« Back to Cutaneous Manifestations of Internal Diseases

Cutaneous Manifestations of Internal Malignancy

»List the five criteria that establish an association between a skin disease and internal malignancy.
»What is Sweet’s syndrome?
»Describe the cutaneous lesions of Sweet’s syndrome.
»Are any laboratory abnormalities found in Sweet’s syndrome?
»What cancers are associated with Sweet’s syndrome?
»Describe the clinical appearance of acanthosis nigricans.
»What clinical disease states are associated with acanthosis nigricans?
»What is necrolytic migratory erythema?
»What is hypertrichosis lanuginosa?
»What is Trousseau’s sign?
»Describe the classical skin lesions of dermatomyositis.
»Is dermatomyositis associated with internal malignancy?
»What are the three components of Sézary’s syndrome?
»What is paraneoplastic pemphigus?
»Discuss the laboratory findings in patients with paraneoplastic pemphigus.
»What is the characteristic finding in erythema gyratum repens?
»How do the lesions in Bazex syndrome (acrokeratosis paraneoplastica) progress?
»Where does Paget’s disease most commonly occur?
»Which disorder of protein metabolism is associated with skin lesions and malignancy?
»List the autosomal dominant diseases that have prominent skin findings and internal cancer.
»Describe the cutaneous features of Gardner’s syndrome.
»What are the clinical findings in Cowden’s syndrome (multiple hamartoma syndrome)?
»When do the characteristic skin lesions of Peutz-Jeghers syndrome appear?
»How does multiple mucosal neuroma syndrome typically present?
»What is Torre’s syndrome (Muir-Torre’s syndrome)?
»Is the sign of Leser-Trélat (eruptive seborrheic keratoses) associated with internal malignancy?
»Is dry scaly skin associated with internal malignancy?
»Which recessively inherited diseases have skin findings and associated internal malignancy?
»Can pyoderma gangrenosum be associated with internal malignancy?
»What is erythromelalgia?
»Can pruritus be a sign of malignancy?
»Is vasculitis associated with malignancy?
»What is multicentric reticulohistiocytosis?
»What is carcinoid syndrome? Does it have prognostic significance?
»What is FAMM syndrome?

 
 
 

Which disorder of protein metabolism is associated with skin lesions and malignancy?

Primary systemic amyloidosis. The cause of this disease is a plasma cell dyscrasia, even though bone marrow aspiration, in some cases, may be normal. The most common associated skin lesions are purpura or ecchymoses that are seen most frequently on thin skin areas, that is, eyelids, neck, groin, axilla, umbilicus, or oral mucosa. The hemorrhagic lesions may occur on areas of clinically normal skin or in skin having waxy papules, plaques, nodules, or tumors. The intracutaneous bleeding is due to infiltration of blood vessel walls with amyloid protein. Other less common skin lesions include alopecia, nail dystrophies, scleroderma-like lesions, macroglossia, cutis verticis gyrata, bullous lesions, and dyspigmentation.