Dermatopathology

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WikiDoc Resources for Dermatopathology

Articles

Most recent articles on Dermatopathology

Most cited articles on Dermatopathology

Review articles on Dermatopathology

Articles on Dermatopathology in N Eng J Med, Lancet, BMJ

Media

Powerpoint slides on Dermatopathology

Images of Dermatopathology

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Podcasts & MP3s on Dermatopathology

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Evidence Based Medicine

Cochrane Collaboration on Dermatopathology

Bandolier on Dermatopathology

TRIP on Dermatopathology

Clinical Trials

Ongoing Trials on Dermatopathology at Clinical Trials.gov

Trial results on Dermatopathology

Clinical Trials on Dermatopathology at Google

Guidelines / Policies / Govt

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse on Dermatopathology

NICE Guidance on Dermatopathology

NHS PRODIGY Guidance

FDA on Dermatopathology

CDC on Dermatopathology

Books

Books on Dermatopathology

News

Dermatopathology in the news

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Commentary

Blogs on Dermatopathology

Definitions

Definitions of Dermatopathology

Patient Resources / Community

Patient resources on Dermatopathology

Discussion groups on Dermatopathology

Patient Handouts on Dermatopathology

Directions to Hospitals Treating Dermatopathology

Risk calculators and risk factors for Dermatopathology

Healthcare Provider Resources

Symptoms of Dermatopathology

Causes & Risk Factors for Dermatopathology

Diagnostic studies for Dermatopathology

Treatment of Dermatopathology

Continuing Medical Education (CME)

CME Programs on Dermatopathology

International

Dermatopathology en Espanol

Dermatopathology en Francais

Business

Dermatopathology in the Marketplace

Patents on Dermatopathology

Experimental / Informatics

List of terms related to Dermatopathology


Dermatopathology is a subspecialty of surgical pathology interested in skin diseases. Dermatopathologists work in close association with dermatologists. In fact, many doctors master both specialties.

Dermatopatholgy is the study of skin disease at a microscopic level. It encompasses both the diagnosis of individual patients through the examination of skin biopsies, and the study of the causes, or pathogenesis of skin diseases at the cellular level.

Dermatologists recognize most skin diseases based on their appearance, distribution on the body and behaviour with time. Occasionally, these criteria are not enough and a skin biopsy is taken to be examined under the microscope. This microscopic examination reveals the histology of the disease and clarifies the diagnosis. Occasionally, additional testing needs to be performed on skin samples, such as immunofluorescence, electron microscopy or flow cytometry.

One of the greatest challenges of dermatopathology is the high number of different skin diseases. There are an estimated 1500 different rashes and skin tumors, including variants, and not one doctor who has seen them all. Therefore, dermatology and dermatopathology are among the most complex specialties of Medicine.

Certification in dermatopathology in the United States requires the completion of four years of medical school, followed by residency training of three years in either dermatology or anatomic pathology. Following that, an additional one to two years of dermatopathology training are completed. For trainees with a background in Pathology, the training includes the equivalent of 6 months of clinical dermatology, and for those whose training is in Dermatology, six months of training in Pathology are requisite. Dermatopathology is considered the most competitive fellowship in Pathology. In the United States, he(she) is first certified by the American Board of Pathology or dermatology, then obtains subspecialty board certification in dermatopathology. Since 2003, the International Board of Dermatopathology certifies candidates from countries other than the United States by a test given in Europe.

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