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Alcohol (OH) and the Skin – Cirrhosis (For professionals)

Cirrhosis

  • Spider nevi:
  1. present in 75% of the time
  2. on the face and trunk
  3. rarely unilateral of the nevoid type, which abundance would correlate with the existence of esophageal varicosities (Foutch et al).

  • Nails
  1. total apparent leuconychia (Terry’s nails): 80% of patients with cirrhosis. Proximal 2/3 white, presumed to result from reduced blood flow due to overgrowth of connective tissue.
  2. flat nails, koilonychia or clubbing (10-15%)
  3. red lunulae: due to arteriolar increased blood flow or venodilation.

 

 

  • Endocrine changes
  1. hypogonadism: reduced facial hair growth, Soft texture. Sign of atrophy
  2. hyperestrogenism: gynecomastia, spider nevi, changes in fat distribution, loss of body hair and change of pubic hair. Palmar erythrosis.
  3. Pseudo Cushing: Moon facies, truncal obesity, proximal muscle wasting, buffalo hump, abdomen striae, hypertension, osteoporosis. Women may have signs of virilization, breast atrophy or menstrual irregularities

 

 

  • Melanoderma (pigmented cirrhosis):
  1. suspect familial haemochromatosis.
  2. due to excess melanin in giant melanosomes in the epidermis
  3. cause….
  4. blotchy circumscribed areas of hyperpigmentation, freckling, areolar, perioral, periorbital pigmentation.

 

 

  • linear pigment in the finger creases
  • purpura (thromopenia or hypoprothrombinaemia)
  • Other visible changes:
  1. Gynecomastia (relative hyperestrogenaemia)
  2. testicular atrophy (relative hyperestrogenaemia)
  3. caput medusae (due to collateral vein development)
  4. bilateral parotidial swelling
  5. icterus (cholestasis

 

 

Source of information: here