Term
What are the components of the integumentary system? |
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Definition
Skin, hair, nails, certain glands, receptors |
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Term
What are the general functions of the Integumentary System? |
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Definition
- Protection
- From UV/Ionizing Radiation
- From harmful organisms
- From water gain/loss
- From heat gain/loss
- Reception of sensory stimuli
- Excretion
- Blood Reservoir (Stores approx. 5% of Total Blood Volume)
- Synthesis of Vitamin D3(cholecalciferol) from 7-dehydrocholesterol
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Term
What is the surface area of the skin? |
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Definition
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Term
How many cells, roughly, make up the skin? How many die and are replaced every second? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the average thickness of the skin? What is its range of thickness? |
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Definition
1-2mm thick on avg; <.5mm (eyelid) to 6.0mm (soles of feet) |
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Term
What are the two distinct regions/layers of the skin? |
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Definition
Epidermis - outermost protective layer composed of keratinized stratified squamous epithelium (which is avascular)
Dermis - beneath the epidermis; thicker; vascularized; consists of CT, smooth muscle, nerves, blood vessels.
NOTE: Hypodermis/subcutaneous tissue is NOT part of the skin |
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Term
Name and describe the cells composing the epidermis |
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Definition
- Stem cells - undifferentiated cells that give rise to keratinocytes, found in the deep (basal) epidermis
- Keratinocyte (90%) - synthesizes the protein keratin for water-proofing; arises in the deep (basal) epidermis; takes 25-45 days to mature while migrating towards the external (free) surface; as keratin hardens -> cell dies and appears scale-like at the outer surface
- Melanocyte (8%) - synthesizes the pigment 'melanin' which absorbs harmful UV light and is responsible for skin color; found at the deep (basal) epidermis; transfers melanin onto the free surface of each keratinocyte
- Remaining (2%)
- Dendritic AKA Langerhans' cells - modified macrophages that originate in the bone marrow but migrate to the epithelium of the oral cavity, esophagus, and vagina
- Merkal AKA tactile cells - sensory receptors for touch found at the deep (basal) epidermis
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Term
Name and describe the five layers of the epidermis |
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Definition
- Stratum Corneum - 20-30 layers of dead, flat, anuclear, keratinized epithelial cells arranged shingle-like
- Stratum Lucidum - 3-5 layers of dead, flat, transparent epithelial cells; ONLY found in the palms and soles
- Stratum Granulosum - 3-5 layers of flat, epithelial cells filled with granules of hardening keratin; alive but dying
- Stratum Spinosum - 8-10 layers of round cuboidal-like epithelial cells (spiny or prickly in shape); alive and keratin is being synthesized; most Langerhans' AKA Dendritic Cells are found here
- Stratum Basale (basal cell layer) - AKA stratum germinativum; single row of alive stem cells -> keratinocyte cells undergoing mitosis
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Term
What is EGF/Epidgermal growth factor? |
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Definition
a hormone which stimulates the growth of epidermal cells; secreted by lots of cells, but mainly by the fibroblast |
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Term
What are the characteristics of the Dermis? |
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Definition
Below epidermis; above hypodermis
Anywhere from .2mm thick (eyelids) to 4.0mm in palms and soles. Possesses two distinct dermal layers. |
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Term
Name and describe the two layers of the dermis |
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Definition
- Papillary layer - superior 20% of the dermis; composed of areolar CT
- Has many receptors - pain receptors at free nerve endings and Meissner's corpuscles (light-touch receptors)
- Dermal papilla(e) - tiny, nipple-like projection(s)/undulation(s) that join to the basal ridges of the epidtermis. These form fingerprints.
- Reticular layer inferior 80% of dermis; composed of Dense Irregular CT
- Thick collagen fibers that run parallel to the skin -> form tension lines AKA lines of cleavage (Incisions made parallel to these lines heal quicker)
- Blood vessels (minor); smooth muscle; hair; glands
- Site of deep pressurce receptors AKA Pacinian Corpuscles (which are also w/in sub-Q)
- Site of penetration for tattoos
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Term
Name and describe the the characteristics of the hypodermis AKA subcutaneous layer AKA superficial fascia |
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Definition
- Mostly Adipose CT and some Areolar CT
- Rich with major blood vessels and nerves
- Provides insulation; 8% thicker in females; this is the site that thickens when one gains weight - begins in breasts and thighs of females and abdominal region of males
- Also a site of deep-pressure receptors AKA Pacinian Corpuscles
- Attaches skin to underlying organs (bone; muscle)
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Term
Name and describe the components that make up skin color |
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Definition
- Melanin - Produced and secreted by melanocytes; yellow-to-reddish/brown-to-black pigment derived from the amino acid tyrosine (albinism is a lack of tyrosine)
- Melanin absorbs the sun's harmful UV radiation - > protects the skin from being damaged
- All 'races' have an equal # of melanocytes; variations in skin color are due to differences in the amount and type of melanin produced
- In RBCs, Hemoglobin/Hb has an iron-containing pigment called porphyrin; changes in the pigment color of porphyrin are reflected through the avascular epidermis (cyanosis or erythema)
- Carotene - yellow-to-orange pigment from egg yolks and yellow/orange vegetables
- Increased concentrations of carotene found in the stratum corneum and sub-q fat of the palms and soles
- NOTE: Asian, Hispanic, Native American skin color mainly due to variations of melanin and NOT carotene
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Term
Describe the process of superficial skin repair (damage to epidermis only, no bleeding) |
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Definition
- Epithelial cells rapidly divide and proliferate -> bridge gap -> begin regeneration (replacement of damaged tissue with the original kind of tissue)
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Term
Describe the process of deep skin repair (blood vessels are broken, bleeding occurs) |
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Definition
- Two phases should normally occur
- Inflammation is the first phase
- Damaged cells, tissues, blood vessels release chemicals that promote
- WBCs, platelets, plasma protein clotting factors to wander into the injured area -> blood clot forms, clot isolates the injured area, stops blood loss, holds the wound together
- Promote dilation plus increased permeability of blood vessel walls -> redness (rubor), swelling (tumor), warmth (calor), pain (dolor)
- Organization is the second phase
- 3-4 days post injury the blood clot is replaced by granulation tissue consisting of: budding capillaries, macrophages (to digest blood clot and debris), and fibroblasts (which deposit EGF plus proteins to form collagen fibers)
- Approx 2 weeks post injury, granulation tissue is replaced by scar tissue: permanent fibrous CT (visible or invisible depending on wound severity)
- surface epithelium regenerates
- remodeling (maturation) of the repaired tissue begins a few weeks post injury and can last as long as two years
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Term
What are the effects of aging on skin? |
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Definition
- ↓ fibroblasts → ↓ collagen fibers → lose skin tone
- ↓ elastic fibers → ↓ elasticity → skin wrinkles
- atrophy of fat (adipose CT) → colder extermities
- ↓ melanocyte activity → gray hair
- ↑ amount of irregular pigments produced → liver spots
- atrophy of oil glands → dry skin
- atrophy of hair follicles → balding or thinning of hair
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Term
Describe the process of the skin's thermoregulation role |
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Definition
- Stimulus leads to ↑ body temperature → brain signals:
- dermal blood vessels to dilate → ↑ loss of body heat
- sweat glands to secrete sweat; sweat evaporates → ↑skin cooling
- Response: as a result of the two things above → ↓ body temperature
- Reverse of the above process (vasoconstriction) is also true
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Term
Describe what happens when the body sustains a burn |
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Definition
Cell death is caused by thermal or nonthermal sources (electrical, radioactive, chemical) → ↑ fluid loss, ↓ blood flow to tissues, ↑ risk of infection
The clinical outcome mainly depends upon two factors: depth of the burn, extent of the surface burned |
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Term
Describe a first degree burn |
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Definition
- First degree burn (partial thickness burn)
- Only the surface epidermis is burned
- Painful, appears red and slightly swollen (like a mild sunburn)
- Tx - local cold or aloe vera → heals in 2-3 days; systemic hydration if Nausa/Vomitting (N/V) occur in the elderly or in an infant
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Term
Describe a second degree burn |
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Definition
- Second degree burn (partial-thickness burn)
- The entire epidermis plus some dermis is burned; has two categories
- Superficial Second Degree Burn
- Epidermis plus superficial dermis are burned
- Painful, red, hallmark is thin-walled fluid-filled blisters that develop within just a few minutes post-injury (blister develops for any short-term but acute trauma that leads to the separation of dermal-epidermal layers by a fluid-filled vesicle)
- Heals in 3-4 weeks provided no complications develop
- Deep Second Degree Burn
- Epidermis plus most of the deep dermis are burned
- Fluid filled blisters may or may not appear; often present is flat dehydrated 'tissue paper' skin
- Usually is less painful than a superficial 2nd degree burn
- May scar → loss of function
- Wound takess > 4 weeks to heal and typically requires medical attention (silvadene) or a graft
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Term
Describe a third degree burn |
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Definition
- Full-thickness burn; entire epidermis, dermis, hypodermis plus appendages are burned
- No blisters; no pain; skin may appear white or black; loss of function with ↑ fluid loss
- wound requires escharotomies (cutting away dead flesh which never heals because it's dead) plus skin graft
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Term
What is the Rule of Nines as relates to skin burns? |
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Definition
Skin can be divided into 9% groupings
- Anterior & Posterior head and neck = 9% (total)
- Anterior & Posterior Upper Extremity (UE) = 9% each (18% total)
- Anterior & Posterior Trunk = 18% each side (36% total)
- Anterior & Posterior Lower Extremity (LE) = 18% each (36% total)
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Term
When is a burn a medical emergency? |
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Definition
25% or greater of a 2nd degree burn
OR
10% or greater of a 3rd degree burn |
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Term
What are the skin appendages? |
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Definition
Hair and hair follicles; sebaceous glands AKA oil glands; sweat glands AKA sudoriferous glands; nails |
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Term
Describe the characteristics of Hair AKA Pilus (general only, do not include DETAILED structures) |
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Definition
- Composition: 3 concentic layers of keratinized epithelium
- Inner Medulla
- Middle Cortex - contains the hair pigments made by melanocytes
- Outermost cuticle - highly keratinized cells arranged like shingles on a roof
- 21 million hairs cover the entire body (100k on scalp); only places with no hair are palms, soles, lips, nipples, and external reproductive organs.
- Hair grows at a rate of approx. 2-3mm/week
- Function of hair: sensitive touch receptors plus a minor amount of protection (eyelashes and nasal hair)
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Term
Name and describe the DETAILED structures of Hair AKA Pilus |
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Definition
- Shaft - portion of a hair that protrudes from and above the skin
- Shape of the shaft opening on the superficial epidermis determines whether one's hair is straight, wavy, or curly
- Root - portion of a hair that is below the epidermis
- Bulb - deepest portion of the root; composed of:
- Hair Papilla - nipple-like opening at the inferior end of the bulb; blood vessels project into this opening feeding the:
- Matrix - an area of rapidly growing epithelial cells that will get keratinized in the shaft
- Hair follicle AKA root sheath - tubular 'bag' enclosing the root; external outlets/openings are one type of skin pore
- Arrector pili AKA piloerector muscle: smooth muscle; attached to a follicle at one end and skin surface at opposite end; contraction of the arrector pili → follicle pulled into upright position and skin surface dimples → 'goose-bumps'
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Term
Describe the characteristics of the Sebaceous Gland AKA Oil Gland |
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Definition
- Body's most numerous gland; present in all skin regions except the palms and soles
- Composed of specialized epithelial cells that secrete sebum (lipids + cell fragments); body's only holocrine gland
- Sebum functions as lubrication, water-proofing, and bacteriocide (on hair and skin)
- Sebaceous gland duct almost always empties into a hair follicle's pore (ALWAYS true as far as our exams go)
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Term
Describe Sudoriferous AKA Sweat glands, including their two sub-types |
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Definition
- Present in all skin regions except the nipples and external genitalia
- Meocrine AKA Eccrine Sweat Gland
- 3-4 million of these; most numerous type of sweat gland, especially in the palms, soles, and forehead
- Duct empties directly into an epidermal outlet AKA pore
- Excretory function; sweat consists of 99% water, plus salts and waste products (urea and uric acid); cooling function as well
- ↑ glandular activity i.e. ↑ secretion with: heat; exercise; emotions (fright, embarrassment, nervousness)
- Apocrine sweat gland
- Approximately 2,000; mainly in axilla, anogenital areas, and beard area of mature males
- Duct empties into a hair follicle's outlet
- Odorless secretions (sweat + fatty acids) are more viscous and sometimes appear yellow-milky white
- Become odorized when secretions are metabolized by skin's bacteria
- Inactive until puberity, then ↑ glandular activity i.e. ↑ secretion with sexual stimulation
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Term
After sudoriferous and sebaceous glands, what are the two remaining skin glands? |
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Definition
Ceruminous (ear wax) glands; Mammary (milk) glands |
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Term
Describe the characteristics and composition of nails |
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Definition
- On fingers and toes; growth of .5-1.0mm/week
- Nail Plate - external keratinized, translucent epithelial tissue; consists of:
- Nail Body - visible attached part
- Free Edge - Overhangs the tip of the finger or toe
- Nail Root - Hidden by the proximal overlying skin, contains modified stratum basale cells that form the (germinal) nail matrix
- Nail bed - Skin that underlies the nail plate
- Lunula AKA lunule - white half-moon at the proximal nail plate; appears white because blood is not reflected through the dermis due to a thick overlying nail matrix
- Cuticle (AKA eponychium) - narrow band of epidermis extending from the proximal-lateral margins of the nail plate
- Function - protection; manual manipulation i.e. grasping
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Term
Describe the characteristics and etiology of Acne Vulgaris |
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Definition
- Most common skin disease of 12-25 y/olds (85% affected)
- Etiology:
- ↑ androgens → ↑ size and activity of sebaceous glands → ↑ sebum secretion → sebum obstructs duct → leading to one of two forms of acne vulgaris lesions
- Noninflammatory Acne - comedones are closed (whitehead) or open (blackhead)
- Inflammatory Acne - obstructed duct → follicle wall ruptures → sebum expelled into dermis → inflammation
- Superficial pustules develop or deeper cystic nodules or papules develop → may lead to scarring
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Term
Describe the characteristics and etiology of Ecchymosis AKA a black-and-blue mark |
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Definition
- Result of trauma
- After trauma, blood from broken capillaries leaks into dermis → skin filters out the red color as Hb's pigment undergoes color changes
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Term
Describe the characteristics and etiology of a Nevus AKA Mole AKA Birthmark |
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Definition
- Most common congenital anomaly
- Caused by developmental defects whereby normal skin components are arranged in an abnormal pattern
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Term
Describe the characteristics and sub-types of Dysfunctional Wound Healing |
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Definition
- May occur during any phase of healing, including a reactivation of the inflammatory process → a delay of normal healing
- Wound sepsis/Infection - most important Tx is organism-specific antibiotics + debridement of necrotic tissue (Elase, Panafil, sharp debridement, wet-to-dry dressings)
- Cellulitis - inflammation due to infection of dermis and sub-q; infected area is erythematous, swollen, painful
- ↑ collagen synthesis with ↓ collagen lysis (breakdown, not necessarily cell lyses) → elevated overgrowth of immature scar tissue
- keloid - elevated overgrowth of immature scar tissue extending beyond/outside of the scar line
- hypertrophic scar - elevated overgrowth of immature scar tissue that remains within the scar line
- Wound dehiscence (separation of margins) can result from microangiopathy, metabolic disturbances, inadequate collagen, iatrogenic (physician caused) → ↓ tensile strength of the wound → deficient scar formation
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Term
Describe the characteristics and etiology of Onychomycosis AKA Tinea unguium |
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Definition
- Fungal infection of the nail's matrix
- Follows trauma
- Thick, discolored, disfigured nail
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Term
Describe the characteristics and etiology of Psoriasis |
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Definition
- Inflammatory abnormality resulting from skin cells migrating from the Stratum Basale to the Stratum Corneum in only 4 days instead of usual 25-45 days
- Keratin and cells do not mature, resulting in superficial skin lesions present as white, oily, 'flaky' papules, patches or scales.
- Scalp and nails can also be affected
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Term
What are the four types of skin cancers? |
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Definition
Basal Cell Carcinoma, Squamous Cell Carcinoma, Malignant Melinoma, Kaposi Sarcoma |
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Term
Describe the characteristics and etiology of Basal Cell Carcinoma |
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Definition
- Most common, least malignant skin cancer.
- Arises from keratinocytes within stratum basale
- Presents most often in a male >40 years old on sun-exposed areas of the face as a shiny, dome-shaped nodule with a pearly, beaded border that later develops into a bleeding ulcer
- Rarely metastasies but can destroy an ear or nose
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Term
Describe the characteristics and etiology of Squamous Cell Carcinoma |
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Definition
- Arises from keratinocytes within Stratum Spinosum
- Presents most often in a male >60 years old on sun-exposed areas of the head (scalp, ear, lower lip) as a flat or slightly elevated firm keratotic plaque or as a long-standing ulcer that bleeds easily
- Can metastasize 20% of the time - Dx via a Bx is crucial
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Term
Describe the characteristics and etiology of Malignant Melanoma |
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Definition
- Originates from melanocytes or from cells that synthesize melanin
- 1/2 originate from intact skin
- 1/2 originate from freckles or a nevus
- Highly metastatic and resistant to chemotherapy → poorest prognosis/Px of all skin cancers
- Presents most often in females
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Term
Describe the characteristics and etiology of Kaposi Sarcoma |
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Definition
- Associated with immunodeficiency states
- Originates from dermal blood vessels and surrounding CT cells
- Lesions appear flat and purplish-brown → develop into plaques and nodules with antioproliferation; typically pruritic (itchy) and painful
- Classic form initially aappears over Lower Extremity
- A rapidly progressive form (seen with AIDS) tends to spread over the upper body, especially the face and oral mucosa
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Term
Describe the characteristics and etiology of Stretch Marks AKA striae |
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Definition
- Overstretched dermis (obesit or pregnancy) → collagen and elastic fibers getting torn
- Stretch marks are signs of repairing scar tissue of the torn fibers
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Term
Describe the characteristics and etiology of Wart(s) AKA Verruca(e) |
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Definition
- Caused by contracting the HPV/human papilloma virus
- Presents single or in groups, elevated or flat
- Disappear spontaneously with or without Tx (keratolytics, laser, Sx)
- Subtype condyloma(ta) acuminata AKA veneral warts: cauliflower-like lesions along the glans penis, vulva, and/or anus
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