Chronic Blistering Dermatoses Part 2 David M. Bracciano, D.O. Pregnancy- Related Dermatoses       Intrahepatic Cholestasis of Pregnancy Polymorphic Eruption of Pregnancy Herpes (pemphigoid) gestationis purity Urticarial Papules and.

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Transcript Chronic Blistering Dermatoses Part 2 David M. Bracciano, D.O. Pregnancy- Related Dermatoses       Intrahepatic Cholestasis of Pregnancy Polymorphic Eruption of Pregnancy Herpes (pemphigoid) gestationis purity Urticarial Papules and.

Chronic Blistering Dermatoses
Part 2
David M. Bracciano, D.O.
Pregnancy- Related
Dermatoses
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Intrahepatic Cholestasis of Pregnancy
Polymorphic Eruption of Pregnancy
Herpes (pemphigoid) gestationis
purity Urticarial Papules and Plaques of
Pregnancy (PUPPP)
Papular Dermatitis of Pregnancy
purity Folliculitis of Pregnancy
Intrahepatic Cholestasis of
Pregnancy
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Generalized purities and jaundice
No primary skin lesions, secondary
excoriations
Caused by cholestasis, occurs late in
pregnancy, resolves after delivery
0.5% of pregnancies
Tx; oral steroids
Polymorphic Eruption of
Pregnancy
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Classification of all purity inflammatory
dermatoses of pregnancy:
Toxemic rash of pregnancy
Pruigo annularis
EM gestationis
PUPPP
purity Folliculitis of Pregnancy
Polymorphic Eruption of
Pregnancy
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Pruritic inflammatory dermatoses of
pregnancy occur in 1 of every 120 to
240
Treatment and prognosis is similar in
subtypes
Pruritic Urticarial Papules and
Plaques of Pregnancy (PUPP)
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First reported in 1979
Erythematous papules and plaques that
begin as 1-2 mm lesions within the
abdominal striae
Spread over the course of a few days to
involve the abdomen, buttocks, thighs
Upper chest, face, and mucous
membranes spared
PUPPP
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Lesions coalesce to form urticarial plaques
Intense pruritis is characteristic
Primigravidas 75% of the time, usually does
not recur with subsequent pregnancies
Begins late in third trimester and resolves
with delivery
May be associated with increase weight gain
PUPPP
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Histology: perivascular infiltrate in
upper and mid dermis, epidermis
normal
Tx: topical or oral steroids
Papular Dermatitis of
Pregnancy
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Pruritic generalized eruption of 3-5 mm
erythematous papule surmounted by a
small, firm, central crust
May erupt at any time during pregnancy
and resolve with delivery
Marked elevation of urine HCG
Tx; oral steroids, may recur in
subsequent pregnancies
Prurigo Gestationis (Besnier)
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purity, excoriated papules of the
proximal limbs and upper trunk
Onset is 20-34 weeks gestation
Clears in postpartum period and does
not recur
Tx: topical steroids
Pruritic Folliculitis of
Pregnancy
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2nd or 3rd trimester
Small follicular pustules scattered widely
over the trunk
May be a type of hormonally induced
acne
Impetigo Herpetiformis
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Form of severe pustular psoriasis occurring in
pregnancy
Acute, usually febrile onset of grouped
pustules on an erythematous base
Begins in the groin, axillae, and neck
Increased WBC, hypocalcemia
Recurs with pregnancy, fetal death due to
placental insufficiency
Tx; prednisone 1mg/kg
Cicatricial Pemphigoid (Benign
Mucosal Pemphigoid)
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Vesicles which quickly rupture, leaving
erosions and ulcers with scarring
Primarily occur on mucous membranes,
conjunctiva (66%) and oral mucosa
(90%)
Oral mucosa may be the only affected
site for years; desquamative gingivitis
of buccal mucosa
Cicatricial Pemphigoid
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Tends to affect middle-aged to elderly women
2:1 female/male
Ddx; oral lichen planus (biopsy and IF)
Chronic disease that may lead to slowly
progressive shrinkage of the ocular mucous
membranes and blindness
Also occurs in pharynx, esophagus, larynx,
nose, penis, vagina, anal mucosa, deafness
Cicatricial Pemphigoid
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Cutaneous lesions in 25%; tense bullae
Bullae heal with or without scarring, occur on
the face, scalp, neck, and inguinal region and
extremities
Some pts may have antibodies targeted
against classic bullous pemphigoid antigens
and should be classified as “mucosal
predominate bullous pemphigoid”
Chronic course, pts health not usually
affected
IgA antibodies may explain mucosal scarring
Cicatricial Pemphigoid
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Little tendency to remission (unlike
bullous pemphigoid)
Subtypes include types that target
basement membrane zone antigens
(laminin, glycoproteins, )
Cicatricial Pemphigoid
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Direct IF testing C3 and IgG at the
lamina lucida in 80-95%
Tx: mild cases topical steroids
(Temovate/Orabase), intralesional
triamcinolone every 2-4 weeks
Tx: Dapsone, prednisone, Azathioprine
or cyclophosphamide
Epidermolysis Bullosa
Acquisita
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Antibodies to Type VII collagen
Skin fragility, healing with scars
Bullous eruption, scaring, milia
Need to exclude all other bullous
diseases: porphyria cutanea tarda,
pemphigoid, pemphigus, dermatitis
herpetiformis, and bullous drug
eruption
Epidermolysis Bullosa
Acquisita
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Tx; unsatisfactory, steroids, dapsone,
colchicine, IV Immunoglobulin,
Cyclosporin
Dermatitis Herpetiformis
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Chronic, relapsing, severely purity
disease
Grouped symmetrical, polymorphous,
erythematous-based lesions
May be papular, papulovesicular,
vesiculobullous, bullous, or urticarial
Itching and burning are intense
Spontaneous remissions lasting a week
Dermatitis Herpetiformis
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Eruption usually symmetrical
Scalp, nuchal area, posterior axillary folds,
sacral region, buttocks, knees, forearms
Pruriginous papules are a common feature
Vesicles are more common than bullae;
however all types of these lesions may be
present in one patient
Course of the disease is generally lifelong,
with prolonged remissions being rare
Dermatitis Herpetiformis
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Very few patients with DH ever have diarrhea
although DH is associated with Glutensensitive-enteropathy (GSE)
87% of pts with DH and IgA deposits in the
skin are HLA-B8 positive (like GSE)
Gluten is a protein found in cereals except for
rice, oats, and corn
IgA antibodies are formed in the jejunum,
may deposit in the skin
Dermatitis Herpetiformis
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Associated with; Thyroid disorders,
small bowel lymphoma, non-Hodgkins
lymphoma
70% of pts have abnormalities of the
jejunal mucosa
Gluten-free diet decreases Dapsone
dose requirements after 3-4 months
Dermatitis Herpetiformis
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Ddx: pemphigoid, EM, scabies, contact
dermatitis, atopic dermatitis, eczema,
insect bites, pruigo nodularis
IgA in a granular pattern in the
dermal papillae in normal skin is
specific and pathognomonic for DH
Dermatitis Herpetiformis
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IgA deposits may be focal, so multiple
biopsies may be needed.
Deposits of the antibody are more often
seen in previously involved skin or
normal appearing skin adjacent to
involved skin
Dermatitis Herpetiformis
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Equal male:female
Onset between 20 to 40 years
Tx: Dapsone 50-300mg daily (hemolytic
anemia, methemoglobinemia, check G6PD
prior to tx) monitor Hct,WBCs, LFTs
Tx: Sulfapyridine 0.5g QID to 2-4g/day
Gluten-free diet will decrease need for meds
or allow pt to go off them Celiac Society
Linear IgA Bullous Dermatosis
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Subepidermal blisters, a neutrophillic
infiltrate, circulating IGA antibasement
membrane zone antibody
Deposition of IgA antibody at the
dermoepidermal junction by direct IF
Linear IgA Bullous Dermatosis
Adult Form
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Acquired autoimmune blistering disease
Clinical pattern similar to dermatitis
herpetiformis, or with vesicles and bullae in a
bullous pemphigoid-like appearance
50% mucous membrane involvement
Oral and conjunctival lesions may be scarring
No association with enteropathy or with HLAB8
Tends to remit over several years
Linear IgA Bullous Dermatosis
Adult Form
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Linear IgA dermatosis can occur as a druginduced disease:
Self-limited, less mucosal involvement, usually
does not have circulating autoantibody
IgA is usually deposited in the subbasal
lamina area
Vanco, Lithium, amiodarone, captopril, PCN,
lasix, dilantin, and others
Linear IgA Bullous Dermatosis
Adult Form
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Histo: papillary dermal microabscess with
neutrophils, subepidermal bullae may be seen
with neutrophils and eosinophils
Direct IF: homogeneous linear deposition of
IgA is present at the BMZ
Indirect IF: few will have circulating IgA
autoantibody with anti-BMZ specificity
Tx: Dapsone, topical steroids
Linear IgA Bullous Dermatosis
Childhood Form
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Chronic Bullous Disease of Childhood:
acquired, self-limited bullous disease
Onset by 2 or 3, remits by age 13
Bullae develop on erythematous or normal
appearing skin
Trunk, buttocks, genitalia, and thighs
Perioral and scalp lesions are common, oral
lesions not uncommon
Bullae arranged in a rosette or annular array
“cluster of jewels”
Linear IgA Bullous Dermatosis
Childhood Form
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Histo: subepidermal bullae filled with
neutrophils, eosinophils may predominate
Direct IF: linear deposition of IgA at the BMZ
Indirect IF: positive for circulating IgA
antibodies in 50%
Tx: Sulfapyridine or dapsone, topical steroids
Transient Acantholytic
Dermatosis
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Over age 50, fragile vesicles, limited
extent, sparse, limited duration
Rapid crusting, keratotic erosion <1cm
Usually chest, shoulder
Direct IF is negative
Tx: topical steroids, isotretinoin
Nutritional Diseases
Andrews Chapter 22
David M. Bracciano, D.O.
Nutritional Diseases
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Caused by insufficiency or excess of
dietary essentials
Common in underdeveloped countries,
infants and children
Often pts have features of several
disorders if diet is generally restricted
Alcoholism is the main cause in
developed countries
Nutritional Diseases
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Postoperative pts, psychiatric pts
(anorexia nervosa, bulimia), surgical or
inflammatory bowel dysfunction,
Crohn’s
Hypovitaminosis A
(Phrynoderma)
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Vitamin A: fat soluble found in milk, fish oil,
liver, eggs, and as carotenoids in plants
Common in children in developing world
Developed countries found in diseases of fat
malabsorption; Crohn’s, celiac, cystic fibrosis,
cholestatic liver disease
Vitamin A required for keratinization of
mucosal surfaces
Hypovitaminosis A
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Abnormal keratinization leads to increased
mortality from inflammatory disease of the
gut and lung ie; diarrhea and pneumonia
Phrynoderma or “toadskin” resembles
keratosis pilaris.
Keratotic papules over extremities and
shoulders arising from pilosebaceous follicles
Hypovitaminosis A
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Eruption begins on thighs or upper
arms. Spreads to shoulders, abdomen,
back, and buttocks, face and neck
Skin displays dryness and scaling
Hypovitaminosis A
Ocular Findings
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Major cause of blindness in children in the
developing world!
Earliest finding is delayed adaptation to the
dark (nyctalopia)
Night blindness, xeropthalmia, xerosis
corneae, keratomalacia
Bitot’s Spots; circumscribed areas of
xerosis of the conjuctiva lateral to the cornea
Hypovitaminosis A
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Diagnosis: based on eye findings,
serum Vitamin A level.
Tx: 300,000 IU Vitamin A
Hypervitaminosis A
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Skin findings similar to side effects of
Retinoid therapy. Children are at greater
risk.
Loss of hair and coarseness, loss of
eyebrows, exfoliation and pigmentation
of skin, clubbing, hepatosplenomegaly,
anemia, increased LFTs, pseudotumor
cerebri with papilledema
Hypervitaminosis A
Adults
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Early signs are dryness of the lips and
anorexia. Followed by bone and joint pains,
follicular hyperkeratosis, branny
desquamation of the skin, loss of scalp hair
and eyebrows, dystrophy of the nails.
Fatigue, myalgia, depression, anorexia, liver
disease
Birth defects with excess Vit A in
pregnancy
Vitamin D
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Deficiency of Vitamin D causes alopecia,
osteomalacia
Vitamin D overdose can cause
hypercalcemia and calcinosis.
Vitamin E Deficiency
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Most common in infants of low birth
weight
Peripheral edema, progressive
neuromyopathy, and ophthalmoplegia
Vitamin K Deficiency
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Dietary deficiency of vitamin K, a fat
soluble vitamin, does not occur in adults
because it is synthesized by bacteria in
the large intestine
Liver disease causes deficiency
Drugs: coumadin, salicylates,
cholestyramine
Vitamin K Deficiency
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Decrease in the vitamin K-dependent
clotting factor II, VII, IX, and X.
Purpura, hemorrhage, and ecchymosis.
Tx: 5 to 10 mg/day IM Vit K for 2-3
days
Vitamin B1 Deficiency
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Thiamine deficiency results in Beriberi
Edema, and peripheral neuropathy
Vitamin B2 Deficiency
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Riboflavin deficiency is seen most often in
alcoholics.
Phototherapy for neonatal icterus, boric acid
ingestion, hypothyroidism, chlorpromazine
Oral-ocular-genital Syndrome: angular
chelitis, atrophic tongue, photophobia,
blepharitis, confluent dermatitis of scrotum
Tx: 5mg Riboflavin qd
Vitamin B6- Pyridoxine
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Deficiency: occurs in uremia and
cirrhosis
Seborrheic dermatitis, glossitis, chelitis,
conjunctivitis, confusion, neuropathy
Excess: subepidermal vesicular
dermatosis, peripheral sensory
neuropathy
Vitamin B12 Deficiency
Cyanocobalamin
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Absorbed through the distal ileum after
binding to gastric intrinsic factor in an acid
ph.
Deficiency caused by: decreased intrinsic
factor, achlorhydria, malabsorption syndromes
(pancreatic, sprue)
Because of large body stores in adults,
deficiency occurs 3 to 6 years after onset of
GI disease!
Vitamin B12 Deficiency
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Glossitis, hyperpigmentation
accentuated in exposed areas
resembling Addison’s disease
Megaloblastic anemia, weakness,
paresthesias, ataxia
Tx: IM B12, neuro defects may not
improve
Folic Acid Deficiency
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Diffuse hyperpigmentation, glossitis,
chelitis, and megaloblastic anemia
Scurvy
Vitamin C Deficiency
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Most common vitamin deficiency dxd by
dermalologists
Elderly alcoholics and psychiatric pts
Scurvy
“The Four H’s”
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Hemorrhagic signs
Hyperkeratosis of the hair follicles
Hypochondriasis
Hematologic abnormalities
Scurvy
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Perifollicular petechiae and ecchymoses,
subungual, subconjunctival, intramuscular,
and intraarticular hemorrhage
“Corkscrew hairs”; hairshafts are curled in
follicles capped by keratotic plugs
Hemorrhagic gingivitis; bleeding gums,
epistaxsis, anemia
Scurvy
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Dx: serum ascorbic acid level
Tx: ascorbic acid 800-1000mg qd x 1
week
Niacin Deficiency
Pellagra
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Nicotinic acid, vitamin B3, niacin or its
precursor tryptophan is associated with
a diet entirely composed of corn, millet
or sorghum
Other vitamin defficiencies or
malnutrition coexist
Most cases are alcoholics in developed
countries
Pellegra
Causes
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Carcinoid tumors, which divert
tryptophan to serotonin
Intestinal parasites esp; hookworm
GI diseases ie; Chron’s
IV alimentation
Anorexia nervosa
Meds; Isoniazid, azathioprine, 5-FU,
Hydantoins
Pelegra
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Chronic disease affecting GI tract, CNS, skin
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“3 D’s”; diarrhea, dementia, dermatitis
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Dermatitis: photosensative eruption, perineal
lesions, thickening and pigmentation over
boney prominences, seborrheic dermatitis-like
eruption on face
Pellegra
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Photosensitive eruption on face, neck, chest
(Casal’s necklace), eruption may be vesicular
or bullous (wet pellegra)
After several phototoxic events the skin
shows hyperpigmentation, scaling, a copper
hue
Scrotal and perineal erosions, fissures,
angular chelitis
Pellegra
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CNS and GI symptoms may occur
without skin changes; apathy, muscle
weakness, parasthesias, dizziness,
psychosis
Disease is progressive, majority of pts
die in 4-5 years if untreated
Pellegra
Diagnosis and Treatment
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Diet: Animal protiens, eggs, milk,
vegetables
100mg nicotinamide qid
Skin lesions begin to resolve within 24
hours of tx
Biotin Deficiency
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Biotin is universally available and is
produced by intestinal bacteria
Deficiency is rare, can occur in short gut
or malabsorption
Dermatitis is perioral; pathcy, red,
eroded lesions on the face and groin
Candida overgrowth of lesions occurs
Biotin
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Alopecia including loss of eyebrows and
eyelashes
Neuro: depression, lethargy, parasthesias
Infants: hypotonia, lethagry seizures,
developmental delays
Inherited form: detecting organic
aminoaciduria with 3-hydroxyisovaleric acid
Tx: 10mg Biotin qd Skin lesions resolve
rapidly, but neuro damage may be permenant
Zinc Deficiency
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Inherited or Aquired
Inherited: Acrodermatitis enteropathica
Premies at risk due to inadequate body
zinc stores
Weaning from breast from breast milk
precipitates clinical zinc deficiency
Parental nutrition without adequate zinc
content may contribute
Zinc
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Acquired: alcoholics, bowel disease,
anorexia, AIDS
Zinc requirements increase with
metabolic stress
Diets containing mainly cereal grains
are high in phytate, which binds zinc,
Middle East, North Africa
Zinc
Dermatitis
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Pustular and bullous, acral and perioral
Patchy, red, dry, scaling with exudation
and crusts. Angular chelitis and
stomatitis
Nail dystrophy, alopecia
Diarrhea, growth retardation, CNS
Histo: vacuolation of the keratinocytes
of the upper stratum malpighii
Zinc Deficiency
Diagnosis and Treatment
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Characteristic skin findings, acral or perioral
dermatitis
Chronic diaper rash with diarrhea in an infant
should lead to evaluation for zinc deficiency
Diagnosis: low serum zinc, alkaline
phosphatase
Tx: zinc sulfate 1-2 mg/kg/day
Tx: acrodermatitis enteropathica is lifelong
Essential Fatty Acid Defficiency
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Lbw infants, bowel disease, alimentation
Dermatitis similar to zinc def : xerosis, EFA’s
constitute 25% of the fatty acids of the
stratum corneum
Widespread erythema, intertriginous weeping
eruption, infection, alopecia
Decrease in linoleic acid and an increase in
palmitoleic and oleic acids
EFA Deficiency
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Ratio of eicosatrienoic acid to
arachidonic acid of >0.4 is diagnostic
Tx: Intralipid 10% IV
Iron Deficiency
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Common in menstration
Mucocutaneous; glossitis, angular
chelitis, pruitus, telogen effluvium
Plummer-Vinson syndrome:
microcytic anemia, dysphagia, glossitis
(middle aged women) thin lips, narrow
mouth, koilonchia in 50%
Post-cricoid esophageal web
Iron Deficiency
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Diagnosis: serum iron (Fe+)
Tx: iron sulfate 325 mg tid
Selenium Deficiency
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IV alimentation, poor soil selenium
content, lbw infants
Children: hypopigmentation of skin and
hair (psuedoalbinism), leukonychia
Cardiomyopathy, muscle pain, elevated
muscle enzymes (cpk)
Tx: 3 ug/kg/day selenium
Protein-energy Malnutrition
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Spectrum of diseases: marasmus,
kwashiorkor, and marasmic kwashiorkor
Endemic in developing world
Marasmus; def of protein and calories,
children < 60% of IBW without edema
Kwashiorkor; protein def, 60-80% of
IBW with edema or hypoproteinemia
Marasmus/ Kwashiorkor
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Cystic fibrosis, dietary restrictions
Marasmus: skin is dry, wrinkled, loose
“Monkey facies”; due to lose of buccal
fat pad, no edema
Kwashiorkor; edema, potbelly, hair and
areas of skin are hypopigmented, hair is
red, gray to white
Kwashiorkor
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Africans call them “Red Children”
“Flag Sign”; alternating bands of pale
and dark hair along a single strand
correspond to periods of good and poor
nutrition
“Mosaic skin”; areas of
hyper/hypopigmentation resemble
peeling paint
Carotenemia and Lycopenemia
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Excessive ingestion of : carots, oranges,
squash, spinach, turnips, corn, beans, butter,
eggs, pumpkins, sweet potatoes, papaya
(seen in Kirksville)
Yellowish discoloration of skin, palms, soles,
central face
Carotenemia occurs in vegitarians
Lyconpenemia; red foods, beets, tomatoes,
chili beans (flatulence), berries leads to
reddish discoloration of skin aka “K.C.
Chiefs’ syndrome