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Cutaneous Infection

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Title: Cutaneous Infection


1
Cutaneous Infection
2
Cutaneous Infections
  • Bacterial
  • Viral
  • Fungal
  • Mycobacterial
  • Protozoan
  • Ectoparasitic

3
Cutaneous Infections
  • Systemically invasive
  • Subdermal involvement
  • Skin limited
  • Stratum Corneum limited

4
Impetigo
  • Staph aureus or Strep pyogenes
  • Bullous variant caused most often by phage 2
    Staph that produces exotoxins
  • Highly contagious (day care nightmare)

5
Bullous Impetigo
6
Bullous impetigo
7
Nonbullous Impetigo
  • Honey colored crusted plaques
  • Seen in children 2-5 years old.
  • Rarely develops in intact skin.
  • Poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis
  • Presents with hematuria and proteinuria
  • Red cell casts

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Nonbullous Impetigo
10
Nonbullous Impetigo
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Treatment of Impetigo
  • Oral Antibiotics coverage of S. areus and
    Streptococcus
  • Topical Mupirocin

13
Folliculitis
  • Infection of the hair follicle
  • Most commonly staphylococcal
  • Involvement of the deep part of the follicle
    results in a furuncle (boil)
  • Differentiate from pseudofolliculitis, acne
    vulgaris and keratosis pilaris

14
Folliculits
15
Cellulitis and Erysipelas
  • Erysipelas involves superficial dermis while
    cellulitis involves the deep dermis and
    subcutaneous tissue.
  • Both often associated with fever and chills
  • Erysipelas is usually on face or legs
  • Recurrence is common (25) in erysipelas because
    of the lymphatic damage

16
Erysipelas
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Cellulitis
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Onycholysis due to Pseudomonas
19
Ecthyma gangrenosum
20
Malignant Otitis Externa
  • Seen in immunocompromised, particularly diabetics
  • Osteomyelitis of the skull base or temporal bone
  • Severe earache, worse at night
  • Caused by P. aurginosa

21
Malignant Otitis Externa
22
Acute Meningococcemia
  • Caused by Neisseria meningitidis
  • Meningitis is usually seen
  • Kills rapidly (within hours)
  • Transmitted through respiratory secretions, a
    viral infection may enhance ability to invade
    blood stream
  • Petechiae and erythematous macules or papules.
    Later, ecchymoses and skin necrosis

23
Meningococcemia
24
Meningococcemia
25
Mycobacterial infections
  • Atypical mycobacteria fish tank granuloma
  • Leprosy
  • Tuberculosis
  • Lupus vulgaris
  • Scrofuloderm

26
Fish Tank Granuloma
27
Herpes
  • Erythematous, vesicular rash
  • May be systemically ill especially eczema
    herpeticum
  • Zoster is reactivation of varicella
  • Involvement of V1 should prompt ophtho consult
    not steroids!!!

28
Herpes Simplex
  • Caused by HSV-1 and HSV-2
  • Infections occurs at the primary site,
    transported via neurons to dorsal root ganglion
    where latency is established
  • Pain, tenderness or tingling occur often before
    reactivation.
  • Grouped vesicles on erythematous base
  • Vesicles often umbilicated

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Herpes Simplex VirusEczema Herpeticum
33
Herpes Simplex VirusEczema Herpeticum
34
Herpes Simplex Virus
35
Herpes Simplex Virus
36
Herpes Simplex Virus
37
Varicella
  • Chicken Poxincubation about 14 days
  • Prodrome mild in children, more severe in
    adults
  • Eruptive Phase rose petal macule, then
    vesicle which becomes cloudy, begins on trunk and
    spreads, centripetal distribution
  • Varicella Zoster shingles, reactivation
  • Pain may last long after (postherpetic neuralgia)

38
Varicella
39
Varicella Zoster
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Varicella
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Molluscum Contagiosum
  • Double stranded DNA poxvirus
  • 2-5 mm discrete umbilicated papules
  • Spreads to areas of inflamed skin or injury
  • Common and disfiguring in patients with HIV. DDx
    of MC in this pop. includes crypto and other
    fungal infx
  • May be an STD in adults suprapubic and genital
    lesions
  • Most are self limited, but may last 2-4 years
  • Tx includes cryo, curettage, cantharidin, Aldara
    or no treatment.

44
Molluscum Contagiosum
  • Caused by pox virus
  • Characteristic umbillicated papules, molluscum
    bodies on biopsy
  • May be an STD in adults suprapubic and genital
    lesions
  • Giant molluscum in AIDS pts, ddx in this pop.
    includes crypto and other fungal infx
  • Tx includes cryo, curettage, cantharidin, Aldara
    or nothing they will spontaneously resolve

45
Molluscum Contagiosum
46
Molluscum Contagiosum
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Human Papilloma Viruses
  • Verrucae vulgarescommon wart
  • Verrucae planaflat warts
  • Verrucae plantaresplantar warts
  • Condyloma acuminatagenital warts

50
Human Papilloma Viruses
  • Verrucae vulgares HPV 2,4,29
  • Verrucae plana HPV 3,10,28,49
  • Verrucae plantares HPV 1
  • Condyloma acuminata HPV 6 and 11
  • HPV 16, 18, 26, 27, 30, 31, 33-5 and others

51
Verruca vulagaris
52
Verrucae Plana
53
Verrucae Plantares
54
Condyloma acuminita
55
Condyloma acuminita
56
Hand, foot, mouth disease
  • Usually coxsackievirus A16 and enterovirus 71
  • Oral lesions
  • 3-7mm oval vesicles with red border
  • Heal within 7 days

57
Hand, foot, mouth disease
58
Pityriasis Rosea
  • Begins with herald patch, then develops eruptive
    plaques 7-14 days later. Lasts about 6 weeks
  • About 2/3 of cases have history of preceding
    upper respiratory tract infection
  • Most common in fall and winter
  • Mean age 23 with most between ages 10 and 35
  • Most asymptomatic, but can be pruritic

59
Pityriasis Rosea
60
Pityriasis Rosea
  • 2-10cm round or oval papulosquamous plaques
  • Salmon colored with collarette of scale
  • Along skin lines Christmas tree pattern

61
Pityriasis Rosea Therapy
  • Self limited, so therapy often not required
  • If pruritic, phototherapy effective
  • Topical steroids sometimes helpful

62
Exanthems
  • Scarlet fever streptococcal erythrogenic toxin
  • Rubella
  • Erythema infectiosum parvovirus B19
  • Roseola infantum human herpes virus 6 and 7
  • Kawasaki syndrome

63
Scarlet Fever
64
Scarlet Fever
65
Scarlet Fever
66
Roseola infantum
67
Erythema Infectiosum
68
Erythema Infectiosum
69
Kawasaki Disease
70
Kawasaki Disease
71
Dermatophytes
  • Named for area involved tinea capitis, corporis,
    manum, facei, pedis, cruris, etc.
  • Incognito refers to tinea mistakenly treated
    with topical steroids
  • If there is scale, do KOH exam
  • Severe tinea capitis can lead to kerion, may
    result in scarring alopecia
  • Topical and systemic antifungals /-
    kearatolytics

72
Superficial Fungal Infections
  • Caused by dermatophytes Microsporum,
    Trichophyton, Epidermophyton
  • Tinea capitis ectothrix or endothrix
  • Tinea pedis athletes foot
  • Tinea cruris jock itch
  • Tinea corporis

73
Tinea Pedis
  • Interdigital web space type
  • Inflammatory vesicular form
  • Dry, Scaly moccassin type
  • Two feetone hand syndrome usually it is the
    hand used to scratch the feet

74
Tinea Pedis
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Tinea Corporis
78
Tinea Manum
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Tinea cruris
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Tinea Capitis
  • Most often T. tonsurans in U.S.A.
  • Four types black dot, seborrheic dermatitis
    type, pustular, and inflammatory (kerion)
  • Favus T. schoenleinii, thick crust of hyphae
    and skin debris (scutula)
  • Must treat systemically

84
Black-dot Tinea Capitis
85
Tinea capitis Inflammatory and Noninflammatory
86
Kerion
87
Black-dot Tinea Capitis
88
Favus
89
Candidiasis
  • Oral Candidiasis
  • Balanitis
  • Intertrigo
  • Angular Cheilitis (perleche)
  • Chronic paronychia
  • Look for satellite pustules

90
Cutaneous candidiasis
91
Tinea Versicolor
  • Caused by lipophilic yeast M. furfur (or p.
    ovale, depending on who you read)
  • Treat with topical or systemic antifungals
  • Frequently recurrent
  • Appearance variable depending on background skin
    color
  • KOH is spaghetti meatballs

92
Tinea Versicolor
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Seborrheic Dermatitis
  • Infants cradle cap, greasy yellow adherent
    crusts on the scalp vertex
  • Young children blepharitis and tinea amiantacea
  • Adults Yellow scale erythema on nasolabial
    folds, glabella, scalp hairline, in beard if
    present, post-auricular, concha, central chest,
    body folds
  • HIV/AIDS Frequently present and more severe

96
Seborrheic Dermatitis Therapy
  • Topical Steroids
  • Topical Antifungals
  • Topical Sulfacetamide
  • Frequent Washings with Zinc, Selenium or
    Salicylic acid shampoos

97
Seborrheic Dermatitis
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Scabies
  • Caused by Sarcoptes scabiei
  • Pregnant female mite burrows in the stratum
    corneum, lays eggs about 2-3 per day. Eggs hatch
    after about a week.
  • See burrows, papules, vesicles
  • In immunocompromised and elderly, can be crusted
    and hyperkeratotic (Norwegian scabies)

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Scabies burrow
104
Scabies
105
Crusted Scabies
106
Pediculosis
  • Head lice Pediculosis humanus var. capitis
  • Body lice Pediculosis humanus var. corporis
  • Pubic lice Pthirus pubis

107
Pediculosis humanus
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Pediculosis pubis
  • Presents as pruritus
  • Up to 30 have a sexually transmitted disease
  • Pubic area, medial thighs, abdomen, beards,
    eyelashes in children
  • Can see maculae ceruleae which are grayish blue
    macules 1-2 cm in diameter

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Pediculosis pubis
114
Tick-borne Diseases Dermacentor
Ixodes
115
Rocky Mountain spotted fever
  • Can be spotless (Westerman, E.)
  • Transmitted by Dermacentor ticks, infected with
    Rickettsia rickettsii
  • About 1 week after bite, fever(94),
    headache(88), myalgias(85), vomiting(60)
  • Rash is seen in about 85

116
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
  • Erythematous macules begin on ankles and wrists,
    then to palms and soles, then generalized
    (centrifugal distribution)
  • Eruption becomes petechial
  • Mortality in those untreated is estimated to be
    about 30
  • Preferred treatment is doxycycline.

117
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
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Brown Recluse Spider
  • Loxoscelidae reclusus aka fiddle-back spider
  • Bites occur when forced into contact with the
    skin.
  • Expanding blue gray macule around the puncture
    site which becomes necrotic,
  • Pain may become severe, associated with fever,
    chills, nausea, vomiting, myalgias
  • Hemolysis, thrompocytopenia, rare DIC more
    commonly seen in children

120
Brown Recluse Spider
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