1. Ulcers are breaks in the skin or mucosa that can be caused by infections, trauma, vascular issues, neuropathy, cancer, or other factors. Diagnosis involves examining the ulcer's characteristics, patient history, and potentially investigations or a biopsy.
2. Treatment depends on the underlying cause but the stages of an ulcer include the extension, transition, and repair phases involving changes to the floor, edges, discharge, and surrounding tissue.
3. The next lecture will cover sinuses and fistulae and include an assessment test on wound healing.
9. • 5. Pain:
–acute inflammation, arterial
ulceration– painful (venous – not
usually very painful)
–Neuropathic – less pain
–malignant – early – usually
painless.
10. • 6. Fever: infective/TB
• 7. Loss of weight:malignant/TB
• 8. Smoking: Buerger's disease,
artherosclerosis
• Past History – TB, Syphilis, Diabetes
Mellitus, Hypertension
• Responses to Antibiotics:
(+) in infection (-) in malignancy
11. PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
• General – cachexia, anaemia,weight
loss (Ca, TB)
• Local:
1. Number (single or multiple –TB)
2. Site
Rodent –lobule of ear & angle of
the mouth;
12. Varicose – medial aspect of lower half of leg,
Arterial – tip/between toes, malleoli, heel
Pigmentation & Residual varicosity,
linear healing ulcer
Arterial ulcer due to
ischaemic pressure to
the heel
13. Squamous cell Carcinoma
SCC – lower lip, Gumma – s/c bone ~
tibia/sternum/skull
Diabetic/Perforating/trophic – heel/ball of
the foot (head of 1st /2nd metatarsals
TB – neck, axilla, groin
Lupus – face, fingers, hands,
Chancre/soft sore – ext.genitalia
17. • (b) square cut or punched
out
– gumma, trophic, diabetic
- Chronic GU/DU, leprosy
(rapid death & loss of whole
thickness of skin without much
attempt by the body to repair the
defect)
18. • (c) undermined
– TB, amoebic, bed
sore, carbuncle
(infection affects
underneath tissue more
than epithelial surface)
BUTTOCK
SLOUGH IN THE BASE OF
DEEP SACRAL ULCER
19. • (d) raised & rolled up
– rodent/BCC
(slow growth of tissue in the edge of
ulcer, edge pale pink or white with
clumps of cluster of cells visible through
paper thin superficial coverings of
squamous cell)
20. • (e) raised & everted
– malignant ulcer,
epithelioma
(tissue in edge growing quickly and
spilling out of the ulcer to overlap normal
skin or mucosa)
21. Everted edges which to the
palpating fingers feels hard - Ca
Slightly raised edges – Rodent
Septic ulcer (commonest –
varicose ulcer) sloping edges
Undermined edges -
tuberculous
Punched out ulcer –
tertiary syphilis
22. Multiple gummatous ulcers in lower limb
Varicose
ulcer
confined
to the
lower
quarter
of the
leg
Perforating ulcer on the sole
Exuberant
granulation
tissue
around a
sinus
On rib
23. Colour of the Edge
• Red inflammation
• Pale or cyanosed ischaemia
• Late blue, purple, black
• Pigmentation venous ulcer,
malignant melanoma
• Pearly edge BCC
• Keratinization Neuropathic ulcer
24. • 6. Floor:
Haemorrhage & necrotic slough–
malignant
purulent - acute infection
washed leather- gumma
bluish unhealthy granulation tissue
TB (whitish in brownish space/
apple jelly)
solid brown or gray – dead tissue
full thickness skin death
25. • 7. Discharge:
On dressing gauze – serous,
sero-sanguinous,
purulent, offensive, copious, or
so slight – dries up into a scab.
• 8. Surrounding skin, state of local
tissue, blood supply, innervation
Surrounding skin of infln – infective,
scar – TB
26. PALPATION
• Temperature difference/tenderness - in
acute infected ulcer
• Base – induration +/-,
• Mobility of ulcer over underlying
structures –
– fixed – malignant; bleed on touch +/-
• regional lymphatics –
enlarged -> inflammation
hard – malignant
28. Investigation
• D. Mellitus – Urine sugar/ RBS/FBS
• Infective - fbc, culture
TB - CXR, AFB, ESR
Syphilis- KT, VDRL
• Discharge – smear, Gram stain, C&S
• Biopsy - wedge/incisional biopsy
margin of the ulcer & normal
tissue which allows
» (a) comparison with normal tissue
» (b) known organ &
» (c) +/- or infiltration
29. • Curling’s ulcer
– acute peptic ulcer in burn as a
reaction to stress
• Cushing’s ulcer
– acute PU in head injury, early
days following spinal cord injury
• Marjolin’s ulcer
– malignant change in a scar, ulcer,
sinus (Chr.venous ulcer, burn,
Chr.OM sinus – slow growth –
avascular, painless – scar not
have cut. nerve fibres, late lymphatic
spread – obliterated lymphatics)
31. Stages of Ulcer
Extension Transition Repair or healing
Floor Exudates &
slough
Clean, healthy
granulation tissue
Base Indurated No induration
Discharge Purulent/Blood Thinner Very ittle serous
Margin Sharp Less sharp Shelving
Edge Hyperaemic Less White (fibrous),
Blue (epi.lining)
Red (gr.ts)
32. Principles of Assessment
1. Combination of aetiologies in any one lesion,
especially diabetic foot.
2. Pain indicates invasion of nerve endings.
3. When the diagnosis relates directly to
treatment, biopsy may be necessary.
35. Primary Skin Lesions names
• Macule – a small flat area of
altered colour or texture
• Papule – a small solid
elevation of skin less than
0.5 cm in diameter
• Nodule - >0.5 cm
• Plaque – elevated area of
skin greater than 2 cm in
diameter without
substantial depth
• Vesicle – circumscribed
elevation of skin <0.5 cm in
dia containing fluid
• Bulla - >0.5 cm
• Pustule – visible
accumulation of pus in the
skin
• Abscess - > 1cm
• Weal – elevated white
compressible evanescent
area produced by dermal
oedema
36. • Papilloma – a nipple like
mass protruding from the
skin
• Petechiae – Pin-head sized
macules of blood in the skin
• Purpura – A larger macule
or papule of blood in the
skin
• Ecchymosis – a larger
extravasation of blood into
the skin
• Haematoma – a swelling
from gross bleeding
• Burrow – a linear or
curvilinear papule, caused
by a burrowing scabies mite
• Comedo – a plug of keratin
and sebum wedged in a
dilated pilosebaceous
orifice
• Telangiectasia – visible
dilatation of small
cutaneous blood vessels
37. Secondary lesions (evolved from primary lesion
• Scale – a flake arising from
the horny layer
• Crust – look like a scale, but
is composed of dried blood
or tissue fluid
• Ulcer – an area of skin from
which the whole of
epidermis and at least the
upper part of the dermis has
been lost
• Excoriation – an ulcer or
erosion produced by
scratching
• Erosion – an area of skin
denuded by a complete or
partial loss of the epidermis
• Fissure – a slit in the skin
• Sinus – a cavity or channel
that permits the escape of
pus or fluid
• Scar – the result of healing
in which normal structures
are permanently replaced by
fibrous tissue
• Atrophy – thinning of the
skin due to diminution of
the epi/dermis, s/c fat
• Striae – a streak like, linear,
atrophic, pink, purple or
white lesion of the skin due
to changes in the connective
tissue