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Fifth stage 

Dermatology 

Lec-13

 

 .د

  عمر

10/4/2016

 

 

Vitiligo

 

 

  Chronic skin disease 
  Other name = Leukoderma 
  White spots occur when the skin no longer forms melanin (pigment that determines the 

color of your skin, hair, and eyes) 

  The white patches of irregular shapes begin to appear on your skin 

 

Symptoms & Signs 

  White patches of skin  
  Whitening or graying of the hair on your scalp, eyelashes, eyebrows or beard 
  Loss of color in the tissues that line the inside of your mouth 
  Loss or change in color of the inner layer of your eye 

 

White Vitiligo Spots 

  Chalk white color 
  Convex margins 
  5mm to 5cm or more in diameter 
  Round, oval, or elongated in shape 

 

3 patterns: 

  Focal pattern—the depigmentation is limited to one or 

only a few areas  

  Segmental pattern—depigmented patches develop on 

only one side of the body  

  Generalized pattern—(most common) depigmentation 

occurs symmetrically on both sides of the body 

  Focal and segmental patterns do not spread. The 

generalized pattern is hard to predict and can randomly 
stop  

 


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Facts: 

  Can appear at any age, usually first appears between the ages of 20 and 30 
  White patches may begin on your face above your eyes or on your neck, armpits, 

elbows, genitals, hands or knees 

  1-200 of the world population develops 
  Affects both genders and all races equally 

 

Causes: 

  When no melanin is produced, the involved patch of skin becomes white 
  When a white patch grows or spreads the cause may be Vitiligo 
  Exact cause is unknown 
  May be due to an immune disorder, heredity, or environmental causes like sunburn or 

emotional distress that trigger the condition 

 

Treatment 

      Vitiligo is difficult to treat 

      Early treatment options include: 

  Exposure to intense ultraviolet light, such as narrow-band UVB therapy  

  Photosensitizers taken by mouth such as trimethylpsoralen (Trisoralen)  plus 

UVA exposure 

      Topicals:  

  Corticosteroid creams (weak effect) 

  Immunosuppressants such as 

pimecrolimus

 (

Elidel

and 

tacrolimus

 (

Protopic

 

  Repigmenting agents such as 

methoxsalen

 (

Oxsoralen

) 

Excimer lasres 

Systemic steroids 

 

  If the affected body surface area is more than 40%, then it is better to bleach 

(depigment) the remaining normal skin in order to unify the body’s color by using 20% 
monobenzone cream. 

 


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Psoralen photochemotherapy 
(Psorglen & Ultraviolet A Therapy & PUVA therapy)
 

  Most effective treatment available in the United States.  
  PUVA therapy is to repigment the white patches 
  time-consuming, and care must be taken to avoid side effects 
  Psoralen is a drug that contains chemicals that react with ultraviolet light to cause 

darkening of the skin.  

  Psoralen is taken orally or is applied to the skin 
  Then skin is carefully timed exposure to sunlight or to ultraviolet A (UVA) light that 

comes from a special lamp.  

 

 

 


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Sun awareness and camouflage 

Sunscreen 

  Helps protect the skin from sunburn and long-term damage 
  Minimizes tanning, which makes the contrast between normal and depigmented 

skin less noticeable 

Cosmetics 

  Dermablend 

 




رفعت المحاضرة من قبل: Abdalmalik Abdullateef
المشاهدات: لقد قام 27 عضواً و 154 زائراً بقراءة هذه المحاضرة








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