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Dermatology in Family Medicine 1

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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. Objectives. Use appropriate terminology to describe common skin presentations seen in family medicine - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Dermatology in Family Medicine 1 Clerkship Briefing Dr. Clayton Dyck
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Page 1: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1

Dermatology in Family Medicine 1

Clerkship Briefing

Dr. Clayton Dyck

Page 2: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1

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

Clerkship Briefing

Dr. Clayton Dyck

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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

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A call from Victoria Beach…

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Dermatologic Diagnosis

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

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Dermatologic Diagnosis

Use whatever algorithm you like: TTIINNMAP VITTAMIN DD CITTIN VD

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

Biopsies Scrapings/clippings Blood and urine samples

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Questions to ask Onset Pattern Skin symptoms Systemic symptoms Related factors

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

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An overview of terms…

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macule

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papule

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plaque

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nodule

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pustule

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vesicle

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bulla

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ulcer

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wheal

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purpura

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excoriation

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papulosquamous

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Some Common Conditions

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

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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

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

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

Scraping DM, immunocomprimised PO antifungals

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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

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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

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

drugs, winter 5-8% have psoriatic arthritis

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

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Topical Therapy Choice of vehicle important:

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

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

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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

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

Medium Betamethasone 0.1%

High Mometasone

Ultrahigh Augmented betamethasone

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

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Nevus

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Superficial spreading melanoma

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Basal cell carcinoma

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Cherry hemangioma

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Actinic keratosis

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When to biopsy Change in:

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

to years Bleeding Any doubt

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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

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Page 54: Dermatology in Family Medicine 1

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

weeks

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

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

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

Impetigo Eczema Idonomata

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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

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Some short snappers

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Pityriasis rosea

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paronychia

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Molluscum contagiosum

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rosacea

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Stasis dermatitis

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wart

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Subungual hematoma

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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

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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

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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

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Questions? Or itching to leave?


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