Pityriasis rosea
lichen planuspityriasis rubra pilaris
Pityriasis lichenoides
Erythroderma
Papulosquamous disorders
may be caused by reactivation of either human herpes virus 7 or 6.The disease seems not to be contagious.
It mainly affects children and young adults,
second attacks are rare.
About half of patients complain of itching.
A minority of patients have systemic symptoms such as aching and tiredness.
Pityriasis rosea
Most patients develop one plaque ( the ‘herald’ or ‘mother’ plaque) before the others. It is larger ( 2–5 cm diameter ) than later lesions, and is rounder, redder and more scaly.
After several days many smaller plaques appear, mainly on the trunk, but some also on the neck and extremities.
An individual plaque is oval, salmon pink and shows a delicate scaling, adherent peripherally as a collarette.
The configuration of such plaques is often characteristic. Their longitudinal axes run down and out from the spine in a ‘fir tree’ pattern , along the lines of the ribs. The herald plaque precedes the generalized eruption by several days. Subsequent lesions enlarge over the first week or two.
eruption lasts 2–10 weeks and then resolves spontaneously
herald plaques are often mistaken for ringworm ( tinea corporis), the two disorders most likely to be misdiagnosed early in the general eruption are guttate psoriasis and secondary syphilis.No treatment is curative.
A moderately potent topical steroid or calamine lotion will help the tching. Sunlight or artificial UVB often relieves pruritus and may hasten resolution.
treatment with antiviral agents has not been helpful.
Cause is unknown
Lichen planus is also associated with autoimmune disorders, such as alopecia areata, vitiligo and ulcerative colitis.
Contact allergy to mercury compounds ( in dental amalgam fillings)
Drugs too can cause lichen planus.
Some patients with lichen planus also have a hepatitis C infection .
lichen planus
Typical lesions are violaceous or lilac-coloured, intensely itchy, flat-topped papules that usually arise on the extremities, particularly on the volar aspects of the wrists and legs .A close look is needed to see a white streaky pattern on the surface of these papules ( Wickham’s striae).
White asymptomatic lacy lines, dots, and occasionally small white plaques, are also found in the mouth, particularly inside the cheeks, in about 50%of patients
oral lesions may be the sole manifestation of the disease.
Curiously, although the skin plaques are usually itchy, patients rub rather than scratch, so that excoriations are uncommon.
the Köbner phenomenon may occur.
The nails are usually normal, 10% of patients show changes ranging from fine longitudinal grooves to destruction of the entire nail fold and bed.
Scalp lesions can cause a patchy scarring alopecia.
Individual lesions may last for many months and the eruption as a whole tends to last about 1 year.
About one in six patients will have a recurrence.
Lichenoid drug reactions can mimic lichen planus closely. Gold antimalarials, beta-blockers, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, para-aminobenzoic acid, thiazide diuretics and penicillamine.
Contact with chemicals used to develop colour photographic film can also produce similar lesions.
The diagnosis is usually obvious clinically.
Potent topical steroids.Systemic steroid in extensive involvement, nail destruction or painful erosive oral lichen planus.
photochemotherapy with psoralen and ultraviolet A ( PUVA ) or with narrowband UVB may reduce pruritus and help to clear up the skin lesions.
Oral ciclosporin or acitretin
Antihistamines may blunt the itch.
Mucous membrane lesions, both oral and genital, applications of a corticosteroid or calcineurin inhibitor such as tacrolimus in a gel base
uncommon skin disorders characterized by fine scaling (pityriasis), redness (rubra) and involvement of hair follicles ( pilaris).
No cause has been identified.
The familial type autosomal dominant inheritance.develops gradually in childhood.
The most common acquired form generally resolves within 3 years, but may recur.
The familial type, developing in childhood, persists throughout life.
pityriasis rubra pilaris
common acquired typebegins in adult life with erythema and scaling of the face and scalp. Later, red or orange plaques grow quickly and merge, so that patients with pityriasis rubra pilaris are often erythrodermic.
Perifollicular papules keratinous follicular plugs
Small islands of skin may be ‘spared’
The palms and soles become thickened, smooth and yellow.
Emollient and keratolytics for the palms and soles are the mainstay of this.
About 50% of patients respond slowly to systemic retinoids such as acitretin ( in adults, 25–50 mg/day for 6–8 months).Oral methotrexate in low doses, taken once a week, may also help a similar percentage.
Phototherapies do not help much.
A recent report of treatment with the tumour necrosis factor α (TNF-α) inhibitor, infliximab, was encouraging.
Systemic steroids are not indicated.
Pityriasis lichenoides
1. Pityriasis lichenoides et varioliformis acuta characterized by crops of papules that become necrotic and leave scars, rarely affect the face and usually scattered on the trunk and limbs. 2. Pityriasis lichenoides chronica numerous small circular scaly macules and papules, their scaling is distinctive in that single silver-grey scales (mica scales) surmount the lesions.Long-term antibiotics ( tetracycline or erythromycin) have their advocates and UVB radiation
Spontaneous resolution occurs eventually.
the whole skin becomes red and scaly. ‘Erythroderma’ is the term used when the skin is red with little or no scaling, while the term ‘exfoliative dermatitis’ is preferred if scaling predominates.
If chronic, tightness of the facial skin leadsto ectropion, scalp and body hair may be lost, and the nails become thickened and may be shed too.
Temperature regulation is impaired , patient feel cold and shiver. Oedema, high output cardiac failure, tachycardia, anaemia, failure to sweat and dehydration can occur.
Erythroderma
Some causes of erythroderma/exfoliative dermatitisPsoriasis
Pityriasis rubra pilaris
Ichthyosiform erythroderma
Pemphigus erythematosus
Contact, atopic or seborrhoeic eczema
Drug eruptions
Crusted (Norwegian) scabies