Clinical Dermatology
eBook - ePub

Clinical Dermatology

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eBook - ePub

About this book

The best-selling text has been completely revised and revitalised in this fifth edition, with the authors once again encouraging general practitioners, medical students, general physicians and early stage dermatology specialist trainees and interns to relish the unique challenge of diagnosing and treating skin conditions.

Clinical Dermatology, 5th edition contains over 400 high quality pictures and diagrams combined with colourful phrases to illustrate and entertain as it teaches. The book has established a reputation as a 'way of learning' and as an accessible guide to the subject for the aspiring specialist. Readers are guided through the maze that too often lies between the presenting skin complaint and its final diagnosis and treatment. The authors have skilfully crafted an easily read text with enough detail to clarify the subject, but not enough to obscure it.

This fifth edition contains new chapters on non-invasive physical treatment and dermoscopy, and new material on cosmetic dermatology, surgical dermatology, the skin and the psyche, and dermatoses of non-Caucasian skin. The text throughout the book has been updated in line with developments in the science and practice of dermatology.

"... brilliantly succeeds in enticing you to look further. The writing is clear, and the joint British-American authorship avoids any parochial views." From a review of a previous edition in BMJ

"...a very well-presented book...an excellent aid for teaching. I recommend this book highly to individuals and departments." From a review of a previous edition in J Derm Treatment

"… provides a good overview of the structure and function of the skin as well as a good foundation for learning dermatology…well organized and includes a chapter dedicated to skin signs of systemic disease which is not covered in the other dermatology primers." From a review of a previous edition in JAMA

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Yes, you can access Clinical Dermatology by Richard B. Weller,Hamish J. A. Hunter,Margaret W. Mann in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Medicine & Dermatology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Year
2014
Print ISBN
9780470659526
eBook ISBN
9781118851029
Edition
5
Subtopic
Dermatology

1
Skin Disease in Perspective

This chapter presents an overview of the causes, prevalence and impact of skin disease.

The many roles of the skin

The skin is the largest organ in the body. It is the boundary between ourselves and the world around us, and its primary role is that of a barrier, preventing the entry of noxious chemicals and infectious organisms, and the exit of water and other chemicals. It is a sort of ‘space suit’, nicely evolved to house all the other organs and chemicals in our body.
Skin has other roles too. It is an important sense organ, and controls heat and water loss. It reflects internal changes (see Chapter 21) and reacts to external ones. It can sweat, grow hair, erect its hairs, change colour, smell, grow nails, secrete sebum, synthesize vitamin D and release nitric oxide. When confronted with insults from outside, it usually adapts easily and returns to a normal state, but sometimes it fails to do so and a skin disorder appears. Some of the internal and external factors that are important causes of skin disease are shown in Figure 1.1. Often several will be operating at the same time. Just as often, however, no obvious cause for a skin abnormality can be found, and here lies much of the difficulty of dermatology. When a cause is obvious, for example when the washing of dishes leads to an irritant hand dermatitis, or when episodes of severe sunburn are followed by the development of a melanoma, education and prevention are just as important as treatment.
images
Figure 1.1 Internal and external factors causing skin diseases.

The prevalence and cost of skin disorders

Skin diseases are very common. Probably everyone has experienced a skin disorder, such as sunburn, irritation, dry skin, acne, warts or pigment changes. The most common skin disorders in the United Kingdom are given in Table 1.1. People in other countries and in other environments may also develop skin diseases peculiar to their surroundings, or common skin diseases at different rates. For example, people living in tropical areas develop infectious diseases, such as leishmaniasis, not seen in more temperate climates. Different age groups experience different skin conditions. In the United States, for example, diseases of the sebaceous glands (mainly acne) peak at the age of about 18 years and then decline, while the prevalence of skin tumours steadily mounts with age (Figure 1.2).
Table 1.1 The most common categories of skin disorder in the United Kingdom.
Skin cancer
Acne
Atopic eczema
Psoriasis
Viral warts
Other infective skin disorders
Benign tumours and vascular lesions
Leg ulcers
Contact dermatitis and other eczemas
images
Figure 1.2 The age-dependent prevalence of some skin conditions.
The idea that ‘common things occur commonly’ is well known to surgeons as an aid to diagnosis. It is equally true of dermatology – an immense subject embracing more than 2000 conditions. In the United Kingdom some 70% of a dermatologist's work is caused by only nine types of skin disorder (Table 1.1). Latest figures suggest that approximately one-quarter of the population of England and Wales, some 13 million people, will have a skin condition for which they will seek medical advice over a 12-month period. In the United States approximately one-third of the population has a skin disorder at any given time.
The most recent estimate of the annual cost of skin disease in the United States was $39.3 billion dollars ($29.1 billion dollars in direct medical costs and $10.2 billion in lost productivity costs). Table 1.2 shows a breakdown of the top five most costly skin conditions seen in the United States.
Table 1.2 Most costly skin conditions in the United States (2004).
Condition Direct medical cost ($billions)
Skin ulcers/wounds 9.7
Acne 2.5
Herpes simplex/zoster 1.7
Cutaneous fungal infection 1.7
Contact dermatitis 1.6
Adapted from Bickers et al. (2006). Reproduced with permission of Elsevier.
In the United Kingdom, skin disorders are the most common reason for a patient to consult their general practitioner with a new problem; on average each general practitioner conducts over 600 consultations per year related to skin disorders. These figures are likely to be an under-estimation of the problem given the complexities of the classification of skin conditions. However, this is only the tip of an iceberg of skin disease, the sunken part of which consists of problems that never get to doctors, being dealt with or ignored in the community.
How large is this problem? No one quite knows, as those who are not keen to see their doctors seldom star in the medical literature. People tend to be shy about skin diseases, and many of them settle s...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Dedication
  3. Titlepage
  4. Copyright
  5. Preface to the Fifth Edition
  6. Acknowledgements
  7. Introduction
  8. 1 Skin Disease in Perspective
  9. 2 The Function and Structure of the Skin
  10. 3 Diagnosis of Skin Disorders
  11. 4 Disorders of Keratinization
  12. 5 Psoriasis
  13. 6 Other Papulosquamous Disorders
  14. 7 Eczema and Dermatitis
  15. 8 Reactive Erythemas and Vasculitis
  16. 9 Bullous Diseases
  17. 10 Connective Tissue Disorders
  18. 11 Disorders of Blood Vessels and Lymphatics
  19. 12 Sebaceous and Sweat Gland Disorders
  20. 13 Regional Dermatology
  21. 14 Racial Skin Differences
  22. 15 The Skin at Different Ages
  23. 16 Infections
  24. 17 Infestations
  25. 18 Skin Reactions to Light
  26. 19 Disorders of Pigmentation
  27. 20 Skin Tumours
  28. 21 The Skin in Systemic Disease
  29. 22 Cosmetic Dermatology
  30. 23 The Skin and the Psyche
  31. 24 Other Genetic Disorders
  32. 25 Drug Eruptions
  33. 26 Medical Treatment
  34. 27 Physical Forms of Treatment
  35. 28 Dermoscopy
  36. Formulary 1 Topical Treatments
  37. Formulary 2 Systemic Medication
  38. Index
  39. End User License Agreement