sebaceous disorders - acne · treatment • occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should...

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Acne vulgaris

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Page 1: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local

Acne vulgaris

Page 2: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local

• Stimulated by androgens

• Sebum: triglycerides, free fatty acids, wax esters, squalene, cholesterol

• Sebum functions:

– Waterproof

– mildly bactericidal

– mildly fungistatic

Sebaceous Glands

• Multilobed gland with lipid-containing cells

• Associated with hair follicles (face, behind ears, upper chest and back) or in the epidermis (eyelid, mucous membranes, nipple, genitalia)

Page 3: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local

Acne

• Inflammatory disorder of the pilosebaceous unit

• Affects mainly teenagers

• Starting between 12 and 14 years - earlier in females.

• It affects the sexes equally

• Has marked effects on QOL

• Clears by age 23-25 in 90%

Page 4: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local

Causes - multifactorial • Over-production of sebum

• Androgens excessive response to normal levels

• Occlusion of skin pores genetic, cosmetics

• Increased bacterial colonisation P.Acnes

• Genetics

• Diet dairy?

Page 5: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local
Page 6: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local
Page 7: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local

Presentation • On the face, shoulders, upper chest and back. • Seborrhoea (a greasy skin). • Open comedones (blackheads), because of the plugging by keratin and sebum of

the pilosebaceous orifice • or closed comedones (whiteheads), caused by overgrowth of the follicle

openings by surrounding epithelium. • Inflammatory papules, nodules and cysts • Depressed or hypertrophic scarring and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation

can follow. • Conglobate (gathered into balls) is : a severe form of acne with all of the above

features as well as abscesses or cysts with intercommunicating sinuses that contain thick serosanguinous fluid or pus.

Page 8: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local
Page 9: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local

Variants of acne Neonatal acne • > 20%of healthy newborn babies between 2 weeks to 3

months of age • due to transplacental stimulation of a child’s sebaceous

glands by maternal androgens Infantile acne (rare) • at 3– 6 months of age and typically resolves in 12 months. Late onset • mainly in women and is often limited to the chin and

jawline • Nodular and cystic lesions predominate. • It is stubborn and persistent.

Acne fulminans. (rare) • conglobate acne + fever, joint pains and a high

(ESR).

This slide topic is not recommended in handbook

Page 10: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local

Mechanical : Excessive scrubbing, picking or the rubbing of chin straps or a fiddle can rupture occluded follicles.

Tropical : Associated with heat and humidity / mainly on the trunk and may be conglobate. Excoriated : This is most common in young girls. / Obsessional picking or rubbing leaves discrete denuded areas. Exogenous : Tars, chlorinated hydrocarbons, oils and oily cosmetics may induce comedone formation or precipitate inflammation around vellous hair follicles. Drug-induced : Corticosteroids, androgenic and anabolic steroids, gonadotrophins, oral contraceptives, lithium, iodides, bromides, antituberculosis and anticonvulsant therapy Polycystic ovarian syndrome. Congenital adrenal hyperplasia Androgen-secreting tumours

This slide topic is not recommended in handbook

Page 11: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local

Investigations • None are usually necessary. • Only a few laboratories routinely culture P. acnes

and test its sensitivity to antibiotics. • Cultures to exclude a pyogenic infection, an

anaerobic infection or Gram-negative folliculitis. • Any acne associated with virilization, needs

investigation to exclude an androgen-secreting tumour

This slide topic is not recommended in handbook

Page 12: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local

Treatment Topical • Gentle cleansing • Salicylic acid (comedones) • Benzoyl peroxide (inflammatory) • Vitamin A analogues (comedones)

– Tretinoin, isotretinoin, adapalene – Topical retinoids should not be prescribed for pregnant woman with acne.

• Azelaic acid (inflammatory, bactericidal) • Antibiotics *resistance*

– Clindamycin, erythromycin

Page 13: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local

Systemic • Erythromycin

– Erythromycin resistance in P.Acnes

• Tetracyclines – Oxytetracycline, tetracycline, lymecycline, doxycycline,

minocycline – Avoid in pregnancy and <9years – Minocycline side effects pigmentation & lupus-like syndrome

• Trimethoprim • Co-cyprindiol (dianette)

– Risk of VTE use only for 3 months after acne clears

Page 14: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local

Isotretinoin • Oral retinoid • Inhibits sebum excretion, inflammation and P.Acnes • Indication

– severe nodulocystic acne – scarring acne – non-responsive acne

• Side effects : – May flare on initiation – can use lower dose in first month(s) – Teratogenic – Risk of depression and suicidality – Dry skin, dry nose/lips/eyes – facial erythema – muscle aches – hyperlipidaemia – hair loss – Rare serious: loss of night vision, pancreatitis, hepatotoxicity, pseudotumour cerebri, hearing

loss

Page 15: Sebaceous Disorders - Acne · Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local

Treatment • Occasionally, an underlying cause is found; this should be removed or treated. • Local treatment for comedo-papular acne • both local and systemic treatments are needed for pustulocystic scarring acne

This slide topic is not recommended in handbook