Nutritional Dermatoses in Children

Nutritional Dermatoses in Children

Nutritional Dermatoses in Children

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PEM, Vit A & C - Malnutrition Markers

  • Protein-Energy Malnutrition (PEM):

    • Kwashiorkor: Protein deficiency. Pitting edema, moon facies, apathy.
      • Skin: Flaky paint dermatosis, desquamation.
      • Hair: Flag sign, sparse, easily pluckable.

      ⭐ Flag sign (alternating bands of light/dark hair) is characteristic of Kwashiorkor.

    • Marasmus: Energy & protein deficiency. Severe wasting, "old man" facies. Alert, irritable. No edema. Skin: Dry, loose ("baggy pants").
    • MUAC < 11.5 cm (SAM marker).
  • Vitamin A Deficiency:

    • Ocular: Night blindness, Bitot’s spots, conjunctival/corneal xerosis, keratomalacia.
    • Skin: Phrynoderma (toad skin) - follicular hyperkeratosis (elbows, knees). Dry, rough.
  • Vitamin C Deficiency (Scurvy):

    • Skin: Perifollicular hemorrhages, petechiae, ecchymoses. 📌 Mnemonic: 4 H's (Hemorrhage, Hyperkeratosis...).
    • Gums: Swollen, bleeding (scorbutic gingivitis).
    • Hair: Corkscrew hairs.
    • Impaired wound healing.

B-Vitamin Deficiencies - Skin Signals

  • Riboflavin (B2) - Ariboflavinosis:
    • Angular cheilitis, glossitis (magenta)
    • Seborrheic dermatitis-like rash (nasolabial, genital)
    • Oculo-oro-genital syndrome
  • Niacin (B3) - Pellagra: (📌 3 D's: Dermatitis, Diarrhea, Dementia)
    • Photosensitive dermatitis (Casal's necklace, "glove & stocking")
    • Hyperpigmentation, skin thickening

    ⭐ Casal's necklace (a broad, pigmented, and often photosensitive rash around the neck) is a hallmark of Pellagra (Niacin/B3 deficiency).

  • Pyridoxine (B6):
    • Seborrheic dermatitis-like rash
    • Cheilosis, glossitis
    • Drug-induced (e.g., Isoniazid)
  • Biotin (B7):
    • Periorificial dermatitis (mouth, eyes, nose, anogenital)
    • Alopecia
    • Raw egg white ingestion (avidin)
  • Folate (B9) / Cobalamin (B12):
    • Mucocutaneous hyperpigmentation (knuckles, creases)
    • Glossitis, angular stomatitis
    • Hair changes (B12)

Nutritional Deficiency: Risk Factors & Manifestations

Mineral Deficiencies - Metal Maladies

  • Zinc Deficiency (Acrodermatitis Enteropathica)
    • Cause: Inherited (SLC39A4) / acquired.
    • Triad: Periorificial/acral dermatitis, alopecia, diarrhea.
    • Others: Growth retardation, Beau's lines (nails).
    • Rx: Zinc sulfate 1-3 mg/kg/day elemental zinc.

    ⭐ Acrodermatitis enteropathica, caused by zinc deficiency, classically presents with periorificial and acral erythematous, vesiculobullous, or pustular dermatitis, alopecia, and diarrhea.

  • Iron Deficiency
    • Skin: Pallor, koilonychia (spoon nails), angular cheilitis, glossitis.
    • Hair: Diffuse alopecia.
  • Copper Deficiency (Menkes Kinky Hair Syndrome)
    • X-linked (ATP7A); impaired Cu absorption.
    • Hair: Pili torti ("kinky"), sparse, hypopigmented, brittle.
    • Skin: Hypopigmentation, lax skin.
    • Systemic: Neurodegeneration, FTT.
    • 📌 MENKES: Mental retardation, Epilepsy, Neural degen, Kinky hair, Elastic tissue degen, Subnormal temp. Menkes disease clinical features and copper metabolism
  • Selenium Deficiency
    • Skin/Hair: Hypopigmentation (pseudoalbinism), nail whitening.
    • Systemic: Cardiomyopathy (Keshan disease), myopathy.

EFAD, Dx & Mgmt - Fix & Finish

  • Essential Fatty Acid Deficiency (EFAD):

    • Cause: ↓ Linoleic (LA, ω-6) & α-linolenic (ALA, ω-3) acids.
    • Clinical: Xerosis ("crazy paving" skin), eczematous dermatitis, alopecia, FTT, thrombocytopenia, impaired wound healing. 📌 "SCALP" (Scaly skin, Cutaneous lesions, Alopecia, Low platelets, Poor growth).
    • Dx: Clinical. Lab: Triene:tetraene ratio > 0.2 (Normal < 0.02).
    • Rx: Dietary oils (sunflower, safflower, fish), topical emollients.
  • Nutritional Dermatoses: General Approach

    • Diagnosis: Detailed dietary history, clinical exam (skin, hair, nails, mucosae), targeted labs (nutrient levels).
    • Management:

⭐ Essential fatty acid deficiency can manifest as dry, scaly skin (xerosis), eczematous lesions, and poor wound healing.

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Kwashiorkor: Key: flaky paint dermatosis, enamel paint nails, hair flag sign.
  • Marasmus: Features: "monkey facies", "baggy pants" skin folds, severe muscle wasting.
  • Phrynoderma (Vit A def.): Follicular hyperkeratosis ("toad skin") on elbows, knees, buttocks.
  • Acrodermatitis Enteropathica (Zinc def.): Triad: periorificial/acral dermatitis, alopecia, diarrhea.
  • Scurvy (Vit C def.): Signs: corkscrew hairs, perifollicular hemorrhages, swollen/bleeding gums.
  • Pellagra (Niacin/B3 def.): Casal's necklace (photosensitive rash), "3 Ds" (dermatitis, diarrhea, dementia).

Practice Questions: Nutritional Dermatoses in Children

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Flashcards: Nutritional Dermatoses in Children

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