Lesson 10 — Dermatology Assisting

Half A · HLT420A·Kinn's Ch 17·General Patient Care (18.7%)

Source

All procedural steps, PURPOSE rationales, and topic content below are verbatim from MedCerts HLT420A Storyline modules. Quiz items have been normalized to multiple-choice format with verbatim source rationales. Reference textbook: Niedzwiecki & Pepper, Kinn's The Clinical Medical Assistant, 15th ed., Chapter 17. No outside material added.

Learning Objectives — NHA-aligned
Module L10-01 · Conceptual content

Skin Lesions

Goal: To understand the various types of primary and secondary skin lesions.

Papule

Papule is a primary lesion. The solid elevation less than 0.5cm in diameter. An example is allergic eczema.

Pustule

Pustule is a primary lesion. It is a vesicle filled with pus. An example is acne.

Atrophy

Atrophy is a secondary lesion. It's loss of some portion of the skin. An example is paralysis.

Macule

Macule is a primary lesion. The Flat area of color change with no elevation or depression. An example is freckles.

Ulcer

Ulcer is a secondary lesion. It is the area of destruction of entire epidermis. An example is decubitus or a pressure sore.

Plaque

Plaque is a primary lesion. Flat elevated surface found on skin or mucous membrane. An example is thrush.

Scar

Scar is a secondary lesion. It excess collagen production after injury. An example is surgical healing.

Crust

Crust is a secondary lesion. Dride exudate on skin. An example is impetigo.

Scales

Scales is a secondary lesion. Flakes of cornified skin layer. An example is psoriasis.

Tumor

Tumor is a primary lesion. It is a solid mass larger than 1 cm. An example of squamous cell carcinoma.

Fissure

Fisher is a secondary lesion. It cracks in the skin. An example is athlete's foot.

Nodule

Nodule is a primary lesion. Solid elevation 0.5 to 1 cm in diameter extends deeper into the dermis than papule. An example is a mole.

Bulla

Bulla is a primary lesion. It is a large blister greater than 0.5 cm. An example is a burn.

Vesicle

vesicle is a primary lesion. Small blister fluid within or under the epidermis. An example is Herpesvirus Infection.

Wheal

Wheal is a primary lesion type of Plaque. Result is a transient edema in dermis. Example is intradermal skin test.

Practice quiz · verbatim from MedCerts

Knowledge-check items

Click an answer to lock it in — you'll see the rationale below. Reset any time to re-attempt. Items originally formatted as true/false, fill-in-blank, or drag-and-drop have been normalized to multiple choice; the source format is noted in the eyebrow.

L10-01 · Skin Lesions

Q1 · L10-01 · normalized from dragdrop
Which lesion type is a solid elevation that extends deep into the dermis?
Rationale
"Nodule is a primary lesion. Solid elevation 0.5 to 1 cm in diameter extends deeper into the dermis than papule."

A nodule is specifically characterized by its depth into the dermis, distinguishing it from the more superficial papule.

Source: L10-01 Knowledge Check
Q2 · L10-01 · normalized from dragdrop
Which type of plaque results in transient edema in the dermis?
Rationale
"Wheal is a primary lesion type of Plaque. Result is a transient edema in dermis. Example is intradermal skin test."

A wheal is specifically defined by the transient edema it produces in the dermis, commonly seen with allergic reactions or skin testing.

Source: L10-01 Knowledge Check
Q3 · L10-01 · normalized from dragdrop
Which secondary lesion is characterized by cracks in the skin?
Rationale
"Fisher is a secondary lesion. It cracks in the skin. An example is athlete's foot."

A fissure (spelled as 'Fisher' in source) is the secondary lesion characterized by skin cracks, with athlete's foot being a common clinical example.

Source: L10-01 Knowledge Check
Q4 · L10-01 · normalized from dragdrop
Which secondary lesion represents loss of some portion of the skin?
Rationale
"Atrophy is a secondary lesion. It's loss of some portion of the skin. An example is paralysis."

Atrophy describes partial loss of skin tissue, distinct from ulceration which involves complete epidermal destruction.

Source: L10-01 Knowledge Check
Q5 · L10-01 · normalized from dragdrop
Which primary lesion is a vesicle filled with pus?
Rationale
"Pustule is a primary lesion. It is a vesicle filled with pus. An example is acne."

A pustule is specifically a pus-filled vesicle, distinguishing it from a clear fluid-filled vesicle.

Source: L10-01 Knowledge Check
Q6 · L10-01 · normalized from dragdrop
Which secondary lesion is an example of decubitus or pressure sore?
Rationale
"Ulcer is a secondary lesion. It is the area of destruction of entire epidermis. An example is decubitus or a pressure sore."

An ulcer represents complete destruction of the epidermis and is the characteristic lesion of pressure sores or decubitus ulcers.

Source: L10-01 Knowledge Check