Title: Vesiculobullous Diseases
1Vesiculobullous Diseases
- Infectious (viral)
- Non-infectious (mucocutaneous)
2Vesiculobullous diseases infectious
- Herpes Simplex (HHV I (II)
- Primary
- Recurrent
- Varicella-zoster (HHV III)
- Primary
- Recurrent
- Coxsackie
- Herpangina
- Hand-foot-mouth disease
- Lymphonodular pharyngitis
3Viruses and oral disease
4Herpes Viruses
- Members of human herpesvirus family
- Type 1 (HSV-1 or HHV-1)
- Type 2 (HSV-2 or HHV-2)
- Varicella-zoster virus (VZV or HHV-3)
- Epstein-Barr virus (EBV or HHV-4)
- Cytomegalovirus (CMV or HHV-5)
- HHV-6 and HHV-7 two recently discovered viruses
- HHV-8
5Herpes Simplex Virus
- After initial infection, periods of latency
reactivation - HSV-1 spread predominantly through saliva or
active perioral lesions - HSV-2 spread mainly through sexual contact
- Antibodies to HSV-1 decrease chance of
infection/severity of HSV-2
6Herpes Simplex Virus
- Primary infection - Initial exposure, often is
asymptomatic - Secondary or recurrent HSV-1 infection
reactivation of virus, viral shedding. Symptoms
affect epithelium via sensory ganglion. Virus
easily spread through active lesions or
asymptomatic viral shedding. Virus may spread to
other sites in same host.
7Primary Herpes Simplex
- CLINICAL FEATURES
- Most infections occur during childhood and
subclinically - Few primary infections result in clinical disease
- Oral and perioral vesicles rupture, forming
ulcers - Intraoral lesions on any surface
- Systemic signs/symptoms (e.g., fever, malaise)
- Self-limited symptomatic care
- Immunocompromised have more severe disease
- TREATMENT
- Acyclovir and analogs may control virus
- Must use early to be effective
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition.
8Herpes Simplex Virus
- Acute herpetic gingivostomatitis
- Most common pattern of HSV-1 infection
- Usually occurs 6 months 5 years of age
- Pinhead vesicles, collapse to form small red
lesions which develop ulceration - Movable and attached oral mucosa can be affected
- Gingiva enlarged, painful, extremely erythematous
- Resolves 5-7 days (mild) or 2 weeks (severe)
9Herpes Simplex Virus
A. Herpes simplex induced vesicle. B.
Virus-infected multinucleated keratinocytes in
the wall of a vesicle.
10Pathogenesis of herpes simplex infection
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition. Elsevier. 2002
11Acute herpetic gingivostomatitis
12Acute herpetic gingivostomatitis
13Herpes Simplex Virus
- Herpes labialis (cold sore or fever blister)
- Most common site is vermilion border and adjacent
skin of lips - Prodromal symptoms 6-24 hours before lesion
develops - Small erythematous papules form clusters of
fluid-filled vesicles - Vesicles rupture within 2 days, healing occurs
within 7-10 days
14Secondary Herpes Simplex
- ETIOLOGY
- Reactivation of latent herpes simplex virus type
1 - Triggerssunlight, stress, immunosuppression
- Reactivation common frequency decreases with
aging - Prodromal symptomstingling and burning
- CLINICAL FEATURES
- Affects perioral skin, lips, gingiva, palate
- Self-limited
- TREATMENT
- Possible control with acyclovir and analogs
- Must administer early
- Systemic treatment much more effective than
topical treatment
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition. Elsevier.
15Herpes labialis (cold sore or fever blister)
16Recurrent intraoral herpes
17Herpes Simplex Virus
- Herpetic whitlow (herpetic paronychia)
infection of thumbs or fingers - Herpes gladiatorum (scrumpox) - primary cutaneous
herpetic infection in area of previous epithelial
damage - Eczema herpeticum (Kaposis varicelliform
eruption) diffuse life-threatening HSV
infection in patients with chronic skin diseases
18Herpes Zoster - Shingles
- Occurs after reactivation of VZV
- Predisposing factors include immunosuppression,
radiation, malignancies, old age - Presents as pain in epithelium innervated by
affected sensory nerve (dermatome) - Pain normally present 1-4 days before development
of cutaneous or oral lesions. Lesions resolve
within 2-3 weeks in healthy individuals
19Herpes Zoster - Shingles
- Zoster sine herpete recurrence without lesions
- Postherpetic neuralgia pain lasting longer than
one month after episode - Ramsay Hunt syndrome
- Cutaneous lesions of external auditory canal
combined with involvement of facial, auditory
nerves - Causes facial paralysis, hearing loss, vertigo
- Oral lesions occur with trigeminal nerve
involvement
20Varicella - Chickenpox
- Primary infection with VZV
- Herpes zoster after initial infection, virus
establishes latency in dorsal spinal ganglia - Symptoms include rash, malaise, fever
- Oral lesions common, may precede skin lesions
- Complications Reyes syndrome encephalitis
21Varicella-Zoster
- PRIMARY DISEASE (VARICELLA, CHICKENPOX)
- Self-limiting
- Common in children
- Vesicular eruption of trunk and head and neck
occurring in crops - Systemic signs/symptomsfever, malaise, other
- Symptomatic treatment
- SECONDARY DISEASE (ZOSTER, SHINGLES)
- Self-limiting
- Adults
- Rash, vesicles, ulcers unilateral along dermatome
Postherpetic pain (15 of cases) can be severe - Immunocompromised and lymphoma patients at risk
- Treated with acyclovir and analogs
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
22Varicella - Chickenpox
23Varicella - Chickenpox
24Herpes Zoster - Shingles
- Occurs after reactivation of VZV
- Predisposing factors include immunosuppression,
radiation, malignancies, old age - Presents as pain in epithelium innervated by
affected sensory nerve (dermatome) - Pain normally present 1-4 days before development
of cutaneous or oral lesions. Lesions resolve
within 2-3 weeks in healthy individuals
25Herpes Zoster - Shingles
- Zoster sine herpete recurrence without lesions
- Postherpetic neuralgia pain lasting longer than
one month after episode - Ramsay Hunt syndrome
- Cutaneous lesions of external auditory canal
combined with involvement of facial, auditory
nerves - Causes facial paralysis, hearing loss, vertigo
- Oral lesions occur with trigeminal nerve
involvement
26Herpes Zoster - Shingles
27Herpes Zoster - Shingles
28Herpes Zoster - Shingles
29Herpes Zoster - Shingles
30Enteroviruses
- Herpangina
- Most cases mild
- Sore throat, dysphagia, fever
- Small number of oral lesions develop in posterior
areas of mouth (begin as red macules which form
fragile vesicles that rapidly ulcerate) - Systemic symptoms resolve in a few days,
ulcerations take 7-10 days to heal
31Herpangina
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
32Herpangina
33Enteroviruses
- Hand-Foot-and-Mouth Disease
- Oral lesions almost always present
- Resemble oral lesions of herpangina but may be
more numerous and are not confined to posterior
area of mouth - Most ulcerations resolve within one week
34Hand-Foot-and-Mouth Disease
35Hand-Foot-and-Mouth Disease
- A, B, C. Hand-foot-and-mouth disease.
(Courtesy Dr. Steven K. Young.)
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
36Enteroviruses
- Acute Lymphonodular Pharyngitis
- Sore throat, fever, mild headache lasting 4-14
days - Yellow - dark pink nodules develop on soft palate
or tonsillar pillars - Nodules resolve within 10 days without
vesiculation or ulceration
37Acute Lymphonodular Pharyngitis
38Vesiculobullous diseases non-infectious
- Non-immunologic
- Epidermolysis bullosa
- Darier-White disease (keratosis follicularis)
- Immune-related
- Bullous lichen planus
- Erythema multiforme
- Stevens-Johnson syndrome
- Toxic epidermal necrolysis
- Autoimmune
- Pemphigus vulgaris
- Cicatricial pemphigoid
- Bullous pemphigoid
- Dermatitis herpetiformis
- Miscellaneous
- Allergic stomatitis
39Epidermolysis bullosa
- Epidermolysis bullosa is a general term that
encompasses one acquired and several genetic
varieties (dystrophic, junctional, simplex)
characterized by the formation of blisters at
sites of minor trauma. - The several genetic types range from autosomal
dominant to autosomal recessive in origin and are
further distinguished by various clinical
features, histopathology, and ultrastructure. - In the hereditary forms, circulating antibodies
are not evident. Rather, pathogenesis appears to
be related to genetic defects in basal cells,
hemidesmosomes, or anchoring connective tissue
filaments, depending on the disease subtype. - The acquired nonhereditary autoimmune form, known
as epidermolysis acquisita, is unrelated to the
other types and is often precipitated by exposure
to specific drugs. In this type, IgG deposits are
commonly found in sub-basement membrane tissue
and type VII collagen antibodies located below
the lamina densa of the basement membrane.
40Epidermolysis bullosa
41Epidermolysis bullosa
Complete separation of the epithelium from the
connective tissue is seen in this photomicrograph
of a tissue section obtained from a patient
affected by a junctional form of epidermolysis
bullosa. Neville. Oral and Maxillofacial
Pathology, 2nd Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
42Darier's disease
- Uncommon genodermatosis with rather striking skin
involvement and relatively subtle oral mucosal
lesions. - Inherited as an autosomal dominant trait, having
a high degree of penetrance and variable
expressivity. - A lack of cohesion among the surface epithelial
cells characterizes this disease, and mutation of
a gene that encodes an intracellular calcium pump
has been identified as the cause for abnormal
desmosomal organization in the affected
epithelial cells. - Estimates of the prevalence of Darier's disease
in northern European populations range from 1 in
36,000 to 1 in 100,000.
Neville. Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, 2nd
Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
43Darier's disease
- Patients with Darier's disease have numerous
erythematous, often pruritic, papules on the skin
of the trunk and the scalp that develop during
the second decade of life. - An accumulation of keratin, producing a rough
texture, may be seen in association with the
lesions, and a foul odor may be present as a
result of bacterial degradation of the keratin. - The process generally becomes worse during the
summer months, either because of sensitivity of
some patients to ultraviolet light or because
increased heat results in sweating, which induces
more epithelial clefting. - The palms and soles often exhibit pits and
keratoses. The nails show longitudinal lines,
ridges, or painful splits.
Neville. Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, 2nd
Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
44Darier's disease
- The onset occurs between the ages of 6 and 20
years. - The disease has a predilection for the skin, but
13 of patients have oral lesions. Skin
manifestations are characterized by small,
skin-colored papular lesions symmetrically
distributed over the face, trunk, and
intertriginous areas. The papules eventually
coalesce and feel greasy because of excessive
keratin production. - Fingernail changes may include fragility,
splintering, and subungual keratosis. Nail
changes are often helpful in establishing a
diagnosis. - The extent of the oral lesions may parallel the
extent of skin involvement. Favored oral mucosal
sites include the attached gingiva and hard
palate. The lesions typically appear as small,
whitish papules, producing an overall cobblestone
appearance. Papules range from 2 to 3 mm in
diameter and may become coalescent. Extension
beyond the oral cavity into the oropharynx and
pharynx may occur.
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
45Histopathology of Darier's disease
Microscopic examination of the shows a
dyskeratotic process characterized by a central
keratin plug that overlies epithelium exhibiting
a suprabasilar cleft (acantholysis). Not unique
to Darier's disease and may be seen in conditions
such as pemphigus vulgaris. The epithelial rete
ridges of the lesions appear narrow, elongated,
and test tube shaped. Close inspection of the
epithelium reveals varying numbers of two types
of dyskeratotic cells, called corps ronds (round
bodies) or grains (because they resemble cereal
grains).
Neville. Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, 2nd
Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
46Darier's disease
47Immunologic Mechanism/ Mediation of Skin Disease
48Epithelial attachment apparatus
Neville. Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, 2nd
Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
49Blisters
50Vesiculobullous diseases antigenic targets.
51Chronic Vesiculoulcerative Diseases
Neville. Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, 2nd
Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
52Immunofluorescence techniques
Neville. Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, 2nd
Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
53Patterns of Immunofluorescence
54Erythema Multiforme
- Self-limiting hypersensitivity response to
infectious agents or drugs (by cytotoxic T cells).
55Erythema Multiforme Associated Conditions
- Infections HSV, Mycoplasma, histoplasmosis,
typhoid, leprosy, coccidioidomycosis - Drugs sulfonamides, penicillin, barbiturates,
salicylates, hydantoins, antimalarials - Cancers carcinomas lymphoma
- Autoimmune diseases dermatomyositis, SLE,
polyarteritis nodosa
56Erythema Multiforme
- Sudden onset of macules, papules, vesicles,
bullae target lesions - Skin, mucous membranes, conjunctiva, urethra,
anogenital region - Usually self-limiting but Stevens-Johnson
syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis variants
can be severe and life-threatening
57Erythema multiforme
- Typical sloughing oral lesion Typical target
skin lesion
58Erythema multiforme with genital lesion
59Erythema multiforme with conjunctivitis in
Stevens Johnson syndrome
60Erythema multiforme toxic epidermal necrolysis
61Lichen Planus
- Idiopathic, mucocutaneous, self-limiting in 1-2
years - Skin lesions are pruritic, purple, polygonal
papules extensor of arms, flexor or legs,
Wickham striae - Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation
- Oral lesions more common reticulated
62Lichen planus
63Oral Lichen planus
64Blistering (Vesiculobullous)Diseases
- Pemphigus
- Bullous pemphigoid
- Cicatricial pemphigoid (BMMP)
- Dermatitis herpetiformis
65Immunofluorescence laboratory methodology.
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
66Pemphigus
- Autoimmune attack on desmoglein 3, the
intercellular cementing substance by an IgG
autoantibody - Most middle-aged progressive vegetans type can
be fatal if untreated 1-5/1,000,000 - Vegetans, foliaceus and erythematosus subtypes
- Affects skin (scalp, face, groin, axilla, trunk)
mucous membranes - Suprabasal acantholytic blister
- Positive Nikolsky sign
67Pemphigus Vulgaris
- ETIOLOGY
- Autoimmune reaction to intercellular keratinocyte
protein (desmoglein 3) - Autoantibodies cause intraepithelial blisters
- CLINICAL FEATURES
- Affects skin and/or mucosa 50 or more of cases
begin in the mouth ("first to show, last to go") - Presents as ulcers preceded by vesicles or bullae
- Persistent and progressive
- TREATMENT
- Controlled with immunosuppressives
(corticosteroids and azathioprine/cyclophosphamide
) - High mortality when untreated (dehydration,
electrolyte imbalance, malnutrition, infection)
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
68Pemphigus vulgaris
69(No Transcript)
70Oral pemphigus vulgaris
A B. Oral pemphigus vulgaris showing
intraepithelial separation and Tzanck cells.
?Tzanck cells.
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
71Histopatholgy of pemphigus
72Positive immunofluorescence (fish-net pattern) to
desmoglein 3 indicative of pemphigus
73Skin lesions in pemphigus vulgaris
74Oral lesions pemphigus vulgaris
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
75Oral lesions pemphigus vulgaris
76Bullous Pemphigoid
- Autoimmune attack of the basal lamina zone
hemidesmosome - Tense bullae thighs, flexor forearms, axillae,
groin, lower abdomen oral involvement 8-39 - Older adults 10/1,000,000 positive Nikolsky
sign tends to be limited
77Bullous pemphigoid
78Bullous pemphigoid
79Cicatricial Pemphigoid(Mucous Membrane
Pemphigoid)
- ETIOLOGY
- Autoimmune reaction to basement membrane proteins
(laminin 5 and BP180) - CLINICAL FEATURES
- Oral mucosa (gingiva often only site) and
conjunctiva skin rarely affected - Autoantibodies cause subepithelial blisters
- Present as ulcers/redness in older adults (over
50) - Persistent, uncomfortable to painful
- TREATMENT
- Controlled with corticosteroids sometimes
resistant to systemic therapy topical agents
useful - Significant morbidity if untreated, including
pain and scarring, especially of eye
80Cicatricial Pemphigoid
- Autoimmune attack on BLZ more common than
pemphigus - Oral lesion are most common may have
conjuctival, nasal, esophageal, laryngeal,
vaginal lesions - Also known as benign mucous membrane pemphigoid
- 21 females age 50-60 Nikolsky sign tends to
be progressive
81Oral lesions of cicatricial pemphigoid
82Oral lesions of cicatricial pemphigoid
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
83Ocular lesions in cicatricial pemphigoid
84Symblepheron (chronic ocular pemphigoid)
Regezi. Oral Pathology Clinical Pathologic
Correlations, 4th Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
85Bullous or cicatricial pemphigoid --
subepithelial blister
86Cicatricial (mucous membrane) pemphigoid
basement membrane immunofluorescent staining.
Courtesy Dr. Troy E. Daniels. Regezi. Oral
Pathology Clinical Pathologic Correlations, 4th
Edition. Elsevier, 2002.
87Positive immunofluorescence along basal lamina
(candy ribbion pattern) indicative of bullous
pemphigoid
88Comparision of Pemphigus Pemphigoid
89Dermatitis Herpetiformis
- Rare autoimmune (IgA-autoantibodies localized in
tips of dermal papillae) - Urticaria with closely grouped vesicles pruritic
rash elbows, knees, upper back, buttocks - Age 20-30 celiac disease
- Responds to gluten-free diet
90Dermatitis herpetiformis
91Dermatitis/stomatitis herpetiformis
Skin lesions
Intraoral lesions