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Skin Signs of Gastrointestinal Disease

»List some of the hallmark skin signs seen with diseases of the digestive tract.
»What is jaundice (icterus) and when is it apparent in the skin?
»What can a jaundice color spectrum tell me about the types of liver disease in a patient?
»List the top ten skin findings suggestive of hepatic and biliary tract disease.
»What is the most common skin symptom associated with liver disease?
»What diseases associated with intestinal bleeding may also leave clues in the skin?
»What is pyoderma gangrenosum?
»A patient presents with anemia, blood in the stool, and red macules on his lips/tongue. What diagnosis should I first consider?
»What other diagnoses should I consider when seeing a patient with macules on the lips?
»What is the best treatment for patients with Peutz-Jeghers syndrome?
»What is pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE)? How does this cause GI bleeding?
»What is Gardner’s syndrome?
»How can cancer of the gastrointestinal tract present in the skin?
»What is “malignant” acanthosis nigricans (AN)?
»What is superficial migratory thrombophlebitis (SMT)?
»How is inflammation of the fat (panniculitis) associated with pancreatic disease?
»What chronic liver disease associated with photosensitivity causes blistering and scarring of the skin?
»What chronic skin disease is associated with a gluten-sensitive enteropathy?
»How is dermatitis herpetiformis treated?

 
 
 

What can a jaundice color spectrum tell me about the types of liver disease in a patient?

Yellow discoloration of the skin is caused by bilirubin, while orange shades come from xanthorubin (intrahepatic jaundice). A deep green skin color is due to marked biliverdinemia and is characteristic of obstructive jaundice, as seen with pancreatic cancer. Patients with hepatobiliary disease, especially obstructive jaundice, often have severe pruritis; constant scratching results in inflammation of the skin follow by postinflammatory hyperpigmentation. The combination of postinflammatory hyperpigmentation and bile pigments imparts a bronze color to the skin. “Bronzing” is also encountered in hemochromatosis and primary Addison’s disease.

Do not forget about exogenous plant pigments, metabolic diseases, and trematode ingestion when examining a patient who appears jaundiced. The differential diagnosis of jaundice includes carotenemia (excessive ingestion of carotenoids), lycopenia (via tomato juice), Clonorchis sinensis (travel to Asia) or Fasciola hepatica (ingesting watercress) infection, and the sallow skin of myxedema