Fitzpatrick Dermatology Mcq -
A) Psoriasis B) Normal skin C) Ichthyosis vulgaris D) Lichen planus
A) Horn cysts and pseudohorn cysts B) Palisading basaloid cells with clefts from stroma C) Large atypical cells with "windblown" appearance D) Dense neutrophilic infiltrate fitzpatrick dermatology mcq
1. A 45-year-old patient with skin phototype III develops a benign, well-circumscribed proliferation of keratinocytes showing a "church spire" pattern of orthokeratosis and acanthosis on histology. The lesion is most likely: A) Seborrheic keratosis B) Verruca vulgaris C) Actinic keratosis D) Stucco keratosis A) Psoriasis B) Normal skin C) Ichthyosis vulgaris
A) T-helper 1 vs T-helper 2 cells B) Epidermal barrier dysfunction and immune dysregulation C) IgE-mediated vs non-IgE mediated pathways D) Staphylococcus aureus colonization and antifungal resistance fitzpatrick dermatology mcq
A) Trichophyton rubrum B) Microsporum canis C) Candida albicans D) Malassezia furfur Topic 7: Photodermatology & Fitzpatrick Skin Types 18. According to the Fitzpatrick skin phototype classification, a person who always burns severely and never tans (minimal to no pigmentation) is classified as: A) Type I B) Type II C) Type III D) Type IV
