1 / 34

Lichen Planus(Lichen Ruber)

Lichen Planus(Lichen Ruber). Professor W K Jacyk. Lichen Planus. Flat topped papules, red-violet Location : most often volar aspect of the wrists and anterior aspect of the legs Localised or generalised Koebner phenomenon- typical lesions develop along the lines of scratching .

oke
Télécharger la présentation

Lichen Planus(Lichen Ruber)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lichen Planus(Lichen Ruber) Professor W K Jacyk

  2. Lichen Planus • Flat topped papules, red-violet • Location : most often volar aspect of the wrists and anterior aspect of the legs • Localised or generalised • Koebner phenomenon- typical lesions develop along the lines of scratching

  3. Lichen Planus • Affects skin, oral, genital mucosa, nails • Skin lesions are pruritic • Nail changes are variable-from delicate to complete destruction

  4. Fairly common • Blacks more often than whites • Clinical variability • Classic • Hypertrophic, verrucous • Follicular • Bullous • Course: self limiting but may last several months

  5. Aetiology • Triggers • Certain medications • Viral hepatitis B, C • Other liver diseases • Immunological reaction (cell mediated )to some epidermal antigen, so far not identified • Characteristic histology

  6. Treatment • Milder cases-topical corticosteroids -topical calcineurin inhibitors -PUVA • Severe – sytemic corticosteroids -cyclophosphamide -cyclosporin

  7. Lichenoid drug eruptions • Common • Many medications cause this type of skin lesions • Antimalarials- chloroquine • Antituberculous –isoniazid • Antihypertensives- thiazides, methyldopa, SACE • Gold • D-penicllamine • Lithium

  8. Pityriasis Rosea • Common • Young adults • Seasonal? • Characteristic course • Herald (mother patch) 7-10 days later secondary eruption, waist to neck, usually profuse • Lasts few weeks • Spontaneous resolution • Pruritic • Aetiology –HHV 7

  9. Management • Explain- self limiting, non-infectious, not a sign of internal disease, usually only once in life • Treat only when very pruritic • Topical corticosteroid preparations • Sunlight or artificial UVB • Short course of oral corticosteroids • Sedative antihistaminics

  10. Risk of misdiagnosis • Tinea- herald patch • Syphillis • psoriasis

  11. Seborrhoeic dermatitis-Adult form • “Seborrhoeic” a historical name • Disease is unrelated to the sebaceous glands • Lesions mainly face, scalp, presternal area(in man), folds(axillae, groins, submammary) • Most common in adult males • Role of Pityrosporum yeasts • Common in infection with HIV and HTLV-1

  12. Treatment • Courses of imidazoles- ketoconazole, itraconazole • Courses of antibiotics • Topical steroids

More Related