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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
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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 • Apply a systematic approach to their diagnosis • Know the modalities used in their treatment • Understand basic principles of topical therapy
Dermatologic Diagnosis Approach is same as for any other medical condition: • History • Examination • Formulate differential diagnosis • Apply investigations to confirm/rule out
Dermatologic Diagnosis Use whatever algorithm you like: • TTIINNMAP • VITTAMIN DD • CITTIN VD
Tools Used in Dermatologic Assessment • Our ears • Our eyes • Our hands • Our noses (thankfully infrequently!) • Lab tests • Biopsies • Scrapings/clippings • Blood and urine samples
Questions to ask • Onset • Pattern • Skin symptoms • Systemic symptoms • Related factors • Environmental • Occupational • Other medical conditions • Drugs • Others affected? • To name a few…
Herpes Zoster • VZV reactivation • Pain may precede rash • Usually dermatomal • Crusts usually fall off in 2-3 weeks • Worse in immunocomprimised, elderly
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
Ophthalmic Zoster - Treatment • Hutchinson’s sign • Refer to ophthalmologist urgently • 50% complications if antivirals not given
Tinea infections • Dermatophytes, candida • Topical antifungals • Keep dry! • If resistant/severe consider • Scraping • DM, immunocomprimised • PO antifungals
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
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
Psoriasis • Peaks in 20s and 50s • Multifactorial • Exacerbated by trauma, infections, drugs, winter • 5-8% have psoriatic arthritis
Psoriasis - Treatment • Topical tar (ick!) • High - ultrahigh potency steroids • Vitamin D analogues • Phototherapy • Immunosuppressive agents
Topical Therapy • Choice of vehicle important: • Powder • Paste • Solutions (water or alcohol based) • Gels • Lotions • Creams • Ointments
Topical Therapy • Usually only a thin layer needed • 1 gram = 10 cm x 10 cm area • OD to BID usually sufficient
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
Topical Steroids - Examples (by potency) Low Hydrocortisone 1 % Medium Betamethasone 0.1% High Mometasone Ultrahigh Augmented betamethasone
Topical Steroids - Adverse Fx • Irritation • Hypopigmentation • Skin breakdown • Rebound phenomenon • Atrophy • Striae • Systemic adsorbsion • And many more!
When to biopsy • Change in: • Colour • Size (<6 mm) • Shape • Especially if weeks to months, rather than months to years • Bleeding • Any doubt