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keratin is a
scleroprotein
keratin is in the
outermost layer of the epidermis
dermis is also called the
corium
skin is part of a tissue layer called
ectoderm
dermatome
Area of skin supplied by a single spinal nerve
two glands directly connected with hair follicle
apocrine sweat gland and sebaceous gland
sebaceous gland produces
sebum
another name for sweat gland
sudoriferous gland
lunula is responsible for
nail growth
onychopagia
nail biting
ungual means
pertaining to the nail
incisional biopsy
remove part of a tumor
excisional biopsy
remove entire tumor
punch biopsy
use a punch to remove a small amount of material for microscopic study
shaved specimen
razor blade is used to obtain a specimen
curettage
scrape material from lesion using a curet
sweat test may be used to diagnose
cystic fibrosis (increased sodium/chloride)
tissue/fluid can be removed and examined via
needle aspiration
exfoliation
falling away of tissue in scales or layers
induration
hardening of tissue
discoid lupus erythematosus
chronic systemic disease characterized by lesions that are covered with scales
pediculosis
infestation by human lice
xeroderma
mild form of ichthyosis where the skin is dry/rough
xerosis
excessive dryness of the skin
abscess
pus containing cavity surrounded by inflamed tissue, typically caused by infection
two types of cysts
sebaceous and pilondial
nodule
solid elevated lesion 1 cm or more in diameter
macule
nonraised, dark spot
papule
solid raised lesion
plaque
flat, dry, often raised patch
vesicles
small blisters containing clear fluid
bullae
large blisters filled with clear fluid
wheals
transient, elevated, irregularly shaped; result from allergic skin eruption called urticaria (hives)
lesions may be
primary or secondary
primary lesions include
macule, papule, plaque, vesicles, bullae, pustules, wheals
secondary lesions include
fissures, scales, scar, ulcers, atrophy, excoration
atrophy
thinning of skin, loss of skin markings
excoration
scratch, injury to surface of body from trauma
verruca
wart with a rough surface caused by common contagious virus
herpes simplex virus
most common viral infection of adult skin
furuncle
aka boil. localized suppurative infection that begins with infection of hair follicle or sebaceous gland by staphylococci
production of pus
suppuration, purulence, pyogenesis
dermatomycosis
superficial fungal infection
eczema
superficial dermatitis of unknown cause
herpes zoster
commonly called shingles, painful blisters, reactivation of dormant virus
photodermatits
inflammation of skin from abnormal reaction to light
scabies
contagious dermatitis cause by itch mite
seborrhea
excess production of sebum; may lead to acne vulgaris
seborrheic dermatitis
chronic inflammatory condition of skin, greasy scales and yellowish crusts (example is dandruff)
petechiae
tiny purple or red spots on skin due to small hemorrhages within dermal or submucosal layers
ecchymosis
hemorrhagic spot, larger than petechiae; blue/purplish patch
nevus
mole
keratoma
callus
corn is similar to a ______
callus, but is round/conical and usually painful
two types of keratosis
seborrheic keratosis and actinic keratosis
seborrheic keratosis
benign lesion found on older people
actinic keratosis
premalignant, common in people with sun damaged skin. should be removed because can progress to squamous cell carcinoma
basal cell carcinoma
papule begins to enlarge
malignant melanoma
pigmented neoplasm that originates in skin and is composed of melanocytes
kaposi sarcoma
associated with AIDS; small purplish brown papules spread throughout the skin, lymph nbodes, and internal organs
bedsores are also known as
pressure ulcers, decubitus ulcers
keloid
excessive overgrowth of unsightly scare tissue after injury
contusion
causes subcutaneous bleeding but does not disrupt integrity of skin (bruise)
burns may be classified as
superficial, deep partial-thickness burn, or full-thickness burn
rule of nines
calculates the size of a burn injury (% of body covered by burns)
hypoxic tissue
low oxygen. injury is greater
folliculitis can progress to
cellulitis
hidranenitis
inflammation of a sweat gland
leukoderma
localized loss of skin pigment
vitiligo
depigmentation of the skin
onycholysis
separation of nail from nail bed
onychomalacia
abnormal softening of the nails
onychopathy
any disease of the nails
onychosis
atrophy or unhealthy condition of the nails
onychomycosis
fungal condition of the nails
trichopathy
any disease of the hair
trichosis
abnormal growth/development of hair
diaphoresis
excessive sweating
pyrexia
fever
thermoplegia
another name for heat stroke or sunstroke
dehiscence
rupture of a wound closure or separation of surgical incision
autograft
graft from own body
skin flap
skin graft that involves moving a section of skin to a nearby area without cutting off the end of the transplanted tissue
allograft
graft between two genetically different individuals of same species
mohs surgery
tissue sparing; often used on face; remove thin layers of malignant tissue and examine microscopically until clear of malignancy
debridement/debride
remove foreign/dead material by dissection
electrodessication
destruction of superficial skin growth by burning with electric spark
escharatomy
surgical incision of constricting necrotic tissue from severe burn; relieves pressure/restores blood flow
onychemtomy
excision of a nail; declawing of an animal
rhytidoplasty
surgical repair for wrinkles; facelift
antipruritics
agents that relieve/prevent itching
retinoids
increase sloughing of epithelial cells; often used to treat acne
transdermal drug delivery
apply a drug to the skin which then enters the circulatory system; often called a skin patch
diathermy
passing high frequency current through tissue to generate heat in a particular part of the body
antipsoriatics
treat psoriasis
antiseborrheic drugs
reduce amount of sebum produced to treat dandruff
astringents
dry and contract skin tissue
counterirritants/rubefaceints
create inflammation topically to relieve local pain and swelling
keratolytics
shed top layer of skin to treat acne or remove warts, corns, or other lesions
Bx/bx
biopsy