2/ If you answered, "hands, feet, and ears," you're correct! This is tricky, and it wasn’t until dermatology residency that I learned it’s not palms and soles!
If you haven't yet, take a look at my old #tweetorial on acral rashes as a primer.
3/
Let’s first cover the easy stuff. We use our hands for so many different things that by virtue of that fact, certain things happen more frequently.
✔️Contact dermatitis from hand washing
✔️Herpetic whitlow (especially in dentists)
✔️Actinic skin damage (UV on dorsal hands)
4/ But what about the knee-jerk differential we usually think about? Syphilis, RMSF, Hand foot mouth?
Well, a natural guess might be temperature. We know that T pallidum replicates best at lower temps👀👇. So maybe, the cooler distal extremities lead to the acral predilection?
5/ Not so fast!
The counterpoint I'd make is that despite the same ideal lower temperature for other spirochetes (eg: B. burgdorferi in Lyme), we don't see the same acral predilection in disseminated lyme!
pc: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…
6/ But what about viruses? Coxsackie leads to Hand-Foot-Mouth syndrome (1), and other viruses (like Parvovirus B19) can lead to something called Papular Purpuric Gloves and Socks Syndrome (2). Maybe temperature plays a role here?
7/ Well, let's start with Coxsackie. This paper from 1958 (!!) showed that virus replicates in mice much better a 4C than at 25/36! Perhaps this plays a role?
Unfortunately, nothing in humans, and our acral surfaces are certainly not THAT different in temperature.
PMID: 13514070
8/ What about Parvo? Well, this paper showed that porcine parvovirus replicates differently at different temps, but it’s not clear that it’s a standard preference for lower temps, nor do we have this in human models, so again – conjecture at best.
12/ So this helps explain certain skin eruptions we see! Ever heard of Hand Foot Syndrome?
This is something that happens to patients who get certain chemotherapies (eg: cytarabine, capecitabine). These patients get red, inflamed, blistered hands.
12/ So knowing the differences, why might this happen?
The chemo is excreted out of eccrine glands. Since the eccrine gland concentration is so high on the hands & feet, this rash is from the direct toxicity the chemo has on that skin!
Knowing this, how might you treat it?
14/ We use ice packs! By asking the patient to hold ice packs during chemo infusion, we vasoconstrict decreasing blood flow (and therefore chemo) to the palms. This leads to decreased excretion in the eccrine glands, and improvement of the rash!
15/ Another example of how anatomical differences might matter is GVHD. The pathology of GVHD has on eccrine involvement). This might help explain why GVHD starts acrally and moves in (versus a drug rash that starts on the torso and moves out!).
pc: plasticsurgerykey.com/pediatric-graf…
16/ So while I don’t have all the answers, we at least have some take home points:
✔️Acral means whole hand/foot/ears
✔️Anatomical differences play a role in why certain rashes present with an acral predilection
✔️Temperature may also play a role, but it’s a little murkier.
17/17
Thanks for joining today! If you liked what you read, check out a future episode of the @curiousclinicians! I had the pleasure to record as a guest with the amazing trio of @tony_breu, @AvrahamCooperMD, and @HannahRAbrams on this very topic!
Thanks, and stay safe!
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What color do you expect to see when you hear NXG?
2/ Yes, yellow! Whenever you hear something is “xanthomatous,” expect to see something yellow on exam! Kudos to all of you who guessed some form of a xanthomatous process on our prior mystery diagnosis tweet!👇
3/ This diagnosis occurs classically by the eyes and correspondingly can cause ophthalmologic issues, so for those of you who suggested a referral to ophtho, absolutely agree!
Let's start ourselves off with a question: Which one of the following conditions will lead to scarring?
2/ The correct answer is Pyoderma Gangrenosum! This illustrates a quick first point - scarring only occurs if you damage the skin into dermis and beyond. Epidermal damage heals without scarring, which is why the first 3 don't lead to scarring!
3/ So what exactly is a scar?
Scarring is a normal part of healing that at its root, is extra collagen laid down to repair skin injury.
However, sometimes the process gets out of hand and exuberant which leads to hypertrophic scars (pic 1) keloids (pic 2)!
2/
Beau’s lines (transverse ridge) and onychomadesis (nail shedding) common in kids! Often seen in a post-viral setting.
Common culprit = hand foot mouth disease!
3/
Congenital malalignment of the great toenails – lateral deviation of the first toenails. More common than you think. Start looking at more toes and you’ll see it! Can improve with time or persist. Risk for nail thickening or ingrown nails.
First a question - What do you think when someone asks for your help with a rash?
2/ Regardless how you answered, I hope to teach you something today! Let's start!
"In #dermatology, we don't do an H+P, we do a P+H."
The exam is perhaps most important. You can use it to narrow down your ddx! Then, you use your history to further work toward the right dx.
3/ "If there's scale, there probably is epidermal involvement."
Scale usually implies action in the epidermis. This doesn't rule out anything in the dermis or subcutis, but just that the pathology includes action up top.
2/
Onychomycosis is more common in adults than kids.
Trauma, diabetes, immunosuppression, tinea pedis, psoriasis, and family history are some risk factors
Pro tip- check the feet for tinea pedis if you suspect onychomycosis!