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Essential Dermatology for GPs

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Title: Essential Dermatology for GPs


1
Essential Dermatology for GPs
  • The Itchy Patient
  • Lucy Scriven

2
(No Transcript)
3
  • Itching may be due to an underlying skin
    condition
  • Eczemas
  • Scabies, lice, threadworms
  • Psoriasis (sometimes)
  • Insect bites
  • Exanthems
  • Lichen planus
  • Nodular prurigo
  • Bullous pemphigoid
  • Polymorphic light eruption

4
Whats this?
  • Pompholyx

5
  • PLE

6
  • Bullous pemphigoid

7
  • Eczema

8
  • Lichen planus

9
  • Psoriasis

10
  • Scabies

11
  • Papular urticaria

12
What if they are just itchy?
Pruritus Itchy skin in the absence of any
obvious dermatological condition
  • Generalised Pruritus
  • Localised Pruritus
  • Medications
  • Dermatological conditions with subtle signs
  • Systemic disease
  • Psychogenic
  • Aquagenic pruritus
  • Idiopathic
  • Brachioradial pruritus
  • Notalgia paraesthetica

13
  • Up to 50 of pts will have no clear cause
    idiopathic pruritus
  • This should be a diagnosis of exclusion!
  • So we need a logical approach to try to
    ascertain a cause.......

14
  • STEP 1 TAKE A CAREFUL HISTORY
  • Onset, duration, pattern, effect on sleep, past
    history of skin disease, contacts, response to
    treatments so far
  • Medications
  • Opioids, Statins, ACEI, Digoxin
  • Need to discontinue suspected drug for a few
    weeks if possible
  • Systemic disease
  • Liver disease, renal failure, haematological
    disorders, thyroid disease, paraneoplastic

15
  • Localised Pruritus 2 conditions which cause
    localised areas of itching / burning
  • Brachioradial pruritus - around elbow and
    extensor surface of forearm
  • Notalgia paraesthetica mid-scapular area
  • Consider capsaicin cream
  • thinly od increased to
  • maximum qds over 2wks.
  • Treat for 8 wks
  • Or try gabapentin or low
  • dose amitriptyline.

16
  • Aquagenic pruritus
  • Patients complain of intense pricking itch on
    contact with water or change of skin temperature
  • Do not develop a rash
  • Responds poorly to antihistamines
  • May respond to phototherapy

17
  • STEP 2 EXAMINE THE PATIENT CLOSELY
  • Dry skin / asteototic eczema
  • Common cause, especially in the elderly in winter
  • Signs may be subtle
  • FEEL the skin!
  • Look closely for fine scale
  • Excoriations
  • Bruising
  • Lichen simplex chronicus

18
  • Asteototic eczema

19
  • Excoriations

20
  • Butterfly distribution

21
  • Lichen simplex chronicus

22
  • Dermographic urticaria
  • Should be reproducible

23
  • STEP 3 - ? SYSTEMIC DISEASE
  • Liver disease, renal failure, haematological
    disorders (e.g. Iron deficiency anaemia,
    polycythaemia, Hodgkins lymphoma), thyroid
    disease, paraneoplastic phenomena, pregnancy
  • Thorough history and examination to include
    checking for enlarged lymph nodes and
    hepatosplenomegaly

24
  • Screening investigations in pruritus
  • Full blood count
  • Ferritin
  • CRP
  • Routine biochemistry (UE, LFT, bone, glucose)
  • Thyroid function
  • Antimitochondrial antibody (1 biliary cirrhosis)
  • Urinalysis
  • Chest X ray
  • Consider immunoglobulins and plasma
    electrophoresis in older pts

25
  • STEP 4 - ? PSYCHOGENIC
  • Anxiety / depression can cause or be caused by
    pruritus, esp in older pts
  • Delusions of parasitosis
  • Patient is convinced that a parasite /
    infestation is living in their skin
  • May bring inorganic matter to the consultation
  • Excoriations often seen but nothing else no
    burrows, no urticated papules

26
  • Idiopathic Pruritus
  • No identifiable cause found in up to 50 pts
  • Can cause persistent and widespread itching and
    often extensive excoriation
  • Common in 7th decade and beyond

27
Management
  • Treat any underlying cause
  • Provide a patient information leaflet
  • General measures
  • Liberal emollients if at all dry keep in fridge
  • Sedating antihistamines e.g. Hydroxyzine 25-50mg
    nocte /- 10mg tds through the day if required.
    Use periodically as tolerance may develop
  • Topical agents e.g. 1 or 2 menthol in Aqueous
    cream, Eurax cream, Balneum Plus / Dermol
  • Phototherapy may help in recalcitrant cases

28
  • Manage any features of anxiety or depression
  • Consider low dose amitriptyline (25-75mg nocte)
  • If associated with hepatic or renal disease or
    malignancy
  • Can be difficult to treat
  • Naltrexone and rifampicin have been reported as
    helpful in renal disease
  • Cholestyramine can be effective if secondary to
    liver disease
  • Avoid aggravating factors
  • Reduce damage from scratching
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