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Acanthosis nigricans and the sign of leser-trelat associated with primary brain tumor: Case report
Author(s) -
Slobodan Stojanović,
Pavle Jeremić,
M Poljacki
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
archive of oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.104
H-Index - 13
eISSN - 1450-9520
pISSN - 0354-7310
DOI - 10.2298/aoo0804081s
Subject(s) - seborrheic keratosis , acanthosis nigricans , medicine , skin tumor , dermatology , pathology , keratosis , brain tumor , trunk , magnetic resonance imaging , cancer , radiology , carcinogenesis , biology , ecology , insulin resistance , obesity
The authors present a case of a female patient a 26-year old pensioner from Zmajevo, who developed skin changes in the neck region, armpits and groins, as well as in submammal folds during the 10 years period. The changes include dark-brown hyperpigmentation associated with sudden eruption of a large number of benign skin tumors and dark-brown seborrheic keratosis on trunk and extremities. In 1998, after magnetic resonance imaging, primary brain tumor of astrocytoma type with low grade of malignity was discovered in thalamus region. The patient developed the above-mentioned skin changes since then. According to neurosurgical findings, the brain tumor is inoperable, so skin changes are persistent and stationary. Clinical changes correspond to paraneoplastic form of acanthosis nigricans. Numerous skin tumors histopathologically match seborrheic keratosis and reveal the clinical features of the sign of Leser-Trelat. It is interesting that in the same patient there are both, obligatory and optional, paraneoplastic dermatoses associated with malignant brain tumor

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