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GENETIC EPIDERMOLYSIS
      BULLOSA
 PRESENTER – DR.AMAL SHYAM
   MODERATOR – DR.BIFI JOY
DEFINITION
• Group of genetically determined skin fragility
  disorders characterised by blistering of skin
  and mucosae following mild mechanical
  trauma.

• Alternative term – mechanobullous diseases

• Epidermolysis bullosa was first described in
  1870 by von Hebra under the name ‘erblichen
  pemphigus’.
• Its current name, ‘epidermolysis bullosa
  hereditaria’, was coined by Koebner in 1886.
• Simplex and dystrophic EB were clinically
  separated in 1898 by Hallopeau.
• Junctional EB was first identified in 1935 by
  Herlitz, and termed ‘EB letalis’.
• Precise characterization of these three major
  EB types, via the application of transmission
  electron microscopy, was first performed by
  Pearson in 1962
Prevalence and Incidence
• Mainly derived from National EB Registry
  (USA) Project

• There is no gender, racial, ethnic or
  geographical predilection for EB.
LAMINA
EPIDERMOLYTIC
                     LUCIDO LYTIC

                EB

 DERMOLYTIC            MIXED
EPIDERMOLYTIC BULLOSA SIMPLEX
• Supra basal              • Basal
• Plakophilin deficiency   •   Localised EBS
• Lethal acantholytic      •   EBS, Dowling-Meara
  EBS                      •   EBS, Generalized other
• EBS superficialis        •   EBS,AR
                           •   EBS-Mottled hyperpig
                           •   EBS, Muscular dystrophy
                           •   EBS, Ogna
                           •   EBS, Migratory circinate
                           •   EBS, Pyloric atresia
Molecular Pathology
• In all forms of EB simplex, blister formation is
  intra epidermal

• Most EB subtypes begin with the disruption of
  basal keratinocytes

• Mutations in the basal keratin pair, k5 and k14
• Correlation exist between the position of the
  mutation on the KRT5 or KRT14 genes
• Most severe form of EB simplex, the Dowling–
  Meara subtype - missense mutations in the
  initiation or termination peptides of the rod
  domains

• Weber–Cockayne EBS -, mutations occur
  outside the highly conserved boundary motifs,
  and chiefly in other parts of rod domain or the
  L12 linker region
• In EB simplex with mottled pigmentation is due to
  mutations of the globular head domain of keratin 5,
  that binds with desmosomes & melanosomes

• Ogna form of EB simplex has also been found to be
  caused by a PLEC1 mutation.

• EBS with muscular dystrophy – genetic defects in
  plectin gene (PLEC1)
• AR EBS caused by keratin 14 knock out
  mutation



• Extremely rare entities, plakophilin deficiency
  and lethal acantholytic EB simplex - result
  from mutations in the genes encoding for
  plakophilin-1 and desmoplakin, respectively
Localised EB simplex
• Weber cockayne EBS
• Most common type of EB
• Palms and soles mainly affected
• Most have blisters only on the foot, in a
  minority at waist or neck.
• Blisters start in childhood, rarely in adulthood.
• Aggravated by strenuous physical activity, hot
  weather, friction from clothing.
•   Hyperhydrosis is common.
•   Blisters heal with no milia or scar formation
•   25% develop intra oral lesions, palatal
•   Hair and teeth normal
Dowling-Meara EBS
• EB Herpetiformis
• Blisters occur in groups, heals without scar
• Blistering is severe and extensive – invt of
  mucous membrane, shedding of nails, milia
  formation
• D/d – Junctional and generalized
        recessive dystrophic EB
• Skin biopsy mandatory
• Spontaneous herpetiform, annular,
  or arcuate blistering on the trunk,
  limbs, neck

• Healing with hyperpigmentation

• Irregular hyperkeratosis of palms
  and soles – keratoderma, flexion
  deformity of hand.

• General conditions improve with age
Generalized EBS, non Dowling-Meara
                  variant
•   Koebner EBS
•   Usually mild, 60% localized scarring, 16% milia
•   Blisters appear within first year
•   Infants- occiput, back, legs
•   Childhood- hands & feet
•   Blistering worse in warm weather
EBS Ogna
•   AD
•   Named after a village in Norway
•   Seasonal blistering of hands and feet
•   Generalised bruising tendency, haemorrhagic
    bullae, and onychogryphotic great toe nails
EBS with mottled pigmentation
• Pigmentary changes present at birth or appear
  during infancy
• Reticulate pattern of small, tan coloured
  macular lesions which fade with age
• Involve neck, upper trunk and extremities
• Mild localized skin atophy and nail dystrophy
  seen
AR EBS with neuromuscular disease
•   Muscular dystrophy, Myasthenia gravis, SMA
•   Muscle weakness and wasting severe
•   Blisters over skin and mucosa
•   MR, atrohic scarring seen
•   Milia, nail dystrophy, alopecia
Lethal acantholytic EB
•   Mutation in gene for desmoplakin
•   AR
•   Present at birth, Generalized
•   Presence of oozing erosions than frank blisters
•   Abnormal nails, neonatal teeth, intraoral
    erosions, alopecia of the scalp.
Plakophilin-1 deficiency
• AR form of ectodermal dysplasia
• Mutation in plakophilin-1 gene
• Generalized, appears at birth.
• Superficial erosions, blistering to a lesser
  extent
• Abnormal nails, hypotrichosis, focal
  keratoderma, perioral and tongue fissures,
  constipation, oesophageal stricture,
  blepharitis, absent or sparse eye lashes.
Epidermolysis bullosa simplex
            superficialis
• Epidermal cleavage is just beneath stratum
  corneum
• AD
• Superficial erosions, blisters similar to
  pemphigus foliaceous.
• Mutations in type 7 collagen gene COL7A1
  was found in one study.
Junctional epidermolysis bullosa
• All variants AR inheritance
• Blister formation at the level of Lamina lucida

• Indeterminate JEB
• Types
      Herlitz JEB
      Non Herlitz JEB
      JEB, with pyloric atresia
      JEB, inversa
      JEB, late onset
      LOC Syndrome
Molecular
pathology




• Clean split at the level of Lamina lucida, with
  closely apposed basal keratinocytes, and
  continuous lamina densa in lower part.
• Abnormality in anchoring filament protein laminin
  5 in the skin of patients with Herlitz and some non
  Herlitz JEB

• Herlitz- mutation in LAMA3, LAMB3, LAMC2

• Leads to premature termination codon mutations.

• Non Herlitz JEB – laminin 5 mutation or mutation
  in COL17A1
Herlitz Junctional Epidermolysis
                 Bullosa
• Epidermolysis bullosa letalis
• Epidermolysis bullosa atrophicans
  generalisata gravis

• Blistering and erosions are present at or soon
  after birth and rapidly become generalized
• The whole skin is extremely fragile and lifting
  or turning the baby may cause extensive
  blistering or peeling away of the epidermis.
• Eroded areas are often very slow to heal.
  Healing result in atrophic scarring.

• Involvement of the oral and pharyngeal
  mucosa is frequent and may be severe

• Hoarseness and stridor may indicate laryngeal
  or supraglottic involvement, most notably
  potentially life-threatening stenosis or
  stricture
.
• Infants die early in infancy with overwhelming
  infection or from failure to thrive
• Typical lesions occur symmetrically around the
  nose and mouth
• The teeth show abnormal enamel formation,
  but normal dentine - are malformed, pitted
  and lost prematurely.
• Following blistering and erosions, the
  formation of exuberant granulation tissue on
  the nail folds and nail bed leads to shedding of
  the nails and bulbous changes of the fingertips
.
• Blisters may occur on the cornea, resulting in
  pain, erosions, scarring, and, very rarely,
  blindness

• Urethral meatal stenosis, urinary retention,
  hydronephrosis and bladder hypertrophy,
  Squamous cell carcinoma

• 40% of patients die in first year, most patients
  die within first 5years
• 75% develop flexural contractions at axillae,
  upper & lower limbs.
Generalized non-Herlitz JEB
• Epidermolysis bullosa atrophicans generalisata
  mitis
• Generalized atrophic benign epidermolysis
  bullosa (GABEB)
• Early clinical course similar to Herlitz form
• Patient usually survives till adulthood
• Gradual lessening of severity of disease with
  age
• Teeth show severe enamel defects, fail to
  erupt normally
• Nails are dystropic and frequently missing
• Lesions heal with atrophic scarring,
  sometimes post inflammatory
  hypopigmentation or depigmentation
• Pigmented nevi common
• Alopecia affects scalp, eye brows, eyelashes.
  Body hairs sparse or absent
• Oesophageal stricture, laryngeal invt, oral
  erosions, corneal ulcers, hypoacusis and
  urethral stricture reported
Localised JEB
• Clinical manifestations include nail dystrophy,
  dental enamel changes and blistering
  involving the lower legs and feet only
• Localized forms of non-Herlitz junctional EB
• Chronic, painful erosions associated with
  hyperkeratosis present on the soles.
Junctional EB with pyloric atresia
• Level of blistering - cytoplasm of basal
  keratinocytes, just above the plasma
  membrane, rather than within lamina lucida.
• Few survive beyond the first few months of
  life
• Blistering is usually present at birth, following
  a pregnancy complicated by polyhydramnios
• The teeth are hypoplastic, lacking normal
  enamel, and the nails are dystrophic.

• Early attempts at feeding result in non-bilious
  vomiting.

• Death occurs in first few months, unless
  pyloric stenosis is surgically corrected.
Late onset JEB
• Epidermolysis bullosa progressiva

• The onset is delayed until childhood or
  adolescence, and nail dystrophy is a common
  presentation.

• Later, knees and elbows are involved.
  Progressive atrophic changes lead to early loss
  of fingerprint patterns and mild finger
  contractures
• Condition was originally named EB
  dystrophica–neurotrophica by Gedde-Dahl
  because of the association of partial deafness

• The ultrastructural changes - widening of the
  lamina lucida with deposition of amorphous
  material
Cicatricial JEB
• Bistering heal with scarring and result in loss
  of nails, alopecia, syndactyly and contractures.
• Involvement of oral mucosa with stenosis of
  anterior nares
LOC syndrome
• Laryngo-onycho-cutaneous syndrome
• Shabbir’s syndrome
• Chronic erosive lesions affect the face, mainly
  around the nose and mouth, and, to a lesser
  extent, the limbs, trunk and genitalia.
• Notched teeth, hoarseness
Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa
• Characterized by skin fragility, blistering,
  scarring, nail changes and milia formation.
• Unlike junctional EB, there are both autosomal
  recessive and autosomal dominant subtypes
Molecular pathology
• Both autosomal dominant and recessive forms
  of dystrophic EB are caused by mutations in a
  single gene, COL7A1, which encodes the
  anchoring fibril protein, type VII collagen.

• Ultrastructurally, the level of blistering or
  tissue cleavage in all dystrophic forms of EB is
  immediately below the lamina densa of the
  epidermal basement membrane,
Severe Generalized recessive DEB
• Hallopeau Siemens variant
• Bullae present at birth or appear in early
  infancy
• Clinical presentation include localized absence
  of skin – Bart’s syndrome
• Skin extremely fragile
• Blisters develop on mildest trauma
• Healing lesions produce atrophic scars like
  cigarette paper.
• Milia formation is a constant feature
• Sites of predilection – knees, elbows, hands,
  feet, back of neck ,shoulders, over the spine
• Ulcers over shoulders and spine heal slowly
• Can sometimes become secondarily infected
• Ocasionally lesions heal with excessive
  granulation tissue
• Hair gowth on scalp and body impared
• Scarring digits undergo progressive
  contractures
• Scarring Alopecia
• Pseudosyndactyly
• Oral lesions – Ankyloglossia, microstomia.
• Gums are fragile with erosions & bleeding
• Lingual papillae are lost
• Higher incidence of caries tooth
• Oesophageal involvement – Pain, dysphagia,
  scarring, fibrosis, GERD, perforation
• Perianal blistering, erosions and painful
  fissures common in childhood
• Fecal retention, abdominal pain, bloating
• Ocular – symblepharon, limbal broadening,
  corneal erosions, opacification, scarring
• General physical development is retarded
• Can develop SCC
• Delay in development of secondary
   sexual changes
• Patients die by 3rd or 4th decade.
Generalized dominant DEB
• Hyperplastic (Cockayne-Touraine) and
  albopapuloid (Pasini) variant
• AD
• Skin is less fragile
• Blisters usually follow sharp knocks or glancing
  blows
• Blisters mainly occur over bony prominances
• Nail dystrophy- MC
• Bistering in mouth is mild and teeth normal
• Perianal lesions – intense pain
• Clinically often impossible to distinguish from
  Dominant DEB
• Good long term prognosis
Bullous dermolysis of newborn
• AD
• Blistering over limbs
• Improves during childhood and remits
  completely
• Blisters heal without atrophic scarring
others
• Pretibial dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa
    AD , late onset
    Itching, bullae, atrophy & scarring of shin

• Epidermolysis bullosa pruriginosa
   Intractable pruritus
   Violaceous lichenoid papules & plaques in
     a linear arrangement in shin & forearm
Kindler Syndrome
• AR
• Mutations in FERMT1 (KIND1)
• generalized blistering at birth, with some
  amount of scarring.
• Keratoderma, skin atrophy, poikiloderma,
  photosensitivity,
• and rarely, mental retardation and bone
  abnormalities
• Gingival hyperplasia,
  colitis,
• esophagitis, ectropion,
• and urethral strictures
DIAGNOSIS
• Skin biopsy

• Electron microscopy

• Antigen mapping

• Use of specific antibody probes

• Molecular diagnosis
Management
• Blistering becomes less frequent as age
  advances
• Prevention of trauma
• Prevention of infection
• Avoidance of provocating factors
• Treatment of complications

• Usually a team approach
• Genetic councilling
   Gold standard is identification of genetic mutation
    25% recurrence rate in AR
    50% recurrence in AD

• Prenatal Diagnosis
•    Fetoscopy
•    CVS
•    Amniocentesis
Skin Infection
• Water or air mattress to reduce friction
• Loose fitting clothing, Soft leather shoes
• Cool environment
• Adhesives are avoided, instead use paraffin
  impregnates gauze for dressings
• Blisters drained by puncturing,roof left behind
• Antibiotics in severe infection
Treatment
•   Amityptilline, Phenytoin therapy
•   Vitamin E, Tetracyclines, Retinoids,
•   Cyclosporin
•   No much role for steroids
•   PUVA therapy
•   Thalidomide
•   Cryotherapy
•   Surgical treatment – Split thickness graft
Prevention & Treatment of
             complications
• Digital fusion & contractures
• Dysphagia-
        Liquid foods, IV administration, NG feed,
  Strictures surgically corrected.
• Laryngeal invt –
•           Humidification of air
•           Nebulized adrenaline, steroids,
  Tracheostomy
• Anaemia correction
• Constipation
• Proper nutrition
• Teeth – Cleaning, mouth washes, regular
  examination
• Eyes – lubricants

• Gene therapy
•   IADVL Textbook of dermatology
•   Rooks Textbook of dermatology
•   Fitzpatrick dermatology in General Medicine
•   Fine JD, Eady RAJ, Bauer EA et al. The
    classification of inherited epidermolysis
    bullosa (EB): report of the Third International
    Consensus meeting on Diagnosis and
    Classificationof EB. J Am Acad Dermatol
    2008;58:931-50
Genetic epidermolysis bullosa

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Genetic epidermolysis bullosa

  • 1. GENETIC EPIDERMOLYSIS BULLOSA PRESENTER – DR.AMAL SHYAM MODERATOR – DR.BIFI JOY
  • 2. DEFINITION • Group of genetically determined skin fragility disorders characterised by blistering of skin and mucosae following mild mechanical trauma. • Alternative term – mechanobullous diseases • Epidermolysis bullosa was first described in 1870 by von Hebra under the name ‘erblichen pemphigus’.
  • 3. • Its current name, ‘epidermolysis bullosa hereditaria’, was coined by Koebner in 1886. • Simplex and dystrophic EB were clinically separated in 1898 by Hallopeau. • Junctional EB was first identified in 1935 by Herlitz, and termed ‘EB letalis’. • Precise characterization of these three major EB types, via the application of transmission electron microscopy, was first performed by Pearson in 1962
  • 4. Prevalence and Incidence • Mainly derived from National EB Registry (USA) Project • There is no gender, racial, ethnic or geographical predilection for EB.
  • 5. LAMINA EPIDERMOLYTIC LUCIDO LYTIC EB DERMOLYTIC MIXED
  • 6. EPIDERMOLYTIC BULLOSA SIMPLEX • Supra basal • Basal • Plakophilin deficiency • Localised EBS • Lethal acantholytic • EBS, Dowling-Meara EBS • EBS, Generalized other • EBS superficialis • EBS,AR • EBS-Mottled hyperpig • EBS, Muscular dystrophy • EBS, Ogna • EBS, Migratory circinate • EBS, Pyloric atresia
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9. Molecular Pathology • In all forms of EB simplex, blister formation is intra epidermal • Most EB subtypes begin with the disruption of basal keratinocytes • Mutations in the basal keratin pair, k5 and k14 • Correlation exist between the position of the mutation on the KRT5 or KRT14 genes
  • 10.
  • 11. • Most severe form of EB simplex, the Dowling– Meara subtype - missense mutations in the initiation or termination peptides of the rod domains • Weber–Cockayne EBS -, mutations occur outside the highly conserved boundary motifs, and chiefly in other parts of rod domain or the L12 linker region
  • 12. • In EB simplex with mottled pigmentation is due to mutations of the globular head domain of keratin 5, that binds with desmosomes & melanosomes • Ogna form of EB simplex has also been found to be caused by a PLEC1 mutation. • EBS with muscular dystrophy – genetic defects in plectin gene (PLEC1)
  • 13. • AR EBS caused by keratin 14 knock out mutation • Extremely rare entities, plakophilin deficiency and lethal acantholytic EB simplex - result from mutations in the genes encoding for plakophilin-1 and desmoplakin, respectively
  • 14.
  • 15. Localised EB simplex • Weber cockayne EBS • Most common type of EB • Palms and soles mainly affected • Most have blisters only on the foot, in a minority at waist or neck. • Blisters start in childhood, rarely in adulthood. • Aggravated by strenuous physical activity, hot weather, friction from clothing.
  • 16. Hyperhydrosis is common. • Blisters heal with no milia or scar formation • 25% develop intra oral lesions, palatal • Hair and teeth normal
  • 17. Dowling-Meara EBS • EB Herpetiformis • Blisters occur in groups, heals without scar • Blistering is severe and extensive – invt of mucous membrane, shedding of nails, milia formation • D/d – Junctional and generalized recessive dystrophic EB • Skin biopsy mandatory
  • 18. • Spontaneous herpetiform, annular, or arcuate blistering on the trunk, limbs, neck • Healing with hyperpigmentation • Irregular hyperkeratosis of palms and soles – keratoderma, flexion deformity of hand. • General conditions improve with age
  • 19. Generalized EBS, non Dowling-Meara variant • Koebner EBS • Usually mild, 60% localized scarring, 16% milia • Blisters appear within first year • Infants- occiput, back, legs • Childhood- hands & feet • Blistering worse in warm weather
  • 20. EBS Ogna • AD • Named after a village in Norway • Seasonal blistering of hands and feet • Generalised bruising tendency, haemorrhagic bullae, and onychogryphotic great toe nails
  • 21. EBS with mottled pigmentation • Pigmentary changes present at birth or appear during infancy • Reticulate pattern of small, tan coloured macular lesions which fade with age • Involve neck, upper trunk and extremities • Mild localized skin atophy and nail dystrophy seen
  • 22. AR EBS with neuromuscular disease • Muscular dystrophy, Myasthenia gravis, SMA • Muscle weakness and wasting severe • Blisters over skin and mucosa • MR, atrohic scarring seen • Milia, nail dystrophy, alopecia
  • 23. Lethal acantholytic EB • Mutation in gene for desmoplakin • AR • Present at birth, Generalized • Presence of oozing erosions than frank blisters • Abnormal nails, neonatal teeth, intraoral erosions, alopecia of the scalp.
  • 24. Plakophilin-1 deficiency • AR form of ectodermal dysplasia • Mutation in plakophilin-1 gene • Generalized, appears at birth. • Superficial erosions, blistering to a lesser extent • Abnormal nails, hypotrichosis, focal keratoderma, perioral and tongue fissures, constipation, oesophageal stricture, blepharitis, absent or sparse eye lashes.
  • 25. Epidermolysis bullosa simplex superficialis • Epidermal cleavage is just beneath stratum corneum • AD • Superficial erosions, blisters similar to pemphigus foliaceous. • Mutations in type 7 collagen gene COL7A1 was found in one study.
  • 26. Junctional epidermolysis bullosa • All variants AR inheritance • Blister formation at the level of Lamina lucida • Indeterminate JEB
  • 27. • Types Herlitz JEB Non Herlitz JEB JEB, with pyloric atresia JEB, inversa JEB, late onset LOC Syndrome
  • 28. Molecular pathology • Clean split at the level of Lamina lucida, with closely apposed basal keratinocytes, and continuous lamina densa in lower part.
  • 29.
  • 30. • Abnormality in anchoring filament protein laminin 5 in the skin of patients with Herlitz and some non Herlitz JEB • Herlitz- mutation in LAMA3, LAMB3, LAMC2 • Leads to premature termination codon mutations. • Non Herlitz JEB – laminin 5 mutation or mutation in COL17A1
  • 31. Herlitz Junctional Epidermolysis Bullosa • Epidermolysis bullosa letalis • Epidermolysis bullosa atrophicans generalisata gravis • Blistering and erosions are present at or soon after birth and rapidly become generalized • The whole skin is extremely fragile and lifting or turning the baby may cause extensive blistering or peeling away of the epidermis.
  • 32. • Eroded areas are often very slow to heal. Healing result in atrophic scarring. • Involvement of the oral and pharyngeal mucosa is frequent and may be severe • Hoarseness and stridor may indicate laryngeal or supraglottic involvement, most notably potentially life-threatening stenosis or stricture
  • 33. . • Infants die early in infancy with overwhelming infection or from failure to thrive • Typical lesions occur symmetrically around the nose and mouth • The teeth show abnormal enamel formation, but normal dentine - are malformed, pitted and lost prematurely.
  • 34. • Following blistering and erosions, the formation of exuberant granulation tissue on the nail folds and nail bed leads to shedding of the nails and bulbous changes of the fingertips
  • 35. . • Blisters may occur on the cornea, resulting in pain, erosions, scarring, and, very rarely, blindness • Urethral meatal stenosis, urinary retention, hydronephrosis and bladder hypertrophy, Squamous cell carcinoma • 40% of patients die in first year, most patients die within first 5years • 75% develop flexural contractions at axillae, upper & lower limbs.
  • 36. Generalized non-Herlitz JEB • Epidermolysis bullosa atrophicans generalisata mitis • Generalized atrophic benign epidermolysis bullosa (GABEB) • Early clinical course similar to Herlitz form • Patient usually survives till adulthood • Gradual lessening of severity of disease with age
  • 37. • Teeth show severe enamel defects, fail to erupt normally • Nails are dystropic and frequently missing • Lesions heal with atrophic scarring, sometimes post inflammatory hypopigmentation or depigmentation
  • 38. • Pigmented nevi common • Alopecia affects scalp, eye brows, eyelashes. Body hairs sparse or absent • Oesophageal stricture, laryngeal invt, oral erosions, corneal ulcers, hypoacusis and urethral stricture reported
  • 39. Localised JEB • Clinical manifestations include nail dystrophy, dental enamel changes and blistering involving the lower legs and feet only • Localized forms of non-Herlitz junctional EB • Chronic, painful erosions associated with hyperkeratosis present on the soles.
  • 40. Junctional EB with pyloric atresia • Level of blistering - cytoplasm of basal keratinocytes, just above the plasma membrane, rather than within lamina lucida. • Few survive beyond the first few months of life • Blistering is usually present at birth, following a pregnancy complicated by polyhydramnios
  • 41. • The teeth are hypoplastic, lacking normal enamel, and the nails are dystrophic. • Early attempts at feeding result in non-bilious vomiting. • Death occurs in first few months, unless pyloric stenosis is surgically corrected.
  • 42. Late onset JEB • Epidermolysis bullosa progressiva • The onset is delayed until childhood or adolescence, and nail dystrophy is a common presentation. • Later, knees and elbows are involved. Progressive atrophic changes lead to early loss of fingerprint patterns and mild finger contractures
  • 43. • Condition was originally named EB dystrophica–neurotrophica by Gedde-Dahl because of the association of partial deafness • The ultrastructural changes - widening of the lamina lucida with deposition of amorphous material
  • 44. Cicatricial JEB • Bistering heal with scarring and result in loss of nails, alopecia, syndactyly and contractures. • Involvement of oral mucosa with stenosis of anterior nares
  • 45. LOC syndrome • Laryngo-onycho-cutaneous syndrome • Shabbir’s syndrome • Chronic erosive lesions affect the face, mainly around the nose and mouth, and, to a lesser extent, the limbs, trunk and genitalia. • Notched teeth, hoarseness
  • 46. Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa • Characterized by skin fragility, blistering, scarring, nail changes and milia formation. • Unlike junctional EB, there are both autosomal recessive and autosomal dominant subtypes
  • 47. Molecular pathology • Both autosomal dominant and recessive forms of dystrophic EB are caused by mutations in a single gene, COL7A1, which encodes the anchoring fibril protein, type VII collagen. • Ultrastructurally, the level of blistering or tissue cleavage in all dystrophic forms of EB is immediately below the lamina densa of the epidermal basement membrane,
  • 48.
  • 49. Severe Generalized recessive DEB • Hallopeau Siemens variant • Bullae present at birth or appear in early infancy • Clinical presentation include localized absence of skin – Bart’s syndrome • Skin extremely fragile • Blisters develop on mildest trauma
  • 50. • Healing lesions produce atrophic scars like cigarette paper. • Milia formation is a constant feature • Sites of predilection – knees, elbows, hands, feet, back of neck ,shoulders, over the spine • Ulcers over shoulders and spine heal slowly • Can sometimes become secondarily infected • Ocasionally lesions heal with excessive granulation tissue
  • 51. • Hair gowth on scalp and body impared • Scarring digits undergo progressive contractures • Scarring Alopecia • Pseudosyndactyly • Oral lesions – Ankyloglossia, microstomia. • Gums are fragile with erosions & bleeding • Lingual papillae are lost
  • 52. • Higher incidence of caries tooth • Oesophageal involvement – Pain, dysphagia, scarring, fibrosis, GERD, perforation • Perianal blistering, erosions and painful fissures common in childhood • Fecal retention, abdominal pain, bloating • Ocular – symblepharon, limbal broadening, corneal erosions, opacification, scarring
  • 53. • General physical development is retarded • Can develop SCC • Delay in development of secondary sexual changes • Patients die by 3rd or 4th decade.
  • 54. Generalized dominant DEB • Hyperplastic (Cockayne-Touraine) and albopapuloid (Pasini) variant • AD • Skin is less fragile • Blisters usually follow sharp knocks or glancing blows • Blisters mainly occur over bony prominances • Nail dystrophy- MC
  • 55.
  • 56. • Bistering in mouth is mild and teeth normal • Perianal lesions – intense pain • Clinically often impossible to distinguish from Dominant DEB • Good long term prognosis
  • 57. Bullous dermolysis of newborn • AD • Blistering over limbs • Improves during childhood and remits completely • Blisters heal without atrophic scarring
  • 58. others • Pretibial dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa AD , late onset Itching, bullae, atrophy & scarring of shin • Epidermolysis bullosa pruriginosa Intractable pruritus Violaceous lichenoid papules & plaques in a linear arrangement in shin & forearm
  • 59. Kindler Syndrome • AR • Mutations in FERMT1 (KIND1) • generalized blistering at birth, with some amount of scarring. • Keratoderma, skin atrophy, poikiloderma, photosensitivity, • and rarely, mental retardation and bone abnormalities
  • 60. • Gingival hyperplasia, colitis, • esophagitis, ectropion, • and urethral strictures
  • 61. DIAGNOSIS • Skin biopsy • Electron microscopy • Antigen mapping • Use of specific antibody probes • Molecular diagnosis
  • 62.
  • 63. Management • Blistering becomes less frequent as age advances • Prevention of trauma • Prevention of infection • Avoidance of provocating factors • Treatment of complications • Usually a team approach
  • 64. • Genetic councilling Gold standard is identification of genetic mutation 25% recurrence rate in AR 50% recurrence in AD • Prenatal Diagnosis • Fetoscopy • CVS • Amniocentesis
  • 65. Skin Infection • Water or air mattress to reduce friction • Loose fitting clothing, Soft leather shoes • Cool environment • Adhesives are avoided, instead use paraffin impregnates gauze for dressings • Blisters drained by puncturing,roof left behind • Antibiotics in severe infection
  • 66. Treatment • Amityptilline, Phenytoin therapy • Vitamin E, Tetracyclines, Retinoids, • Cyclosporin • No much role for steroids • PUVA therapy • Thalidomide • Cryotherapy • Surgical treatment – Split thickness graft
  • 67. Prevention & Treatment of complications • Digital fusion & contractures • Dysphagia- Liquid foods, IV administration, NG feed, Strictures surgically corrected. • Laryngeal invt – • Humidification of air • Nebulized adrenaline, steroids, Tracheostomy
  • 68. • Anaemia correction • Constipation • Proper nutrition • Teeth – Cleaning, mouth washes, regular examination • Eyes – lubricants • Gene therapy
  • 69. IADVL Textbook of dermatology • Rooks Textbook of dermatology • Fitzpatrick dermatology in General Medicine • Fine JD, Eady RAJ, Bauer EA et al. The classification of inherited epidermolysis bullosa (EB): report of the Third International Consensus meeting on Diagnosis and Classificationof EB. J Am Acad Dermatol 2008;58:931-50