1.Perceptions of teledermatology in the COVID-19 era: are patients ready for it?
Dawn Ai Qun OH ; Yi Wei YEO ; Shiu Ming PANG ; Choon Chiat OH ; Haur Yueh LEE ; Karen Jui Lin CHOO
Singapore medical journal 2025;66(12):640-644
INTRODUCTION:
The COVID-19 pandemic has changed care provision models, with a rapid increase in the adoption of telemedicine to reduce in-person visits. Although there are many benefits to teledermatology, there are also factors that hinder its widespread adoption. We aimed to examine patients' perceptions of teledermatology to identify the barriers to its adoption.
METHODS:
A prospective study was conducted from 15 June to 14 August 2020. Patients were invited to complete a questionnaire in an outpatient dermatology clinic via direct approach by clinical staff or posters posted at the door of consultation rooms.
RESULTS:
Out of 2,276 clinic attendances, 997 survey responses (43.8%) were collected over a 3-month period. When asked if they would change their subsequent visit to teledermatology, 294 (29.5%) patients were keen, 166 (16.6%) were unsure and 537 (53.9%) declined. Significant factors for declining teledermatology were lack of prior exposure to videoconferencing ( P < 0.01) and lower educational level ( P = 0.019). Patients also raised concerns regarding the ability of teledermatology to address medical concerns (32.1%) and indicated a preference for face-to-face consultation (29.7%).
CONCLUSION
Factors that influence patients' decision to adopt teledermatology, such as concerns about its ability to address medical issues, lack of IT literacy or experience in teleconferencing, are modifiable. Targeted strategies such as careful patient selection, a dedicated teleconsultation workflow, and the use of a novel 'teledermatology patient journey' (including a clinic walkthrough at the first visit) and an intuitive audio-enabled user interface, may improve patient perceptions and adoption of teleconsultation service.
Humans
;
COVID-19/epidemiology*
;
Dermatology/methods*
;
Telemedicine
;
Male
;
Female
;
Prospective Studies
;
Middle Aged
;
Adult
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
SARS-CoV-2
;
Aged
;
Perception
;
Young Adult
;
Pandemics
;
Skin Diseases/diagnosis*
;
Videoconferencing
2.Characteristics and differential diagnosis of common verrucous proliferative skin diseases under dermoscopy and reflectance confocal microscopy.
Lu ZHOU ; Yule FU ; Jian HUANG ; Zhen TANG ; Jianyun LU ; Lina TAN ; Dan WANG ; Jinrong ZENG ; Jia WANG ; Lihua GAO
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2025;50(3):358-365
OBJECTIVES:
Verrucous epidermal nevus (VEN), seborrheic keratosis (SK), verruca plana (VP), verruca vulgaris (VV), and nevus sebaceous (NS) are common verrucous proliferative skin diseases with similar clinical appearances, often posing diagnostic challenges. Dermoscopy and reflectance confocal microscopy (RCM) can aid in their differentiation, yet their specific features under these tools have not been systematically described. This study aims to summarize and analyze the dermoscopic and RCM features of VEN, SK, VP, VV, and NS.
METHODS:
A total of 121 patients with histopathologically confirmed verrucous proliferative skin diseases were enrolled. Dermoscopy and RCM imaging was used to observe and analyze the microscopic features of these conditions.
RESULTS:
Under dermoscopy, the 5 diseases displayed distinct characteristics: VEN typically showed gyriform structures; SK was characterized by gyriform structures, comedo-like openings, and milia-like cysts; VP and VV featured dotted vessels and frogspawn-like structures; NS presented as brownish-yellow globules. RCM revealed shared features such as hyperkeratosis and acanthosis across all 5 diseases. Specific features included gyriform structures and elongated rete ridges in VEN; pseudocysts and gyriform structures in SK; evenly distributed ring-like structures in VP; vacuolated cells and papillomatous proliferation in VV; and frogspawn-like structures in NS.
CONCLUSIONS
These 5 verrucous proliferative skin conditions exhibit distinguishable features under both dermoscopy and RCM. The combination of these 2 noninvasive imaging modalities holds significant clinical value for the differential diagnosis of verrucous proliferative skin diseases.
Humans
;
Dermoscopy/methods*
;
Diagnosis, Differential
;
Microscopy, Confocal/methods*
;
Male
;
Female
;
Adult
;
Middle Aged
;
Adolescent
;
Keratosis, Seborrheic/pathology*
;
Young Adult
;
Warts/diagnosis*
;
Child
;
Aged
;
Skin Diseases/pathology*
;
Nevus, Sebaceous of Jadassohn/diagnosis*
;
Skin Neoplasms/diagnosis*
;
Child, Preschool
3.Diagnostic value of reflectance confocal microscopy in papular dermatoses of the female vulva.
Zhen TANG ; Lingxue HU ; Yu RAO ; Ruijian REN ; Shu DING
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2025;50(3):366-372
OBJECTIVES:
Papular dermatoses commonly affecting the female vulva, such as molluscum contagiosum, syringoma, lymphangioma, folliculitis, verruca vulgaris, ectopic sebaceous glands, and bowenoid papulosis, often present with similar clinical appearances and are frequently misdiagnosed. This study aims to explore the clinical diagnostic value of reflectance confocal microscopy (RCM) in differentiating these conditions.
METHODS:
A retrospective analysis was conducted on RCM imaging and histopathological findings from lesion sites in 172 female patients with vulval papular dermatoses. RCM characteristics confirmed by biopsy were summarized and diagnostic clues were explored.
RESULTS:
RCM diagnosis was consistent with histopathological diagnosis in 147 out of 172 cases (85.47%). Molluscum contagiosum, syringoma, lymphangioma, and folliculitis all exhibited cystic-like structures under RCM, differing in the location of the structures, wall characteristics, internal contents, and reflectivity. Verruca vulgaris, ectopic sebaceous glands, and bowenoid papulosis lacked such structures. Verruca vulgaris showed distinctive low-refractive vacuolated cells in the spinous layer; bowenoid papulosis exhibited mild cytologic atypia in the spinous layer; ectopic sebaceous glands were characterized by moderately to low-refractive, fish roe-like sebaceous lobules within the dermis.
CONCLUSIONS
RCM enables noninvasive, real-time, and dynamic visualization of key diagnostic and differential features of common vulvar papular dermatoses in women, offering high diagnostic value.
Humans
;
Female
;
Microscopy, Confocal/methods*
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Adult
;
Vulvar Diseases/diagnosis*
;
Middle Aged
;
Young Adult
;
Aged
;
Adolescent
;
Diagnosis, Differential
;
Child
;
Skin Diseases/pathology*
;
Molluscum Contagiosum/diagnosis*
4.An efficient and lightweight skin pathology detection method based on multi-scale feature fusion using an improved RT-DETR model.
Yuying REN ; Lingxiao HUANG ; Fang DU ; Xinbo YAO
Journal of Southern Medical University 2025;45(2):409-421
OBJECTIVES:
The presence of multi-scale skin lesion regions and image noise interference and limited resources of auxiliary diagnostic equipment affect the accuracy of skin disease detection in skin disease detection tasks. To solve these problems, we propose a highly efficient and lightweight skin disease detection model using an improved RT-DETR model.
METHODS:
A lightweight FasterNet was introduced as the backbone network and the FasterNetBlock module was parametrically refined. A Convolutional and Attention Fusion Module (CAFM) was used to replace the multi-head self-attention mechanism in the neck network to enhance the ability of the AIFI-CAFM module for capturing global dependencies and local detail information. The DRB-HSFPN feature pyramid network was designed to replace the Cross-Scale Feature Fusion Module (CCFM) to allow the integration of contextual information across different scales to improve the semantic feature expression capacity of the neck network. Finally, combining the advantages of Inner-IoU and EIoU, the Inner-EIoU was used to replace the original loss function GIOU to further enhance the model's inference accuracy and convergence speed.
RESULTS:
The experimental results on the HAM10000 dataset showed that the improved RT-DETR model, as compared with the original model, had increased mAP@50 and mAP@50:95 by 4.5% and 2.8%, respectively, with a detection speed of 59.1 frames per second (FPS). The improved model had a parameter count of 10.9 M and a computational load of 19.3 GFLOPs, which were reduced by 46.0% and 67.2% compared to those of the original model, validating the effectiveness of the improved model.
CONCLUSIONS
The proposed SD-DETR model significantly improves the performance of skin disease detection tasks by effectively extracting and integrating multi-scale features while reducing both parameter count and computational load.
Humans
;
Skin Diseases/diagnosis*
;
Skin/pathology*
;
Neural Networks, Computer
;
Algorithms
5.Clinicopathological and prognostic features of subungual melanoma in situ.
J HU ; M REN ; X CAI ; J J LYU ; X X SHEN ; Y Y KONG
Chinese Journal of Pathology 2023;52(10):1006-1011
Objective: To investigate the clinicopathological characteristics, immunohistochemical profiles, molecular features, and prognosis of subungual melanoma in situ (SMIS). Methods: Thirty cases of SMIS were collected in Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center, Shanghai, China from 2018 to 2022. The clinicopathological characteristics and follow-up data were retrospectively analyzed. Histopathologic evaluation and immunohistochemical studies were carried out. By using Vysis melanoma fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) probe kit, combined with 9p21(CDKN2A) and 8q24(MYC) assays were performed. Results: There were 8 males and 22 females. The patients' ages ranged from 22 to 65 years (median 48 years). All patients presented with longitudinal melanonychia involving a single digit. Thumb was the most commonly affected digit (16/30, 53.3%). 56.7% (17/30) of the cases presented with Hutchinson's sign. Microscopically, melanocytes proliferated along the dermo-epithelial junction. Hyperchromatism and nuclear pleomorphism were two of the most common histological features. The melanocyte count ranged from 30 to 185. Most cases showed small to medium nuclear enlargement (29/30, 96.7%). Pagetoid spread was seen in all cases. Intra-epithelial mitoses were identified in 56.7% (17/30) of the cases. Involvement of nailfold was found in 19 cases, 4 of which were accompanied by cutaneous adnexal extension. The positive rates of SOX10, PNL2, Melan A, HMB45, S-100, and PRAME were 100.0%, 100.0%, 96.0%, 95.0%, 76.9%, and 83.3%, respectively. FISH analysis was positive in 6/9 of the cases. Follow-up data were available in 28 patients, and all of them were alive without disease. Conclusions: SMIS mainly shows small to medium-sized cells. High melanocyte count, hyperchromatism, nuclear pleomorphism, Pagetoid spreading, intra-epithelial mitosis, nailfold involvement, and cutaneous adnexal extension are important diagnostic hallmarks. Immunohistochemistry including SOX10 and PRAME, combined with FISH analysis, is valuable for the diagnosis of SMIS.
Male
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Young Adult
;
Adult
;
Middle Aged
;
Aged
;
Skin Neoplasms/pathology*
;
Prognosis
;
Retrospective Studies
;
In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence
;
China
;
Melanoma/diagnosis*
;
Nail Diseases/pathology*
;
Antigens, Neoplasm
6.Clinicopathological features of ectopic meningothelial hamartoma.
Min Hong PAN ; Jin Hao LI ; Hong Jin HUA ; Qin Yi YANG ; Guo Xin SONG ; Hai LI
Chinese Journal of Pathology 2022;51(3):207-211
Objective: To investigate the clinicopathological features, diagnosis and differential diagnosis of ectopic meningothelial hamartoma (EMH). Methods: Three cases of EMH diagnosed in the First Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing Medical University from January 2014 to December 2020 were enrolled. All cases were evaluated by clinical and imaging features, HE and immunohistochemical staining, and the relevant literature was reviewed. Results: There were one male and two female patients, aged 2, 67 and 19 years, respectively. Clinically, they presented as skin masses in the head and face region (two cases) and sacro-coccygeal region (one case). Grossly, the lesions ranged in size from 1.6 cm to 8.9 cm. Microscopically, the lesions were ill-defined, and located in the dermis and subcutis, and showed pseudovascular channels lined by monolayer of cuboidal to flattened epithelium with mild atypia, with variable cystic cavity formation. There was prominent interstitial fibrosis. Concentric, lamellated, onion skin-like arrangement with short spindle or ovoid cells and psammoma bodies were noted. Immunohistochemically, these cells were strongly positive for SSTR2, EMA, vimentin and progesterone receptor. Ki-67 positive index was low, approximately 1%. Conclusions: EMH is uncommon. Definitive diagnosis relies on histopathologic examination. The importance in recognizing the lesions is to differentiate from other more aggressive tumors.
Choristoma/pathology*
;
Diagnosis, Differential
;
Female
;
Hamartoma/pathology*
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Meninges
;
Skin Diseases/pathology*
8.A Case Series of Esophageal Lichen Planus: An Underdiagnosed Cause of Dysphagia
Puja RAI ; Mahmoud Y MADI ; Raymond LEE ; Aaron DICKSTEIN
The Korean Journal of Helicobacter and Upper Gastrointestinal Research 2019;19(4):266-271
Lichen planus (LP) is a chronic mucocutaneous inflammatory condition that typically affects middle-aged adults. Esophageal involvement in LP is rare and underrecognized, often leading to delayed diagnosis and treatment of LP. Herein, we describe three cases of esophageal LP (ELP) in clinically symptomatic patients with endoscopic lesions in the upper to mid-esophagus. This case series suggests that ELP is be more common than was previously thought and emphasizes that clinicians should have a high index of suspicion for this diagnosis, particularly when evaluating proximal esophageal lesions in patients presenting with dysphagia. The series also highlights the successful treatment of our patients with budesonide-honey slurry.
Adult
;
Deglutition Disorders
;
Delayed Diagnosis
;
Diagnosis
;
Humans
;
Lichen Planus
;
Lichenoid Eruptions
;
Lichens
;
Skin Diseases, Papulosquamous
9.Dermatologic Manifestations in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Hyun Yi SUH ; Woo Jin LEE ; Soo Young NA
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2019;73(5):285-293
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic inflammatory disease of the gastrointestinal tract with an unknown etiology and pathogenesis. The incidence and prevalence of IBD are increasing rapidly in Korea. Approximately one-third of patients with IBD appear to develop extra-intestinal manifestations with the skin being one of the most commonly affected organs. They may precede, occur simultaneously, or follow the diagnosis of IBD. In addition, they may parallel with the luminal symptoms or independent from the disease activity of IBD. This review outlines the skin manifestations associated with IBD and discusses their management. Skin manifestations should be managed in close collaboration with a dermatologist.
Colitis, Ulcerative
;
Cooperative Behavior
;
Crohn Disease
;
Diagnosis
;
Gastrointestinal Tract
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
;
Korea
;
Phenobarbital
;
Prevalence
;
Skin
;
Skin Manifestations
10.Malakoplakia of Head and Neck Mimicking Malignant Lymphadenopathy: A Case Report
Jun Young AN ; Ho Ryun WON ; Dong Young KIM ; Yoo Seob SHIN
Korean Journal of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery 2019;62(4):246-249
Malakoplakia is usually found in the genitourinary tract; however, it occurs uncommonly as a chronic inflammatory disease and rarely in the head and neck area, having been reported in the literature only few times. Here, we report, with a review of the related literature, a case of malakoplakia on the posterior neck. A 76-year-old male patient visited our institution presenting a rapidly growing neck mass that had invaded the overlying skin for several weeks. The results of imaging studies strongly indicated a malignant tumor, but an accurate diagnosis was not made until after a fine needle aspiration biopsy was undertaken twice. The lesion was completely excised with an extended radical neck dissection including the overlying skin and scalene muscle upon consent of the patient. The pathological diagnosis was made with various immunohistochemical staining methods including Von Kossa, Periodic acid-Schiff-diastase, CD-68 and CD163. During the 24 months follow-up after the surgery, there was no sign of recurrence.
Aged
;
Biopsy
;
Biopsy, Fine-Needle
;
Diagnosis
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Head
;
Humans
;
Lymphatic Diseases
;
Malacoplakia
;
Male
;
Neck Dissection
;
Neck
;
Recurrence
;
Skin

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