Cases reported "Skin Neoplasms"

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1/83. Cutaneous waldenstrom macroglobulinemia in transformation.

    waldenstrom macroglobulinemia is a low-grade B-cell lymphoproliferative disorder of the elderly with characteristic monoclonal IgM-producing neoplastic infiltrates of the bone marrow, lymph node, and spleen. Cutaneous manifestations are usually nonspecific such as purpura, ulcers, and urticarial lesions. These lesions are caused by hyperviscosity of the blood, immune complex-mediated vascular damage, paraprotein deposition, and amyloid deposition. Specific skin lesions occur rarely and generally consist of translucent, flesh-colored papules composed of monoclonal IgM deposits. Rarely, there may be violaceous lesions composed of low-grade lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates characteristic of waldenstrom macroglobulinemia. Both cutaneous manifestations of the disease, as well as disease transformation to high-grade, large cell lymphoma are rare. We report two very unusual cases of waldenstrom macroglobulinemia with documented skin disease that demonstrated transformation to high-grade lymphoma. Both patients were elderly men with long-standing waldenstrom macroglobulinemia involving the bone marrow, who subsequently developed skin involvement by the disease. waldenstrom macroglobulinemia can rarely manifest as cutaneous disease, sometimes as a high-grade transformation of low-grade waldenstrom macroglobulinemia elsewhere. Distinction of cases of transformed waldenstrom macroglobulinemia from de novo cutaneous large cell lymphoma may be important, because the two entities are likely biologically different.
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2/83. Granulomatous mycosis fungoides: report of a case with some histopathologic features of granulomatous slack skin.

    We describe a case of granulomatous mycosis fungoides, tumor stage, mimicking sarcoidosis in an 82-year-old man with a 2-year history of skin disease. The final diagnosis was established after one of seven biopsy specimens showed a nongranulomatous histologic picture of patch-stage mycosis fungoides. Monoclonality was proven for the lymphocytic population by T-cell-receptor rearrangement studies. The unusually extensive granulomatous inflammation with huge giant cells surrounded by CD1a-positive cells in the other six biopsy specimens was suggestive of the histopathology of granulomatous slack skin, another rare granulomatous cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. Because both a clinical and histologic overlap between granulomatous mycosis fungoides and granulomatous slack skin have been reported in the literature, we conclude that they may belong to the spectrum of a single disease.
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3/83. Resolution of bullous pemphigoid and improvement of vitiligo after successful treatment of squamous cell carcinoma of the skin.

    The significance of the association of malignant diseases with bullous pemphigoid is still unknown. We report a case of squamous cell carcinoma of the skin associated with both bullous pemphigoid and vitiligo. It is possible that there is a common underlying pathogenic mechanism involved in the co-existence of these three skin diseases as successful treatment of the carcinoma was accompanied by resolution of the bullous pemphigoid and improvement of the vitiligo.
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4/83. arsenic-related bowen's disease, palmar keratosis, and skin cancer.

    Chronic arsenical intoxication can still be found in environmental and industrial settings. Symptoms of chronic arsenic intoxication include general pigmentation or focal "raindrop" pigmentation of the skin and the appearance of hyperkeratosis of the palms of the hands and soles of the feet. In addition to arsenic-related skin diseases including keratosis, bowen's disease, basal-cell-carcinoma, and squamous-cell carcinoma, there is also an increased risk of some internal malignancies. arsenic-related diseases are common in areas of the world where the drinking water has a high arsenic content. In this paper, we describe a 35-year-old male patient who had arsenic-related keratosis, squamous-cell carcinoma in the palmar area of his left hand, and bowen's disease on his left thigh. The patient worked in a borax mine for 15 years, so he was exposed to arsenic in drinking water, airborne arsenic in his workplace, and had direct contact. The patient was treated for 11 months for arsenic-related keratosis until an axillary lymph node metastasis occurred; the lesion was excised and diagnosed to be malignant. bowen's disease was detected when the patient was being treated for cancer. No other malignancy was found. The patient is still receiving regular follow-up care.
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5/83. A case of pre-sezary syndrome preceded by hand lesions.

    Pre-sezary syndrome is an erythroderma with a chronic course, clinical findings of sezary syndrome, lymphocytic subepidermal band infiltration at times, and repeated cycles of circulating Sezary cells of less than 1,000 cells/mm3. Duration of the pre-existing skin diseases preceding pre-Sezary erythroderma varies from a few weeks to 20 years. Before the erythroderma develops, these patients are diagnosed with contact dermatitis, neurodermatitis, chronic dermatitis, atopic dermatitis, or asteatotic eczema. hand lesion also precedes the pre-Sezary erythroderma. This condition has been controlled by three cycles of chemotherapy consisting of vincristine, cytoxan, doxorubicin, and prednisolone. We describe a case of pre-sezary syndrome preceded by hand lesion and treated with chemotherapy.
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6/83. Malignant melanoma of the foot and ankle.

    Malignant melanoma is a serious and devastating skin disease that podiatrists may be called upon to treat. It is pertinent that delays in diagnosis and treatment of malignant melanoma be avoided. Some of the topics discussed in this article are causes, clinical features, classification, and treatment of malignant melanoma, focusing on the foot and ankle.
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7/83. Desmoplastic leiomyosarcoma of the skin.

    This report focuses on two unusual cases of cutaneous leiomyosarcoma composed of sparse numbers of neoplastic cells embedded in abundant sclerotic stroma throughout the entire neoplasm. To the best of our knowledge, only one example of this rare lesion has been described previously as "sclerotic primary cutaneous leiomyosarcoma." However, the resemblance of this tumor to other desmoplastic tumors of the skin is striking and, therefore, we propose the term desmoplastic leiomyosarcoma of the skin for this neoplasm. Because of the sparse cellularity and the abundant stroma, desmoplastic leiomyosarcoma of the skin can be easily misinterpreted, especially in small biopsies. It should be included in the differential diagnosis of inflammatory skin diseases associated with sclerosis, such as radiation dermatitis, and of desmoplastic tumors of the skin, including desmoplastic melanocytic nevus, desmoplastic melanoma, and desmoplastic squamous cell carcinoma.
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8/83. Two cases of segmental multiple glomangiomas in a family: type 1 or type 2 segmental manifestation?

    Several autosomal dominant skin diseases may manifest cutaneous mosaicism. Two types of segmental arrangement can be distinguished: type 1 is characterized by segmental lesions with similar severity to that observed in the diffuse phenotype, the remaining skin being normal; type 2 is characterized by segmental lesions showing a major degree of severity and milder lesions diffusely arranged. Multiple glomus tumours have recently been included in the group of genodermatoses showing type 2 segmental involvement. A family with 2 cases of multiple glomangiomas arranged in a segmental fashion is reported. A 12-year-old girl presented multiple nodular glomangiomas on her right buttock and thigh, in a band-like distribution. A sister of her paternal grandfather showed plaque-like multiple glomangiomas on her left thigh and various glomangiomas on her right buttock and arm. No other family members were known to be affected. Two new cases of familial segmental multiple glomangiomas are reported, with the particularity that one of these exhibited type 2 segmental manifestation and the other type 1 from a clinical point of view.
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keywords = skin disease
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9/83. Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer associated with disseminated superficial porokeratosis. microsatellite instability in skin tumours.

    A 73-year-old man presented with typical lesions of disseminated superficial porokeratosis (DSP) and multiple seborrhoeic keratoses on his face, trunk and extremities, and later developed a keratoacanthoma on his lip. He belonged to a cancer-prone pedigree susceptible to colonic, uterine and other internal cancers, and had a personal history of early gastric cancer and advanced adenocarcinoma of the descending colon without adenomatous polyps at age 59 years. polymerase chain reaction amplification of skin samples for seven separate microsatellite polymorphisms revealed microsatellite instability (MSI) at multiple loci in five of six seborrhoeic keratoses and the keratoacanthoma, strongly suggesting underlying defects in dna mismatch repair. Although no germline mutations in two mismatch repair genes hMSH2 and hMLH1 were found, our patient was recognized as having hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) based on the family history and the findings of the microsatellite analysis of skin tumours. This confirmed the usefulness of detection of MSI in prevalent and readily accessible skin lesions, including non-sebaceous non-dysplastic tumours such as seborrhoeic keratosis in the screening of HNPCC families. Although DSP may also be inherited as an autosomal dominant condition, this particular skin disease appeared to be sporadic in our patient and, to our knowledge, no association of DSP or other forms of porokeratosis with HNPCC has previously been reported. In contrast to the seborrhoeic keratoses and keratoacanthoma, no MSI was observed in two samples from DSP lesional epidermis examined.
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keywords = skin disease
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10/83. Distinctive distribution of human papillomavirus type 16 and type 20 DNA in the tonsillar and the skin carcinomas of a patient with epidermodysplasia verruciformis.

    BACKGROUND: epidermodysplasia verruciformis (EV) is a rare skin disease characterized by disseminated pityriasis versicolor-like or flat wart-like lesions and by the development of skin carcinomas. It is well established that specific cutaneous human papillomaviruses (EV-HPVs) are associated with both benign and malignant skin lesions in EV patients. However, little is known of the relationship between HPV and the mucosal lesions of EV patients. OBJECTIVES: To detect and identify HPV types associated with skin and mucosal lesions of an EV patient. PATIENT/methods: We investigated the skin carcinoma and the coexisting tonsillar carcinoma of a 41-year-old man with EV. Histopathologically, both lesions were squamous cell carcinomas. We analysed these two lesions by immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, and by molecular virology. RESULTS: Neither skin nor tonsillar lesions exhibited positivity for HPV capsid antigen by immunohistochemistry. By Southern blot hybridization, however, the skin carcinoma harboured 'EV-specific' HPV20 DNA, while the tonsillar carcinoma harboured 'genital' HPV16 DNA. In addition, in situ hybridization localized the respective viral DNA in the corresponding lesion. CONCLUSIONS: The results indicate that EV-HPV could be responsible for the development of the skin carcinoma, but not the mucosal carcinoma in this patient.
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keywords = skin disease
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