Sunday, August 29, 2010

Structures and Colours - Dermatoscopy Made Easy

When you look at a lesion you are seeking out  colours and structures. 

Colours in the skin are due to melanin pigment, blood, keratin and collagen and pigments added from the environment. Melanin can be in nevus cells or melanocytes and keratinocytes in the epidermis and also in macrophages and other tumour proliferating cells in the dermis. Melanin is black if very superficial in the epidermis, brown at the dermo epidermal junction , grey in macrophages in the papillary dermis and blue in the deeper nevus cells of a blue nevus or a melanoma metastasis or a pigmented basal cell carcinoma.

 Hemangiomas are red or purple  while Seb ks are brown, yellow or black if they have a lot of melanin in them. 

What about structures? Look for lines, circles, dots, clods or one colour structureless areas. With pink lesions you look at the vessels and background white lines to try to make a diagnosis .

Just look at the links opposite for each of these elements and what they represent.  Start with Lines and work your way down. If a particular diagnosis is mentioned that you are unfamiliar with then scroll down the links opposite and look it up. This way you will learn what each of the colours and structures might represent and that should help you to make the correct diagnosis. However remember the real question here is not the correct diagnosis but instead do I leave this lesion, cut it out or monitor it over say 3 months. Let me quickly add you do not monitor something that is raised and rapidly growing. You cut it out.

Using a dermatoscope allows you to quickly determine if a lesion is benign. If a pigmented lesion is one colour and symmetrical then ignore it. Move on to the next lesion. I am assuming you can recognise a typical  seborrhoeic keratosis and hemangioma. If not look first at the Seb k and hemangioma links opposite and learn the patterns. If it is pink look at the vessels.

Look at the table below to see which lesions commonly have which structures and the patterns in which these structures are arranged. Keep in mind that a symmetrical arrangement of structures is usually a benign lesion. You should also learn all the clues to melanoma. I have added them below but look at the link opposite to see good clinical examples. 

Take particular care of lesions that the patient says are new or have changed. Look at them particularly carefully. Know your patient's past history. If they already have had two melanomas then you excise any new pigmented lesion that is not obviously benign.

Take care with new rapidly growing pink papules. They usually all end up needing excised. See Amelanotic Melanoma

So pick up your dermatoscope and let us get started









Introduction.

Many of the ideas in this teaching blog come from the work of Harald Kittler, Scott Menzies, Cliff Rosendahl and Alan Cameron and the BLINCK algorithm is the work of Dr Peter Bourne.

View this YouTube video on the website. Click on the arrow and when it starts go to the bottom of the screen and change the 360 resolution to 1080 and then click on the box with the arrows pointing out to enlarge to full screen. These videos are recorded in high definition which makes for great viewing if you have a fast broadband connection. Press ESC on your keyboard to return to normal size.












If you want to view examples of these clues then click on the post opposite or click here

Which dermatoscope should I buy?






Colours in Dermatoscopy

View this YouTube video on Colours. Click on the arrow and when it starts go to the bottom of the screen and change the 360 resolution to 1080 and then click on the box with the arrows pointing out to enlarge to full screen. These videos are recorded in high definition. Press ESC on your keyboard to return to normal size.









                                                                

Kittlerian Terminology

View this YouTube video on Kittlerian terminology. Click on the arrow and when it starts go to the bottom of the screen and change the 360 resolution to 1080 and then click on the box with the arrows pointing out to enlarge to full screen. These videos are recorded in high definition. Press ESC on your keyboard to return to normal size.





Lines

Lines take precedence over other structures and lines reticular is a common structure because we look at a lot of nevi. Remember it is made up of the arrangement of pigmented cells over the dermal papillae (clear holes) and along the sides of the rete ridges (pigmented network).

View these YouTube videos on the different types of lines. Click on the arrow and when it starts go to the bottom of the screen and change the 360 resolution to 1080 and then click on the box with the arrows pointing out to enlarge to full screen. These videos are recorded in high definition. Press ESC on your keyboard to return to normal size.





















View this YouTube video.




View this YouTube video on Lines Parallel