Picture This
Something is Afoot
We need a clinician to step in: Can you identify these common podiatry problems?
Match the diagnosis to the photo by letter
a. Atopic dermatitis
b. Contact dermatitis
c. Scabies
d. Bullous impetigo
Case 2 photograph courtesy of Cutis. 2000;65(6):395-398. Copyright 2017 Frontline Medical Communications Inc.
Case 3 photograph and text reprinted with permission from Emergency Medicine. 2010;42(8):19-20.
Answers to July “Picture This” (Clinician Reviews. 2017;27[2]:39):
Fig 1 hallux varus (b)
Fig 2 onychocryptosis (d)
Fig 3 Achilles tendon rupture (a)
Fig 4 Charcot joint ( c)
1. A 4-year-old boy presents with erythematous, oozing, excoriated plaques on the cheeks and chin (sparing the nose), trunk, and extensor surfaces of the arms and legs. His parents report that the “rash,” which flares on occasion, has been apparent since the boy was 6 months old, and he does anything he can to scratch the itch.
Diagnosis: Diagnosis of atopic dermatitis (AD) is made by age 5 in 85% to 90% of children who develop the disease, and by age 1 in 60% to 65%. AD persists into adulthood in up to one-third of patients. Although the cause is unknown, AD may be triggered by viral infections, food allergens, or weather, and in turn may trigger an inflammatory progression known as atopic march. Other factors affecting AD development include genetics and hygiene.
For more information:
“A Practical Overview of Pediatric Atopic Dermatitis, Part 2: Triggers and Grading.” Cutis. 2016;97(5):326-329.
“A Practical Overview of Pediatric Atopic Dermatitis, Part 3: Differential Diagnosis, Comorbidities, and Measurement of Disease Burden.” Cutis. 2016;97(6):408-412.
We need a clinician to step in: Can you identify these common podiatry problems?
Pruritic papules, moles, and more ... can you match the picture to the correct diagnosis?