As dermatologic evaluation relies heavily on the objective cutaneous appearance, physical examination is often performed prior to taking a complete history in pts presenting with a skin problem. A differential diagnosis can usually be generated on the basis of a thorough examination with precise descriptions of the skin lesion(s) and narrowed with pertinent facts from the history. Laboratory or diagnostic procedures are then used, when appropriate, to clarify the diagnosis.
As illustrated in Fig. 59-1, the distribution of skin lesions can provide valuable clues to the identification of the disorder: generalized (systemic diseases); sun-exposed (SLE, photoallergic, phototoxic, polymorphous light eruption, porphyria cutanea tarda); dermatomal (herpes zoster); extensor surfaces (elbows and knees in psoriasis); flexural surfaces (antecubital and popliteal fossae in atopic dermatitis).
Can describe individual or multiple lesions: Linear (contact dermatitis such as poison ivy); annularring-shaped lesion (erythema chronicum migrans, erythema annulare centrificum, tinea corporis); iris or target lesiontwo or three concentric circles of differing hue (erythema multiforme); nummularcoin-shaped (nummular eczema); morbilliformmeasles-like with small confluent papules coalescing into unusual shapes (measles, drug eruption); herpetiformgrouped vesicles, papules, or erosions (herpes simplex).
Cutaneous changes caused directly by disease process (Table 59-1).
Changes in area of primary pathology often due to secondary events, e.g., scratching, secondary infection, bleeding (Table 59-2).
Color, e.g., violaceous, erythematous; physical characteristics, e.g., warm, tender; sharpness of edge, surface contourflat-topped, pedunculated (on a stalk), verrucous (wartlike), umbilicated (containing a central depression).