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SEMINAR PRESENTATION
APPLIED ANATOMY AND
PHYSIOLOGY OF NAIL
MODERATOR
DR. R.S.
MEENA
ANATOMY AND BIOLOGY
OF THE NAIL UNIT
INTRODUCTION
 nail apparatus - strong, relatively
inflexible, keratinous
 protective covering for fingertip
 allows precision and delicacy when picking up
small objects
SHORT EMBRYOLOGY
 primitive epidermis – 9 - 20th wks.
 20 wk
 matrix cells show postnatal-type cell division
 differentiation and keratinization
 nail plate begins to form and move distally
 nail bed loses its granular layer at this stage.
 36 wk: nail plate reaches the tip of the digit
and is surrounded by prominent lateral nail
folds and a well-formed cuticle.
NAIL BASIC STRUCTURE
 1/4 nail is covered by the proximal nail fold
 Lunula (half-moon, lunule)
 Under proximal part of nail
 most distal region of the matrix
 most prominent on thumb & great toe
 may be partly or completely concealed by the
proximal nail fold in other digits
 nail plate distal to lunula usually appears
pink, due to its translucency, which allows the
redness of the vascular nail bed to be seen
through it.
 PROXIMAL NAIL FOLD
 two epithelial surfaces, dorsal and ventral, at the junction of
the two, the cuticle projects distally onto the nail surface.
 LATERAL NAIL FOLDS
 continuity with the skin on the sides of the digit laterally, and
medially they are joined by the nail bed.
 THE MATRIX
 subdivided into dorsal (ventral aspect of the proximal nail
fold), intermediate (germinal matrix or matrix) and ventral
(nail bed) sections.
 two distinct areas may be visible, THE PROXIMAL LUNULA
AND THE LARGER PINK ZONE on seeing nail plate from
above
 On close examination, two further distal zones can often
be identified , the distal yellowish-white margin and
immediately proximal to this the onychodermal band
MICROSCOPIC ANATOMY
 NAIL FOLDS
 The proximal nail folds are similar in structure to the
adjacent skin
 devoid of dermatoglyphic markings and
pilosebaceous glands.
 From the distal area of the proximal nail fold the
cuticle adheres to the upper surface of the nail plate
 serves to protect the structures at the base of the
nail, particularly the germinal matrix, from
environmental insults
 NAIL MATRIX (INTERMEDIATE
MATRIX)
 Nail matrix produces the nail plate
 The nail matrix contains melanocytes in the
lowest three cell layers and these donate pigment
to the keratinocytes.
 there is presence of 6.5 melanocytes per
millimetre of matrix basement membrane
 Langerhans cells are detectable in the matrix by
CD1a staining, and the matrix appears to contain
basement membrane components
 NAIL BED
 Nail bed consists of epidermis with underlying
connective tissue closely apposed to the periosteum
of the distal phalanx.
 There is no subcutaneous fat in the nail bed
 The nail bed epidermis is usually two or three cells
thick
 The nail bed dermal collagen is mainly orientated
vertically, being directly attached to the phalangeal
periosteum and the epidermal basal lamina.
 Within the connective tissue network lie blood
vessels, lymphatics, a fine network of elastic fibres
and scattered fat cells; at the distal margin, eccrine
sweat glands have been seen
 NAIL PLATE
 The nail plate comprises three horizontal layers: a
thin dorsal lamina, the thicker intermediate lamina
and a ventral layer from the nail bed
 The nail plate contains significant amounts of
phospholipid, mainly in the dorsal and
intermediate layers, which contributes to its
flexibility.
 The nail plate is rich in calcium, found as the
phosphate in hydroxyapatite crystals
 Calcium does not significantly contribute to the
hardness of the nail
 NAIL KERATIN
 Nail keratin analysis shows essentially the same
fractions as in hair
 amino acid analysis shows higher cysteine, glutamic
acid and serine, and less tyrosine in nail compared
with hair
 normal nail demonstrates that the suprabasal keratin
pair K1/K10 is found on both aspects of the proximal
nail fold and to a lesser degree in the matrix.
However, it is absent from the nail bed.
 The nail bed contains keratin synthesized in normal
basal layer epithelium, K5/K14, which is also found in
nail matrix.
 keratin pair K6/K16 are present in the nail bed but
not in the germinal matrix
BLOOD SUPPLY OF NAIL
 rich arterial blood supply to the nail bed and matrix
derived from paired digital arteries, a large palmar and
small dorsal digital artery on either side.
 There are two main arterial arches (proximal and distal)
supplying the nail bed and matrix, formed from
anastomoses of the branches of the digital arteries.
 Within the matrix, vessels are longitudinal with a
helicoidal twisting..
 There are many arteriovenous anastomoses beneath the
nail— glomus bodies—which are concerned with heat
regulation
 Glomus bodies are important in maintaining acral
circulation under cold conditions: arterioles constrict with
cold but glomus bodies dilate.
Arterial supply of the distal
finger.
NAIL GROWTH AND MORPHOLOGY
 Cell kinetics
 Measured by
immunohistochemistry, autoradiography and
direct measurement of matrix product (i.e. nail
plate) by ultrasound ,micrometer or histology.
 The rate of nail growth is about 3 mm/month for
finger nails and about 1 mm/month for toe nails
NAIL MORPHOLOGY
 The nail grows flat, rather than as a
heaped-up keratinous mass
 factors probably responsible to produce a
relatively flat nail plate are
 orientation of the matrix rete pegs and papillae
 the direction of cell differentiation and moulding of
the direction of nail growth between the proximal
nail fold and distal phalanx.
 Containment laterally within the lateral nail folds
assists this orientation
 the adherent nature of the nail bed
PHYSIOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL
FACTORS AFFECTING THE RATE OF NAIL
GROWTH.
FASTER SLOWER
DAYTIME NIGHT
PREGNANCY FIRST DAY OF LIFE
YOUTH,INCREASING AGE OLD AGE
FINGERS TOES AND THUMBS
MALE GENDER FEMALE
SUMMER WINTER
RIGHT HAND NAILS LEFT HAND NAILS
TRAUMA,NAIL BITING
PATHOLOGICAL FACTORS AFFECTING THE RATE
OF NAIL GROWTH
FASTER SLOWER
PSORIASIS FINGER IMMOBILIZATION
PITYRIASIS RUBRA
PILARIS
FEVER
HYPERTHYRODISM HYPOTHYRODISM
LEVODOPA YELLOW NAIL
SYNDROME
ARTERIOVENOUS
SHUNTS
BEAU’S LINES
BULLOUS ICTHYSIFORM
ERYTHRODERMA
RELAPSING
POLYCHONDRITIS
IDIOPATHIC POOR NUTRITION
NAILS IN CHILDHOOD
 In early childhood, the nail plate is relatively thin
and may show temporary koilonychia
 nails are also prone to terminal onychoschizia
(lamellar splitting),most prominent on the
sucked thumb.
 Beau’s lines can be seen in up to 92% of
normal infants between 8 and 9 weeks of age
 A herringbone pattern is common in children
and gradually diminishes with time, reflecting a
gradual matrix maturation
NAILS IN OLD AGE
 The whole subungual area in old age may
show thickening of blood vessel walls with
vascular elastic tissue fragmentation.
 The nail plate becomes pallor, dull and
opaque with advancing years
 white nails similar to those seen in
cirrhosis, uraemia and hypoalbuminaemia
may be seen.
NAIL SIGNS AND SYSTEMIC DISEASE
 ABNORMALITIES OF SHAPE
 CLUBBING --
 In clubbing there is increased transverse and longitudinal
nail curvature with hypertrophy of the soft-tissue
components of the digit pulp.
 Hyperplasia of the fibrovascular tissue at the base of the
nail also occurs.
 Pathological associations of clubbing include ---
inflammatory bowel disease, carcinoma of the bronchus
and cirrhosis.
 In forms associated with bronchiectasis or
neoplasm, prominent inflammatory joint signs may also be
seen, resulting in hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy
CLINICAL PICTURE OF CLUBBING
Lovibond’s angle is found at the
junction between the nail
plate and the proximal nail
fold, and is normally less than
160°.
This is altered to over 180° in
clubbing
Curth’s angle at
the distal interphalangeal joint is
normally about 180°. This is
diminished to less than 160° in
clubbing
 Schamroth’s window is seen when the dorsal
aspects of two fingers from opposite hands
are opposed, revealing a window of
light, bordered laterally by the Lovibond
angles. As this angle is obliterated in
clubbing, the window closes.
 In some cases of bronchiectasis, a variant of
clubbing, shell nail syndrome is seen.
 Distugunished from clubbing by the presence
of atrophy of underlying bone and nail bed
KOILONYCHIA
 Greek: koilos, hollow; onyx, nail
 In koilonchyia there is reverse curvature in
the transverse and longitudinal axes giving a
concave dorsal aspect to the nail
 most prominent in the thumb or great toe.
 common in infancy in toe nail
 Its persistence may be associated with a
deficiency of cysteine-rich keratin
 a familial pattern which may be autosomal
Dominant may be seen in some families
 Most common systemic association is with
iron deficiency and haemochromatosis
PINCER NAIL
 Also known as trumpet or involuted nail
 Pincer nail describes a dystrophy where nail
growth is pitched towards the
midline, combined with increased transverse
curvature.
 There are 3 variants of pincer nail
1) In the inherited version there is often a gradient
of involvement, radiating from the thumbs and
big toes outwards, which progresses with time.
2) the most common is in association with
psoriasis, where the thumbs and big toes are the
most likely to be affected, although the pattern is
not as organised and symmetrical as that seen in
the inherited version
3) The third variant is the individual nail which
develops a pincer deformity.
.
MACRONYCHIA AND MICRONYCHIA
 Macronychia and micronychia are conditions
where a nail is considered too large or too small
in comparison with other nails
 The nail disorder is usually associated with an
abnormal digit, arising from underlying bony
abnormalities such as local gigantism causing
macronychia or megadactyly .
 Also the basis of racket thumb, the most
common form of benign, dominantly inherited
macronychia
RACKET NAIL
ANONYCHIA
 Anonychia is absence of all or part of one or several
nails. It may be congenital, acquired or transient.
 A mutation in the R-spondin 4 gene, which plays a
part in Wnt signalling within the cell is responsible for
congenital absence of nail
 Acquired forms are due to scarring of the nail matrix.
This can arise as a result of burns, surgery or
trauma, or be due to inflammatory dermatoses such
as lichen planus where the entire nail matrix is
scarred and lost
 The transient variant is due to nail shedding. This can
occur due to an intense physiological or local
inflammatory process,
ABNORMALITIES OF NAIL ATTACHMENT
 Nail shedding
Nails may be lost through different
mechanisms
1) Complete loss of the nail plate due
to proximal nail separation extending
distally is called onychomadesis and is a
progression of profound Beau’s lines
2) Local dermatoses, such as the
bullous disorders and paronychia, cause
nail loss e.g. toxic epidermal
necrolysis, lichen planus etc.
3) Trauma is a common cause of
recurrent loss
It is often associated with subungual
haemorrhage
4) Temporary loss has also been described due to drugs
such as retinoids,cloxacillin and cephaloridine
5) Onychoptosis defluvium or alopecia unguium
describes atraumatic,familial, non-inflammatory nail loss
6) Nail shedding can be part of an inherited structural
defect, most obviously in epidermolysis bullosa
7) Nail degloving this refers to partial or total avulsion
of the nail and surrounding tissue (perionychium).Typically,it
appears as thimble-shaped nail shedding or total loss of the
nail organ with soft tissue
DIFFERENT EXAMPLES OF SEPERATION
OF NAIL ATTACHMENT
ONYCHOLYSIS
 Onycholysis is the distal or lateral separation of the
nail from the nail bed
 Psoriatic onycholysis can be considered the
reference point for other forms of onycholysis where it
is typically distal, with variable lateral involvement.
 Areas of separation appear white or yellow due to air
beneath the nail and sequestered debris, shed
squames and glycoprotein exudate.
 Isolated islands of onycholysis present as ‘oily spots’
or ‘salmon patches’ in the nail bed.
 Idiopathic onycholysis
 This is a painless separation of the nail from its
bed, which occurs without apparent cause.
Overzealous manicure, frequent wetting and
cosmetic ‘solvents’ may be the cause.
 The condition usually starts at the tip of one or
more nails and extends to involve the distal third of
the nail bed.
Onycholysis: idiopathic type
Fingernail in psoriasis
 Secondary onycholysis
 Onycholysis due to other causes is secondary
onycholysis. It may be localised or systemic
 Psoriasis, fungal infections, dermatitis and trauma are
among the most common. Onycholysis occurs in
general medical conditions, including impaired
peripheral circulation, hypothyroidism
,hyperthyroidism , hyperhidrosis, yellow nail syndrome
and shell nail syndrome
 Photo-onycholysis may occur during treatment with
psoralens, demethylchlortetracycline and doxycycline
PTERYGIUM
 The term ‘pterygium’ describes the winged appearance
achieved when a central fibrotic band divides a nail
proximally in two.
 inflammatory destructive process precedes pterygium
formation.
 There is fusion between the nail fold and underlying nail bed
and matrix.
 The fibrotic band then obstructs normal nail growth.
 It most typically develops in trauma or lichen planus and its
variants, including idiopathic atrophy of the nail and graft-
versus-host disease
 It can also occur in leprosy and secondary purulent infection.
 Ventral Pterygium
 Ventral pterygium or pterygium inversum unguis
occurs on the distal undersurface of the nail
 Causes include trauma, systemic sclerosis,Raynaud’s
phenomenon, lupus erythematosus, familial and
infective .
Subungual hyperkeratosis
 entails hyperkeratosis of the nail bed and hyponychium
 Nail plate thickening is common. Dry, white or yellow
hyperkeratosis may crumble away from the overhanging nail
Hyperkeratosis may extend onto the digit pulp.
 Features of onychomycosis and wart virus infection (mainly
toes) or psoriasis, pityriasis rubra pilaris and eczema
(mainly fingers) are found
 The nail bed is an epithelium of low proliferative turnover.
Any disease process that affects it is likely to result in an
excess of squamous debris. The overlying nail prevents
simple loss. The initial outcome is compaction of debris into
layers of subungual hyperkeratosis.
 Focal subungual keratoses seen with Darier’s disease, and
keratotic debris beneath the nail in Norwegian (crusted).
CHANGES IN NAIL SURFACE
Longitudinal grooves
 Longitudinal grooves may run all or part of the
length of the nail in the longitudinal axis
 The median canaliform dystrophy of Heller is
the most distinctive form in this
 The nail is split, usually in the midline, with a fir-
tree-like appearance of ridges angled
backwards.
 The thumbs are most commonly affected and
the involvement may be symmetrical.
TRANSVERSE GROOVES AND BEAU’S LINES
 Transverse grooves may be full or partial
thickness through the nail.
 When they are endogenous they have an
arcuate margin matching the lunula.
 If exogenous, such as those due to manicure
the margin may match the proximal nail fold
and the grooves may be multiple as in
washboard nails.
BEAU’S LINES
When the transverse groove’s are due to
endogenous cause, the groove is better
known as beau’s lines
PITTING
 Pitting presents as punctate erosions in the
nail surface
 The individual pits of psoriasis are said to be
less regular
 An isolated large pit may produce a localized
full thickness defect in the nail plate termed
elkonyxis, which is found in Reiter’s
disease, psoriasis and following trauma
TRACHYONYCHIA
 Trachyonychia presents
as a rough surface
affecting all of the nail
plate and up to 20 nails
 The original French
term was ‘sand-blasted
nails’, which evokes the
main clinical feature of a
grey, roughened surface
 mainly associated with
alopecia
areata, psoriasis and
lichen planus
ONYCHOSCHIZIA
 Onychoschizia is also
known as lamellar
dystrophy and is
characterized by
transverse splitting into
layers at or near the free
edge
 It is seldom associated
with any systemic disorder,
although it has been
reported with
polycythaemia, human
immuno-deficiency virus
(HIV) infection and
glucagonoma
CHANGES IN COLOUR
 Alteration in nail colour may occur because of changes
affecting the dorsal nail surface, the substance of the nail
plate, the undersurface of the nail or the nail bed.
 Exogenous pigment
 Exogenous pigment on the upper surface is easy
to demonstrate by scraping the nail. If the
proximal margin of the pigment is an arc
matching the proximal nail fold, this is a further
clue confirming an exogenous source.
NAIL PLATE CHANGES
 The nail plate can be changed by the addition of pigment or the
alteration of the normal cellular and intercellular organization such
that there is loss of normal lucency.
 Normal Pigment is typically added in the form of melanin
produced by matrix melanocytes during nail formation. This
produces a brown longitudinal streak the entire length of the nail.
 The incorporation of heavy metals and some drugs into the nail
via the matrix can also produce altered nail plate colour, such as
the grey colour associated with silver.
 The disruption of normal nail plate formation by disease,
chemotherapy, poisons or trauma can result in waves of
parakeratotic nail cells or small splits between cells within the nail.
 In fungal infection discoloration may start distolaterally rather than
via the matrix.
NAIL BED CHANGES
 Normally there is generalized vascular changes in the
nail bed, but localized changes, as seen with nail bed
tumours.
 Subungual hyperkeratosis or the incorporation of drugs
(antimalarials, phenothiazines) may also change the
apparent colour of the nail.
 Splinter haemorrhages, representing ruptured nail bed
vessels, deposit haemoglobin on the undersurface of
the nail, which grows out.
 Cyanosis makes the nail bed blue and carbon
monoxide poisoning makes it bright red.
LEUKONYCHIA
 White discoloration of the nail attributable to
matrix dysfunction is known as leukonychia.
 In an inherited form called total leukonychia,
all nails are milky porcelain white.
 In subtotal leukonychia,
 the proximal two-thirds are white, becoming pink
distally.
 This is attributed to a delay in keratin maturation
 Transverse leukonychia (Mees’ line) reflects a
systemic disorder , such as chemotherapy or
poisoning
APPARENT LEUKONYCHIA
 In apparent leukonychia,
 changes in the nail bed are responsible for the
white appearance.
 Nail bed pallor may be a non-specific sign of
anaemia, oedema or vascular impairment.
TERRY’S NAIL
 This is white proximally and normal distally
 Seen in cirrhosis, congestive cardiac failure and
adult-onset diabetes mellitus.
 Nail bed biopsy reveals only mild changes of
increased
vascularity.
 Terry’s nail is similar to half-and-half nails where,
 there is a proximal white zone and distal (20–60%)
brownish sharp demarcation,
 the histology of half and half nail suggests an increase of
vessel wall thickness and melanin deposition.
 seen in 9–50% of patients with chronic renal failure and
after chemotherapy
MUEHRCKE’S PAIRED WHITE BANDS
 These bands are parallel to the lunula in the
nail bed, with pink between two white lines.
 They are commonly associated with
hypoalbuminaemia
 the correction of hypoalbuminaemia by
albumin infusion can reverse the sign.
COLOUR CHANGES DUE TO DRUGS
 Yellowing of the nail is a
rare occurrence in
prolonged tetracycline
therapy, which can also
produce a pattern of dark
distal photo-onycholysis
associated with
photosensitivity
BLUE MEPACRINE
BLUE-
BLACK
CHLOROQUI
NE
DARK
BLUE
DRUG
ERUPTION
HYPERPIG
MENTATIO
N
DOXORUBICI
N IN
CHILDREN
YELLOW NAIL SYNDROME
•The nails in yellow nail
syndrome are yellow due to
thickening,
•a tinge of green suggets
secondary infection.
•The lunula is obscured
•increased transverse and
longitudinal curvature
•loss of cuticle
•chronic paronychia with
onycholysis and transverse
ridging may occur
• The condition usually
presents in adults
YELLOW NAIL SYNDROME
 An autosomal dominnant inheritance is
suspected
 lymphoedema at one or more sites may
accomapany
 respiratory or nasal sinus disease may present
 Also occur in d-penicillamine therapy and
nephrotic syndrome ,hypothyroidism & AIDS
 Attempted treatments include oral and topical
vitamin E, oral zinc
LONGITUDINAL ERYTHRONYCHIA
•It is a longitudinal red
streak in the nail
•Forms a strip where the
nail bed is less compressed
by the overlying nail so that
blood pools
• color is more easily seen
because the nail is thinner
in this line.
•Splinter hemorrhages may
lie longitudinally
•Seen with lichen planus &
darrier’s disease ,
acrokeratosis verruciformis
ONYCHOPAPILLOMA
 Describe the isolated, benign warty distal nail
bed lesions
 term coined by baran
 Can be associated with longitudinal
erythronychia
 The papilloma is a secondary element, given
that it is found distally in the nail bed while
the cause lies proximally within the matrix.
.
Nail seminar

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Nail seminar

  • 1. SEMINAR PRESENTATION APPLIED ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF NAIL MODERATOR DR. R.S. MEENA
  • 2. ANATOMY AND BIOLOGY OF THE NAIL UNIT
  • 3. INTRODUCTION  nail apparatus - strong, relatively inflexible, keratinous  protective covering for fingertip  allows precision and delicacy when picking up small objects
  • 4. SHORT EMBRYOLOGY  primitive epidermis – 9 - 20th wks.  20 wk  matrix cells show postnatal-type cell division  differentiation and keratinization  nail plate begins to form and move distally  nail bed loses its granular layer at this stage.  36 wk: nail plate reaches the tip of the digit and is surrounded by prominent lateral nail folds and a well-formed cuticle.
  • 5. NAIL BASIC STRUCTURE  1/4 nail is covered by the proximal nail fold  Lunula (half-moon, lunule)  Under proximal part of nail  most distal region of the matrix  most prominent on thumb & great toe  may be partly or completely concealed by the proximal nail fold in other digits  nail plate distal to lunula usually appears pink, due to its translucency, which allows the redness of the vascular nail bed to be seen through it.
  • 6.  PROXIMAL NAIL FOLD  two epithelial surfaces, dorsal and ventral, at the junction of the two, the cuticle projects distally onto the nail surface.  LATERAL NAIL FOLDS  continuity with the skin on the sides of the digit laterally, and medially they are joined by the nail bed.  THE MATRIX  subdivided into dorsal (ventral aspect of the proximal nail fold), intermediate (germinal matrix or matrix) and ventral (nail bed) sections.  two distinct areas may be visible, THE PROXIMAL LUNULA AND THE LARGER PINK ZONE on seeing nail plate from above  On close examination, two further distal zones can often be identified , the distal yellowish-white margin and immediately proximal to this the onychodermal band
  • 7. MICROSCOPIC ANATOMY  NAIL FOLDS  The proximal nail folds are similar in structure to the adjacent skin  devoid of dermatoglyphic markings and pilosebaceous glands.  From the distal area of the proximal nail fold the cuticle adheres to the upper surface of the nail plate  serves to protect the structures at the base of the nail, particularly the germinal matrix, from environmental insults
  • 8.  NAIL MATRIX (INTERMEDIATE MATRIX)  Nail matrix produces the nail plate  The nail matrix contains melanocytes in the lowest three cell layers and these donate pigment to the keratinocytes.  there is presence of 6.5 melanocytes per millimetre of matrix basement membrane  Langerhans cells are detectable in the matrix by CD1a staining, and the matrix appears to contain basement membrane components
  • 9.  NAIL BED  Nail bed consists of epidermis with underlying connective tissue closely apposed to the periosteum of the distal phalanx.  There is no subcutaneous fat in the nail bed  The nail bed epidermis is usually two or three cells thick  The nail bed dermal collagen is mainly orientated vertically, being directly attached to the phalangeal periosteum and the epidermal basal lamina.  Within the connective tissue network lie blood vessels, lymphatics, a fine network of elastic fibres and scattered fat cells; at the distal margin, eccrine sweat glands have been seen
  • 10.  NAIL PLATE  The nail plate comprises three horizontal layers: a thin dorsal lamina, the thicker intermediate lamina and a ventral layer from the nail bed  The nail plate contains significant amounts of phospholipid, mainly in the dorsal and intermediate layers, which contributes to its flexibility.  The nail plate is rich in calcium, found as the phosphate in hydroxyapatite crystals  Calcium does not significantly contribute to the hardness of the nail
  • 11.  NAIL KERATIN  Nail keratin analysis shows essentially the same fractions as in hair  amino acid analysis shows higher cysteine, glutamic acid and serine, and less tyrosine in nail compared with hair  normal nail demonstrates that the suprabasal keratin pair K1/K10 is found on both aspects of the proximal nail fold and to a lesser degree in the matrix. However, it is absent from the nail bed.  The nail bed contains keratin synthesized in normal basal layer epithelium, K5/K14, which is also found in nail matrix.  keratin pair K6/K16 are present in the nail bed but not in the germinal matrix
  • 12. BLOOD SUPPLY OF NAIL  rich arterial blood supply to the nail bed and matrix derived from paired digital arteries, a large palmar and small dorsal digital artery on either side.  There are two main arterial arches (proximal and distal) supplying the nail bed and matrix, formed from anastomoses of the branches of the digital arteries.  Within the matrix, vessels are longitudinal with a helicoidal twisting..  There are many arteriovenous anastomoses beneath the nail— glomus bodies—which are concerned with heat regulation  Glomus bodies are important in maintaining acral circulation under cold conditions: arterioles constrict with cold but glomus bodies dilate.
  • 13. Arterial supply of the distal finger.
  • 14. NAIL GROWTH AND MORPHOLOGY  Cell kinetics  Measured by immunohistochemistry, autoradiography and direct measurement of matrix product (i.e. nail plate) by ultrasound ,micrometer or histology.  The rate of nail growth is about 3 mm/month for finger nails and about 1 mm/month for toe nails
  • 15. NAIL MORPHOLOGY  The nail grows flat, rather than as a heaped-up keratinous mass  factors probably responsible to produce a relatively flat nail plate are  orientation of the matrix rete pegs and papillae  the direction of cell differentiation and moulding of the direction of nail growth between the proximal nail fold and distal phalanx.  Containment laterally within the lateral nail folds assists this orientation  the adherent nature of the nail bed
  • 16. PHYSIOLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS AFFECTING THE RATE OF NAIL GROWTH. FASTER SLOWER DAYTIME NIGHT PREGNANCY FIRST DAY OF LIFE YOUTH,INCREASING AGE OLD AGE FINGERS TOES AND THUMBS MALE GENDER FEMALE SUMMER WINTER RIGHT HAND NAILS LEFT HAND NAILS TRAUMA,NAIL BITING
  • 17. PATHOLOGICAL FACTORS AFFECTING THE RATE OF NAIL GROWTH FASTER SLOWER PSORIASIS FINGER IMMOBILIZATION PITYRIASIS RUBRA PILARIS FEVER HYPERTHYRODISM HYPOTHYRODISM LEVODOPA YELLOW NAIL SYNDROME ARTERIOVENOUS SHUNTS BEAU’S LINES BULLOUS ICTHYSIFORM ERYTHRODERMA RELAPSING POLYCHONDRITIS IDIOPATHIC POOR NUTRITION
  • 18. NAILS IN CHILDHOOD  In early childhood, the nail plate is relatively thin and may show temporary koilonychia  nails are also prone to terminal onychoschizia (lamellar splitting),most prominent on the sucked thumb.  Beau’s lines can be seen in up to 92% of normal infants between 8 and 9 weeks of age  A herringbone pattern is common in children and gradually diminishes with time, reflecting a gradual matrix maturation
  • 19. NAILS IN OLD AGE  The whole subungual area in old age may show thickening of blood vessel walls with vascular elastic tissue fragmentation.  The nail plate becomes pallor, dull and opaque with advancing years  white nails similar to those seen in cirrhosis, uraemia and hypoalbuminaemia may be seen.
  • 20. NAIL SIGNS AND SYSTEMIC DISEASE  ABNORMALITIES OF SHAPE  CLUBBING --  In clubbing there is increased transverse and longitudinal nail curvature with hypertrophy of the soft-tissue components of the digit pulp.  Hyperplasia of the fibrovascular tissue at the base of the nail also occurs.  Pathological associations of clubbing include --- inflammatory bowel disease, carcinoma of the bronchus and cirrhosis.  In forms associated with bronchiectasis or neoplasm, prominent inflammatory joint signs may also be seen, resulting in hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy
  • 21. CLINICAL PICTURE OF CLUBBING Lovibond’s angle is found at the junction between the nail plate and the proximal nail fold, and is normally less than 160°. This is altered to over 180° in clubbing Curth’s angle at the distal interphalangeal joint is normally about 180°. This is diminished to less than 160° in clubbing
  • 22.  Schamroth’s window is seen when the dorsal aspects of two fingers from opposite hands are opposed, revealing a window of light, bordered laterally by the Lovibond angles. As this angle is obliterated in clubbing, the window closes.  In some cases of bronchiectasis, a variant of clubbing, shell nail syndrome is seen.  Distugunished from clubbing by the presence of atrophy of underlying bone and nail bed
  • 23. KOILONYCHIA  Greek: koilos, hollow; onyx, nail  In koilonchyia there is reverse curvature in the transverse and longitudinal axes giving a concave dorsal aspect to the nail  most prominent in the thumb or great toe.  common in infancy in toe nail  Its persistence may be associated with a deficiency of cysteine-rich keratin
  • 24.  a familial pattern which may be autosomal Dominant may be seen in some families  Most common systemic association is with iron deficiency and haemochromatosis
  • 25. PINCER NAIL  Also known as trumpet or involuted nail  Pincer nail describes a dystrophy where nail growth is pitched towards the midline, combined with increased transverse curvature.  There are 3 variants of pincer nail 1) In the inherited version there is often a gradient of involvement, radiating from the thumbs and big toes outwards, which progresses with time.
  • 26. 2) the most common is in association with psoriasis, where the thumbs and big toes are the most likely to be affected, although the pattern is not as organised and symmetrical as that seen in the inherited version 3) The third variant is the individual nail which develops a pincer deformity. .
  • 27. MACRONYCHIA AND MICRONYCHIA  Macronychia and micronychia are conditions where a nail is considered too large or too small in comparison with other nails  The nail disorder is usually associated with an abnormal digit, arising from underlying bony abnormalities such as local gigantism causing macronychia or megadactyly .  Also the basis of racket thumb, the most common form of benign, dominantly inherited macronychia
  • 29. ANONYCHIA  Anonychia is absence of all or part of one or several nails. It may be congenital, acquired or transient.  A mutation in the R-spondin 4 gene, which plays a part in Wnt signalling within the cell is responsible for congenital absence of nail  Acquired forms are due to scarring of the nail matrix. This can arise as a result of burns, surgery or trauma, or be due to inflammatory dermatoses such as lichen planus where the entire nail matrix is scarred and lost  The transient variant is due to nail shedding. This can occur due to an intense physiological or local inflammatory process,
  • 30. ABNORMALITIES OF NAIL ATTACHMENT  Nail shedding Nails may be lost through different mechanisms 1) Complete loss of the nail plate due to proximal nail separation extending distally is called onychomadesis and is a progression of profound Beau’s lines
  • 31. 2) Local dermatoses, such as the bullous disorders and paronychia, cause nail loss e.g. toxic epidermal necrolysis, lichen planus etc. 3) Trauma is a common cause of recurrent loss It is often associated with subungual haemorrhage
  • 32. 4) Temporary loss has also been described due to drugs such as retinoids,cloxacillin and cephaloridine 5) Onychoptosis defluvium or alopecia unguium describes atraumatic,familial, non-inflammatory nail loss 6) Nail shedding can be part of an inherited structural defect, most obviously in epidermolysis bullosa 7) Nail degloving this refers to partial or total avulsion of the nail and surrounding tissue (perionychium).Typically,it appears as thimble-shaped nail shedding or total loss of the nail organ with soft tissue
  • 33. DIFFERENT EXAMPLES OF SEPERATION OF NAIL ATTACHMENT ONYCHOLYSIS  Onycholysis is the distal or lateral separation of the nail from the nail bed  Psoriatic onycholysis can be considered the reference point for other forms of onycholysis where it is typically distal, with variable lateral involvement.  Areas of separation appear white or yellow due to air beneath the nail and sequestered debris, shed squames and glycoprotein exudate.  Isolated islands of onycholysis present as ‘oily spots’ or ‘salmon patches’ in the nail bed.
  • 34.  Idiopathic onycholysis  This is a painless separation of the nail from its bed, which occurs without apparent cause. Overzealous manicure, frequent wetting and cosmetic ‘solvents’ may be the cause.  The condition usually starts at the tip of one or more nails and extends to involve the distal third of the nail bed.
  • 36.  Secondary onycholysis  Onycholysis due to other causes is secondary onycholysis. It may be localised or systemic  Psoriasis, fungal infections, dermatitis and trauma are among the most common. Onycholysis occurs in general medical conditions, including impaired peripheral circulation, hypothyroidism ,hyperthyroidism , hyperhidrosis, yellow nail syndrome and shell nail syndrome  Photo-onycholysis may occur during treatment with psoralens, demethylchlortetracycline and doxycycline
  • 37. PTERYGIUM  The term ‘pterygium’ describes the winged appearance achieved when a central fibrotic band divides a nail proximally in two.  inflammatory destructive process precedes pterygium formation.  There is fusion between the nail fold and underlying nail bed and matrix.  The fibrotic band then obstructs normal nail growth.  It most typically develops in trauma or lichen planus and its variants, including idiopathic atrophy of the nail and graft- versus-host disease  It can also occur in leprosy and secondary purulent infection.
  • 38.  Ventral Pterygium  Ventral pterygium or pterygium inversum unguis occurs on the distal undersurface of the nail  Causes include trauma, systemic sclerosis,Raynaud’s phenomenon, lupus erythematosus, familial and infective .
  • 39. Subungual hyperkeratosis  entails hyperkeratosis of the nail bed and hyponychium  Nail plate thickening is common. Dry, white or yellow hyperkeratosis may crumble away from the overhanging nail Hyperkeratosis may extend onto the digit pulp.  Features of onychomycosis and wart virus infection (mainly toes) or psoriasis, pityriasis rubra pilaris and eczema (mainly fingers) are found  The nail bed is an epithelium of low proliferative turnover. Any disease process that affects it is likely to result in an excess of squamous debris. The overlying nail prevents simple loss. The initial outcome is compaction of debris into layers of subungual hyperkeratosis.  Focal subungual keratoses seen with Darier’s disease, and keratotic debris beneath the nail in Norwegian (crusted).
  • 40. CHANGES IN NAIL SURFACE Longitudinal grooves  Longitudinal grooves may run all or part of the length of the nail in the longitudinal axis  The median canaliform dystrophy of Heller is the most distinctive form in this  The nail is split, usually in the midline, with a fir- tree-like appearance of ridges angled backwards.  The thumbs are most commonly affected and the involvement may be symmetrical.
  • 41. TRANSVERSE GROOVES AND BEAU’S LINES  Transverse grooves may be full or partial thickness through the nail.  When they are endogenous they have an arcuate margin matching the lunula.  If exogenous, such as those due to manicure the margin may match the proximal nail fold and the grooves may be multiple as in washboard nails.
  • 42. BEAU’S LINES When the transverse groove’s are due to endogenous cause, the groove is better known as beau’s lines
  • 43. PITTING  Pitting presents as punctate erosions in the nail surface  The individual pits of psoriasis are said to be less regular  An isolated large pit may produce a localized full thickness defect in the nail plate termed elkonyxis, which is found in Reiter’s disease, psoriasis and following trauma
  • 44. TRACHYONYCHIA  Trachyonychia presents as a rough surface affecting all of the nail plate and up to 20 nails  The original French term was ‘sand-blasted nails’, which evokes the main clinical feature of a grey, roughened surface  mainly associated with alopecia areata, psoriasis and lichen planus
  • 45. ONYCHOSCHIZIA  Onychoschizia is also known as lamellar dystrophy and is characterized by transverse splitting into layers at or near the free edge  It is seldom associated with any systemic disorder, although it has been reported with polycythaemia, human immuno-deficiency virus (HIV) infection and glucagonoma
  • 46. CHANGES IN COLOUR  Alteration in nail colour may occur because of changes affecting the dorsal nail surface, the substance of the nail plate, the undersurface of the nail or the nail bed.  Exogenous pigment  Exogenous pigment on the upper surface is easy to demonstrate by scraping the nail. If the proximal margin of the pigment is an arc matching the proximal nail fold, this is a further clue confirming an exogenous source.
  • 47. NAIL PLATE CHANGES  The nail plate can be changed by the addition of pigment or the alteration of the normal cellular and intercellular organization such that there is loss of normal lucency.  Normal Pigment is typically added in the form of melanin produced by matrix melanocytes during nail formation. This produces a brown longitudinal streak the entire length of the nail.  The incorporation of heavy metals and some drugs into the nail via the matrix can also produce altered nail plate colour, such as the grey colour associated with silver.  The disruption of normal nail plate formation by disease, chemotherapy, poisons or trauma can result in waves of parakeratotic nail cells or small splits between cells within the nail.  In fungal infection discoloration may start distolaterally rather than via the matrix.
  • 48. NAIL BED CHANGES  Normally there is generalized vascular changes in the nail bed, but localized changes, as seen with nail bed tumours.  Subungual hyperkeratosis or the incorporation of drugs (antimalarials, phenothiazines) may also change the apparent colour of the nail.  Splinter haemorrhages, representing ruptured nail bed vessels, deposit haemoglobin on the undersurface of the nail, which grows out.  Cyanosis makes the nail bed blue and carbon monoxide poisoning makes it bright red.
  • 49. LEUKONYCHIA  White discoloration of the nail attributable to matrix dysfunction is known as leukonychia.  In an inherited form called total leukonychia, all nails are milky porcelain white.  In subtotal leukonychia,  the proximal two-thirds are white, becoming pink distally.  This is attributed to a delay in keratin maturation  Transverse leukonychia (Mees’ line) reflects a systemic disorder , such as chemotherapy or poisoning
  • 50. APPARENT LEUKONYCHIA  In apparent leukonychia,  changes in the nail bed are responsible for the white appearance.  Nail bed pallor may be a non-specific sign of anaemia, oedema or vascular impairment.
  • 51. TERRY’S NAIL  This is white proximally and normal distally  Seen in cirrhosis, congestive cardiac failure and adult-onset diabetes mellitus.  Nail bed biopsy reveals only mild changes of increased vascularity.  Terry’s nail is similar to half-and-half nails where,  there is a proximal white zone and distal (20–60%) brownish sharp demarcation,  the histology of half and half nail suggests an increase of vessel wall thickness and melanin deposition.  seen in 9–50% of patients with chronic renal failure and after chemotherapy
  • 52. MUEHRCKE’S PAIRED WHITE BANDS  These bands are parallel to the lunula in the nail bed, with pink between two white lines.  They are commonly associated with hypoalbuminaemia  the correction of hypoalbuminaemia by albumin infusion can reverse the sign.
  • 53. COLOUR CHANGES DUE TO DRUGS  Yellowing of the nail is a rare occurrence in prolonged tetracycline therapy, which can also produce a pattern of dark distal photo-onycholysis associated with photosensitivity BLUE MEPACRINE BLUE- BLACK CHLOROQUI NE DARK BLUE DRUG ERUPTION HYPERPIG MENTATIO N DOXORUBICI N IN CHILDREN
  • 54. YELLOW NAIL SYNDROME •The nails in yellow nail syndrome are yellow due to thickening, •a tinge of green suggets secondary infection. •The lunula is obscured •increased transverse and longitudinal curvature •loss of cuticle •chronic paronychia with onycholysis and transverse ridging may occur • The condition usually presents in adults
  • 55. YELLOW NAIL SYNDROME  An autosomal dominnant inheritance is suspected  lymphoedema at one or more sites may accomapany  respiratory or nasal sinus disease may present  Also occur in d-penicillamine therapy and nephrotic syndrome ,hypothyroidism & AIDS  Attempted treatments include oral and topical vitamin E, oral zinc
  • 56. LONGITUDINAL ERYTHRONYCHIA •It is a longitudinal red streak in the nail •Forms a strip where the nail bed is less compressed by the overlying nail so that blood pools • color is more easily seen because the nail is thinner in this line. •Splinter hemorrhages may lie longitudinally •Seen with lichen planus & darrier’s disease , acrokeratosis verruciformis
  • 57. ONYCHOPAPILLOMA  Describe the isolated, benign warty distal nail bed lesions  term coined by baran  Can be associated with longitudinal erythronychia  The papilloma is a secondary element, given that it is found distally in the nail bed while the cause lies proximally within the matrix. .