« Back to Special Patient Populations

Geriatric Dermatology

»How common are skin disorders in the elderly population?
»What is intrinsic aging of the skin?
»What is extrinsic aging of the skin?
»How does intrinsically aging human skin vary from young skin under the microscope?
»Why does skin wrinkle as we age?
»Does smoking cigarettes accelerate skin aging?
»What is solar elastosis?
»What is nodular elastosis with cysts and comedones?
»How do liver spots, solar lentigo, and lentigo senilis differ?
»Why do elderly patients frequently develop bleeding into the skin on the dorsum of their hands and arms?
»Advertisements in newspapers and magazines frequently tout products that “rejuvenate” the skin or make the skin younger. Is there truth to these claims?
»What is the difference between superficial, medium, and deep chemical peels?
»Are some sunscreens better than others in preventing wrinkles due to photodamage?
»Which are the most common inflammatory skin diseases in the elderly?
»Why are elderly patients prone to develop xerosis?
»What is the best way to treat xerosis?
»How common is chronic venous insufficiency in the geriatric population?
»Explain the pathogenesis of chronic venous insufficiency.
»How should you manage chronic venous insufficiency?
»What is rosacea? How does it present?
»Is rhinophyma related to alcohol abuse?
»Name the most common types of skin tumors seen in the elderly.
»What are seborrheic keratoses?
»What are stucco keratoses?
»What is sebaceous hyperplasia?
»A 70-year-old man presents to your clinic with the sudden onset of hundreds of seborrheic keratoses. Is there any reason for concern?
»Describe the methods for treating seborrheic keratoses.
»An elderly man presents with a soft blue papule on the helix of his cheek and is concerned about malignant melanoma. What is the most likely diagnosis?
»Is there a future in geriatric dermatology?

 
 
 

An elderly man presents with a soft blue papule on the helix of his cheek and is concerned about malignant melanoma. What is the most likely diagnosis?


A, Venous lake presenting as dark blue-violaceous papule on the cheek. B, Same venous lake demonstrating collapse after compression.
Fig. 59.9 A, Venous lake presenting as dark blue-violaceous papule on the cheek. B, Same venous lake demonstrating collapse after compression.
The differential diagnosis includes a blue nevus, malignant melanoma, tattoo, and venous lake. In this case, the diagnosis of a venous lake can be established by compression of the papule, which will cause collapse of the lesion (Fig. 59-9). Venous lakes, like hemorrhoids, are dilated veins that have lost elasticity of their walls. They are usually 1 to 5 mm in diameter and are typically located on sunexposed surfaces, such as the lips, ears, and face of the elderly. They are very common, with one epidemiologic study of elderly patients finding venous lakes in 12% of those examined. They are of no clinical significance, except that they may mimic malignant melanoma and occasionally become painful or thrombosed. They can be treated by excision, carbon dioxide laser, infrared coagulation, or by the injection of sclerosing agents such as polidocanol.

Kuo HW, Yang CH: Venous lake of the lip treated with a sclerosing agent: report of two cases, Dermatol Surg 29:425–428, 2003.