As a review, what disease should you think with lesions on the ventrum?
As a review, what disease should you think with lesions on the head/legs/paws?
Demodicosis
As a review, what disease should you think with lesions on the pinnae?
As a review, what disease should you think with lesions on the flanks and tail tip?
Autoimmune diseases definition
- Antibodies or activated lymphocytes develop against itself and cause lesions
What is an immune-mediated disease?
Antigens that can cause immune-mediated disease?
What are lymphocytes involved in?
How are activated lymphocytes generally cleared?
- Breakdown in regulation of these may lead to activation of self-reactive lymphocytes
What breakdown leads to increased activated lymphocytes?
- Cross reactivity with self and foreign antigen (e.g. drugs or infectious agents)
What is the target organ in true autoimmune dermatoses?
What hypersensitivity reactions are involved with autoimmune disease?
Age of animals with autoimmune disease in general?
Pemphigus definition?
What are the two main subtypes of pemphigus, and which is most common?
2. Pemphigus vulgaris
Other types of pemphigus
- Paraneoplastic pemphigus
Pathogenesis of pemphigus
What are acantholytic keratinocytes, and how do they appear on cytology?
- Immature detached keratinocytes that are the hallmark of pemphigus
What are the primary two adhesion structures involved in holding the skin together? Where are they in the layers of the epidermis?
- Hemidesmosomes (attach keratinocytes to basal cell layer)
Which two proteins mediate adhesions of desmosomes?
In people, which protein is the most common target in pemphigus?
In dogs, what does the autoantibody response primarily involve? What about in people?
- In people it’s primarily IgG also
In dogs, which protein is the most common target in pemphigus?
What often plays a role in development of canine pemphigus foliaceus?