Clinical Review

How I Became a Derm Guru (And How You Can, Too)

Author and Disclosure Information

 

And a funny thing happened: The more I read, the more diagnoses I recognized on my patients. My colleagues and the clinic schedulers took note of this and began sending me their problem cases. Even the derm department, beleaguered as usual by huge backlogs of patients, started sending patients to me. By 1985, even though I was in the internal medicine department, I had transitioned to doing derm fulltime. And that’s what I’ve been doing since.

Around 1992, I discovered that I was one of 6 dermatology PAs in this country. Last time I checked, our numbers were approaching 4,000. So, yes, derm is indeed difficult, but rocket science it isn’t.

Being the pedantic sort that I am, and finding that whole experience so enlightening, I resolved to make it my mission to foster the use of PAs in dermatology—part of which involves the education of those PAs, by means of taking students but also by writing articles (several hundred at last count) and lecturing at conferences and at PA programs. Nearing retirement, I only practice two days a week, but I write and publish at least 5 clinical articles a month, all of which are based on real cases: my cases, using my photos, doing new research on each case. This keeps my knowledge fresh and my 75-year-old mind sharp, helps ward off burnout, and, most importantly, saves lives while reducing patient discomfort.

What follows are 10 dermatology pearls that I have gleaned along the way. My apologies to my former students and attendees at my lectures who’ve heard all this before:

1 If the treatment for your diagnosis isn’t working, consider another diagnosis. Here’s an example (Figure 1): A man in his 50s was sent to dermatology for psoriasis that wasn’t responding to a biologic. Was it really psoriasis? A KOH prep quickly showed it to be tinea corporis, which cleared completely with a month’s worth of oral terbinafine (250 mg qid).

Dermatophytosis misdiagnosed as psoriasis

Continue to: #2...

Pages

Recommended Reading

Expert Q&A: What’s new in alopecia areata research and treatment?
Clinician Reviews
Review of pediatric data indicates link between vitamin D levels and atopic dermatitis severity
Clinician Reviews
Skin rashes often accompany drug-induced liver injury
Clinician Reviews
Topical retinoid found effective as microneedling for acne scars
Clinician Reviews
Weight loss cuts risk of psoriatic arthritis
Clinician Reviews
Tanning use disorder should be added to the DSM-5
Clinician Reviews
Dermoscopy in family medicine: A primer
Clinician Reviews
ACR, NPF unveil new psoriatic arthritis treatment guideline
Clinician Reviews
When Skin Damage Takes Sides
Clinician Reviews
New worldwide atopic dermatitis survey brings big surprises
Clinician Reviews