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Hypermelanocytic guttate and macular segmental hypomelanosis
Author(s) -
Westerhof W.,
Dingemans K.P.,
Hulsmans R.F.H.J.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
british journal of dermatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.304
H-Index - 179
eISSN - 1365-2133
pISSN - 0007-0963
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2133.2004.06126.x
Subject(s) - melanosome , buttocks , epidermis (zoology) , medicine , anatomy , pathology , basal (medicine) , dermatology , biology , melanin , genetics , insulin , endocrinology
Summary We report two sisters, 27 and 30 years of age, with a cutaneous pigmentary anomaly, which seems to be a new entity. At the age of 26 years the elder sister developed an asymptomatic and persistent rash consisting of discrete, grouped, round to oval, guttate and nummular, hypopigmented macules, 0·2–5 cm in diameter. The distribution of the lesions was unilateral. They were located on the right side of the thorax with a moderately sharp demarcation in the mid‐line and ran in a segmental distribution over the right arm, hand and fingers. Microscopic examination of lesional skin scrapings was negative for fungi. Examination with Wood's light accentuated the lesions from the surrounding normal skin. The younger sister had experienced identical, mostly guttate, skin lesions for many years, which at examination were distributed on all extremities and buttocks, and to a lesser degree on the trunk, but here in a segmental distribution. Histological examination (Masson–Fontana staining) of lesional skin of both sisters was identical. A slightly thinned epidermis and a marked decrease in pigmentation of the epidermal basal layer was seen. Electron microscopic examination of lesional skin showed an overall linear increase of morphologically and cytologically normal melanocytes just above the epidermal basal membrane. At many places the density of melanocytes was so high that the keratinocytes were displaced from the basal layer. The melanocytic dendrites extended into the suprabasal layer. The keratinocytes of lesional skin showed a decreased number of melanosomes. It is paradoxical that a hypomelanotic macule shows a histological picture of an increase in normal functioning melanocytes. In all probability a deficient melanosome transfer is responsible for this unexpected phenomenon.