Wednesday, January 15, 2020

[考生加油] Dermatological Recall: Chapter 30 Pityriasis Lichenoides

從2020/01/11之後,煜彬就想趕快把下半段完成,以免被以為選舉完心情不好。

Chapter 30 :: Pityriasis Lichenoides(苔蘚樣糠疹)

:: Stefan M. Schieke & Gary S. Wood
鄭煜彬(20200114)
PITYRIASIS LICHENOIDES(PL)
PITYRIASIS LICHENOIDES(PL)

EPIDEMIOLOGY

What age group has higher prevalence rate of PL?
Children & young adults
Which season has higher prevalence of PL?
Fall and winter.
How much is the male-to-female ratio of PL?
1.5~3: 1(M>F)
Which one is more common, PLC or PLEVA?
PLC, which is 3 to 6 times more common than PLEVA.
CLINICAL FEATURES

What is the divide of PLC & PLEVA?
No, they are in a spectrum, and usually coexist.
What is the symptoms of PL?
Asymptomatic> pruritic or burning
What is the features of PLC?
Recurrent crops of erythematous scaly papules, regressing over several weeks to months
What is the features of PLEVA?
Recurrent crops of erythematous papules with crusts, vesicles, pustules, erosions, or ulcers before regressing in weeks (shorter than PLC)
What feature determine the duration of PL in children?
Distribution(not the number of lesions)
What distribution of PL has longer duration?
Peripheral (distal extremities) > central (trunk) > diffuse
What is the “clinical pattern” of PLC & PLEVA individually?
PLC: papulosquamous lesions (scaly papules)
PLEVA: papulonecrotic lesions (papules with ulcer)
What is PLEVA with severe ulceration & fever?
Pityriasis lichenoides with ulceronecrosis & hyperthermia (PLUH) or febrile ulceronecrotic Mucha–Habermann disease (FUMHD)
What is the features of PLUH?
Fever, purpuric papulonodules with central ulcers up to several cms (larger than PLEVA/PLC)
What is the common locations of PL?
Trunk & proximal extremities (all skin/mucous membranes is possible, regional/segmental lesions also exists)
What is the common skin sequelae of PL?
Postinflammatory hypo/hyper-pigmentation
What disease does the remnant of PLC look like? 
Idiopathic guttate hypomelanosis (PLC left postinflammatory hypopigmentation actually)
What disease does the remnant of PLEVA look like? 
Smallpox-like scar
What is the difference between smallpox & PLEVA? 
Smallpox: all lesions are in the same stage
PLEVA: in various stages of evolution
COMPLICATIONS

What is the most common complication of PL?
Secondary infection
What is the complications of PLEVA?
Low-grade fever, malaise, headache, and arthralgia (like a mild flu)
What is the complicatiolns of PLUH or FUMHD?
High fever, malaise, myalgia, arthralgia, gastrointestinal, & CNS symptoms(like a severe flu, can be fatal)
What is the relationship of PL & lymphoma?
Almost no relationship. (Only very rare cases progress to MF)
ETIOLOGY

What could cause PL?
Unknown, can be infections(toxoplasma gondii & virus), estrogen-progesterone therapy, chemotherapy, radiocontrast iodide, influenza vaccine, & HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors.
What is the Immunohistologic difference between PLC & PLEVA?
PLEVA: CD8+ T cells with TIA-1 & granzyme B(cytotoxic) predominate
PLC: CD4+ T (helper) predominate, CD8+ T, FoxP3+ T (regulatory)
What is the difference of clonality between PLC & PLEVA?
PLEVA: half cases have clonality
PLC: minority has clonality
What is the possible pathogenesis of PL?
Clonal cytotoxic memory T-cell lymphoproliferative
response to one or more foreign antigens.
Which disease has most overlapping features with PL?
Lymphomatoid papulosis (LyP)
What is the difference between PL & LyP?
l   LyP (type A & C): large CD30+ atypical lymphoid cells.
l   LyP has CD4+ cells which lack 1 or more mature T-cell antigens(CD2, 3, & 5)
DIAGNOSIS

How to diagnose PL?
Clinical & pathological features. Blood test may show leukocytosis &CD4/CD8, but of little value.
PATHOLOGY

What are the common pathological features of PL?
An interface dermatitis of lymphocytes (denser & more wedge shaped in acute lesions), exocytosis, parakeratosis, & RBC extravasation.
What features may appear in acute variants of PL?  
1.      Necrotic keratinocytes/vesicles/pustules/ ulcers.
2.      Lymphocytic vasculitis + fibrinoid degeneration
What is the meaning of CD30+ variant of PLEVA?
PL serve as fertile soil for the development of the CD30+ T-cell clone characteristic of lymphomatoid papulosis/ anaplastic large cell lymphoma
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

What is the differential diagnoses of PL and the method to distinguish them?
l   Secondary syphilis & virus exanthemas (serology)
l   LyP(CD30+ large atypical lymphoid cells)
l   Macular/papular variants of MF(small epidermotropic  atypical lymphoid cells with convoluted nuclei & a band-like superficial dermal lymphoid infiltrate)
MANAGEMENT

When should PL be treated?
The more acute course(PLEVA) & severe lesions (PLUH)
Mild, chronic lesions can be ignored.
How to treat PL?
l   Topical steroids & photo/photodynamic therapy
l   Systemic (antiinflammatory) antibiotics: tetracyclines, erythromycin, & azithromycin
l   Systemic steroids, low-dose methotrexate, calcineurin inhibitors(tacrolimus) & retinoids(bexarotene)
l   Bromelain (a pineapple extract, very effective)
l   Antibiotics for Gram(+) pathogens in secondary infections of PL lesions


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