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Seborrheic dermatitis. Chronic papulosquamous conditionOccur on sebum-rich area of scalp, face and trunkOccur as an isolated condition or in conjunction with other disorder such as blepharitis, acne vulgaris, ocular rosaceaVaries from mild dandruff to exfoliative erythroderma. Seborrheic dermatit
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1. Seborrheic dermatitis
2. Seborrheic dermatitis Chronic papulosquamous condition
Occur on sebum-rich area of scalp, face and trunk
Occur as an isolated condition or in conjunction with other disorder such as blepharitis, acne vulgaris, ocular rosacea
Varies from mild dandruff to exfoliative erythroderma
3. Seborrheic dermatitis (cont.) Aggravated by change in humidity, change in season, trauma (e.g. scratching) or emotional stress
Associated with several systemic disease include AIDS, zinc deficiency, Parkinson disease
Frequently seen in patient who received psoralen with UVA therapy
4. Causative factor Malassezia globosa
Sebum production
Genetic susceptibility for inflammatory response
5. Malassezia and seborrheic dermatitis Lipophilic yeast
Found in normal skin
Research document supported relation between Malassezia and seborrheic dermatitis
:clinical response to antifungal drug
:increase in number of Malassezia in recurrence disease
6. Causes Malassezia are not the cause but are a cofactor link to T-cell depression, increase sebum level and activation of the alternative complement pathway
Skin barrier dysfunction prone to disease
Medication that induced flare up : auranofin, aurothioglucose, buspirone, chlorpromazine, cimetidine, ethionamide, gold, griseofulvin, haloperidol, interferon Alfa, lithium, methoxsalen, methyldopa, phenothiazines, psoralens, stanozolol, thiothixene and trioxsalen
7. Epidemiology Occurrence 1-3%
Variable age range include infant through adult
Increase rate of occurrence in infant and 4-5th decade of life
Male > female
African-American > Caucasian
8. Epidemiology (cont.) 34-83% found in AIDS
Higher rate of occurrence in DM, obesity, malabsorption, Parkinson disease, epilepsy
9. Etiology Unclear
Sebum and lipid level
:increase sebum and lipid level in Parkinson disease, African-American > Caucasian
:large and active sebaceous gland in newborn infant
10. Etiology (cont.) Immunologic response
:depress T-cell function lead to increase Malassezia growth
:increase natural killer cell activation
:increase inflammatory interleukin
Medication induced :found in Parkinson treated with specific neuroepileptic drug
11. Clinical Depend on age, skin type, presence or absence of concurrent systemic illness
Dry and flaky with white scale or greasy with crusting
Skin type 4-6
:reduce visible erythema
:hypo or hyperpigmented
12. Clinical (cont.) Increase in winter and early spring
Remission commonly in summer
13. Clinical finding in newborn infant Scale located throughout the scalp but also on face, chest, groin, neck, ears and eyelid
Cradle cap and napkin dermatitis appearance
Related to sebum overproduction
14. Clinical finding in newborn infant (cont.) Severe generalized seborrheic dermatitis may represent Leiner disease (exfoliative disorder with anemia, diarrhea, immunodeficiency, concomitants bacterial and candidial infection
16. Clinical finding in adult Involved scalp, face, chest, axillae, submammary area, groin, gluteal region
Scalp and face involvement
:most prominent around eyebrows, perinasal skin, postauricular area, ears, eyelids
17. Clinical finding in adult (cont.) :may extend from frontal scalp onto upper forehead
Perinasal and post auricular skin can appear either hypopigmented, hyperpigmented, erythematous
Crusting may be seen in inner ear and ear canal
18. Clinical finding in adult (cont.) Chest, axillae, groin, gluteal involvement is usually scaly with hypopigmentation or erythema beneath the scale
Occasionally bacterial superinfection
23. Clinical finding in immunocompromise Similar to normal adult but more extensive
More visible inflamed skin
Involvement include blepharitis, Meibomian gland occlusion result in scaling and burning of eyelids
Diffuse lesion at axillae, extremities and groin
24. Clinical finding in immunocompromise (cont.) Generalized seborrheic erythroderma is rare but more often May presented bacterial, candidial, dermatophyte superinfection Moist and extreme erythema plaques at torso and extremities