Medicine
Volume 38, Issue 6 , Pages 294-299, June 2010

Skin conditions of the male genitalia

Chris B Bunker MA MD FRCP is Consultant Dermatologist at Chelsea and Westminster and the Royal Marsden Hospitals and Professor of Dermatology at Imperial College, London, UK. Conflicts of interest: none declared

Abstract 

Non-sexually acquired male genital dermatoses occur most commonly in the uncircumcised. They can cause psychological morbidity and sexual dysfunction, amounting to male dyspareunia. Some, such as lichen sclerosus, have a significant precancerous potential. Diagnosis depends on accurate history-taking, systematic examination of the anogenital area (and often the extragenital skin) and investigations to exclude diabetes, STIs and cancer: some patients require a biopsy. Specific management depends on the clinicopathological diagnosis. General and non-specific interventions include avoidance of contact with soap and urine and the use of soap substitutes and moisturizers. Many people with genital skin problems ‘overwash’ compounding the problem and creating irritant contact dermatitis. Failure of maximal conventional medical management usually necessitates the surgical intervention of circumcision.

Keywords: Bowenoid papulosis, dyspareunia, foreskin, lichen planus, lichen sclerosus, penis, psoriasis, pyoderma gangrenosum, Zoon's

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PII: S1357-3039(10)00073-3

doi:10.1016/j.mpmed.2010.03.006

Medicine
Volume 38, Issue 6 , Pages 294-299, June 2010