typical of neurofibromatosis


Cafe-au-lait spots and Nodules

Kaposi's sarcoma in AIDS


Malignant tumor; often multiple and may involve internal structures


Left: ovoid, pinkish red plaques that lengthen along skin


Right: purplish red nodule on the foot

Stage 1 Pressure Ulcer


Reddened area that fails to blanch with pressure


Changes in temperature, firmness or boggy, pain or itching, or red, blue, purple; red on lighter skin

Stage 2 Pressure Ulcer


Forms a blister or sore


Partial thickness skin loss or ulceration involving the epidermis or dermis or both

Stage 3 Pressure Ulcer


Deepens, full thickness skin loss and damage to or necrosis of subcutaneous tissue that may extend to, but not through, underlying muscle

Stage 4 Pressure Ulcer


Full thickness skin loss, with destruction, tissue necrosis, or damage to underlying msucle, bone, and sometimes tendons and joints

Paronychia


Superficial infection of the proximal and lateral nail folds adjacent to the nail plate


Red, swollen and tender


Infection from Staphylococcus aureus or Streptococcus

Clubbing of the Fingers


Vasodilation with increased blood flow to the distal portion of the digits and changes in connective tissue, possibly from hypoxia, changes in innervation, genetics, or platelet-derived growth factor from fragments of platelet clumps.


Seen in congenital heart disease, interstitial lung disease and lung cancer, inflammatory bowel disease, and malignancies

Onycholysis


Painless separation of the whitened opaque nail plate from the pinker translucent nail bed


Local cause: trauma from excess manicuring, psoriasis, fungal infection, allergic reaction to nail cosmetics


Systemic cause: diabetes, anemia, photosensitive drug reactions, hyperthyroidism, peripheral ischemia, bronchiectasis, syphilis

Terry's Nails


Nail plate turns white, a distal band of reddish brown


Liver disease, usually cirrhosis, heart failure, diabetes, decreased vascularity and increased connective tissue in nail bed

White Spots (Leukonychia)


Trauma to nail beds


Pattern is typical in overly vigorous and repeated manicuring

Transverse White Bands (Mees' Lines)


Curving transverse lines


Arsenic poisoning, heart failure, Hodgkin's disease, chemotherapy, carbon monoxide poisoning, and leprosy

Transverse Linear Depressions (Beau's Lines)


Temporary disruption of proximal nail growth from systemic illness


Timing of illness may be estimated by measuring the distance of the line from the nail bed


Severe illness, trauma, cold exposure if Raynaud's disease is present

Pitting


Punctuate depressions


Caused by defective layering of the superficial nail plate


Psoriasis, Reiter's syndrome, sarcoidosis, alopecia areata, localized atopic or chemical dermatitis

Tinea Versicolor


Fungal infection of the skin


Hypo or hyperpigmentation, scaly macules on the trunk, neck and upper arms

Pityriasis Rosea

Reddish oval ringworn-like papules or plagues

Trichotillomania

hair loss from pulling, plucking, or twisting hair. Hair shafts are broken and of varying lengths. More common in children, often in settings of family or psychosocial stress

Tinea Capitis ("Ringworm")

Round scaling patches of alopecia. Hairs are broken off close to the surface of the scalp. Usually caused by fungal infection from Trichophyton tonsurans from humans, less commonly from microsporum canis from dogs or cats