Showing posts with label What are the Types of Lesions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label What are the Types of Lesions. Show all posts


Types of Skin Lesions

What is a Lesion?

A Lesion is any abnormal tissue found on or in an organism, usually damaged by disease or trauma.

What are the Types of Lesions:

Primary Lesions:
  1. Macule – skin color change without elevation.
  2. Papule - is solid, raised spot on the skin that is less than 1 centimeter wide.
  3. Plaque – raised, flat lesion form from merging papules or nodules.
  4. Nodule – larger than papule. Raised solid Lesion extending deeper into the dermis.
  5. Tumor – larger than a nodule. Elevated firm lesion that may or may not be easily demarcated.
  6. Wheal (Hive) – fleeting skin elevation that is irregularly shaped because of edema.
  7. Vesicle (Blister) – elevated, sharply defined lesion containing serous fluid.
  8. Bulla (plural: Bullae) – large, elevated, fluid–filled lesion greater than 1cm.
  9. Cyst – elevated, thick-walled lesion containing fluid or semisolid matter.
  10. Pustule – elevated lesion less than 1cm containing purulent material.

Secondary Lesion:
  1. Scale – dried fragments of sloughed epidermal cells, irregular in shape and in size and white, tan, yellow or silver in color.
  2. Scar – mark left on the skin after healing. Replacement of destroyed tissue by fibrous tissue.
  3. Crust – dried serum, sebum, blood or pus on skin surface producing a temporary barrier to environment.
  4. Erosion – a moist, demarcated, depressed area due to loss of partial - or full thickness epidermis.
  5. Ulcer – irregularly shaped, exudative, depressed lesion in which entire epidermis an upper layer of dermis are lost.
  6. Excoriation – superficial, linear abrasion of epidermis.
  7. Fissure – deep linear split through epidermis into dermis.
  8. Atrophy – wasting of epidermis in which skin appears thin and transparent or of dermis in
    which there is a depressed area.