Fitzpatrick's Color Atlas and Synopsis of Clinical Dermatology, Seventh Edition

APPROACH TO DERMATOLOGIC DIAGNOSIS

There are two distinct clinical situations regarding the nature of skin changes:

I. The skin changes are incidental findings in well and ill individuals noted during the routine general physical examination

• “Bumps and blemishes”: many asymptomatic lesions that are medically inconsequential may be present in well and ill persons and are not the reason for the visit to the physician; every general physician should be able to recognize these lesions to differentiate them from asymptomatic but important, e.g., malignant, lesions.

Important skin lesions not noted by the patient but that must not be overlooked by the physician: e.g., atypical nevi, melanoma, basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, café-au-lait macules in von Recklinghausen disease, and xanthomas.

II. The skin changes are the chief complaint of the patient

• “Minor” problems: e.g., localized itchy rash, “rash,” rash in groin, nodules such as common moles and seborrheic keratoses.

• “4-S”: serious skin signs in sick patients

SERIOUS SKIN SIGNS IN SICK PATIENTS

Generalized red rash with fever

• Viral exanthems

• Rickettsial exanthems

• Drug eruptions

• Bacterial infections with toxin production.

Generalized red rash with blisters and prominent mouth lesions

• Erythema multiforme (major)

• Toxic epidermal necrolysis

• Pemphigus

• Bullous pemphigoid

• Drug eruptions

Generalized red rash with pustules

• Pustular psoriasis (von Zumbusch)

• Drug eruptions

Generalized rash with vesicles

• Disseminated herpes simplex

• Generalized herpes zoster

• Varicella

• Drug eruptions

Generalized red rash with scaling over whole body

• Exfoliative erythroderma

Generalized wheals and soft-tissue swelling

• Urticaria and angioedema

Generalized purpura

• Thrombocytopenia

• Purpura fulminans

• Drug eruptions

Generalized purpura that can be palpated

• Vasculitis

• Bacterial endocarditis

Multiple skin infarcts

• Meningococcemia

• Gonococcemia

• Disseminated intravascular coagulopathy

Localized skin infarcts

• Calciphylaxis

• Atherosclerosis obliterans

• Atheroembolization

• Warfarin necrosis

• Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome

Facial inflammatory edema with fever

• Erysipelas

• Lupus erythematosus


Previous
Page
Next
Page

Contents


If you find an error or have any questions, please email us at admin@doctorlib.org. Thank you!