The Journal of dermatology
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The patient is a 13-year-old female who had had a patchy lesion on her back since birth which increased in size proportional to her age. When she visited our hospital at the age of 13, the lesion was a 30 x 43 mm, slightly depressed, well defined, irregularly shaped, atrophic plaque. Differential clinical diagnoses at that time included macular atrophy, congenital melanocytic nevus, and mastocytosis. ⋯ The tumor cells had oval nuclei with relatively abundant cytoplasm and were similar to nevus cells. They were negative for markers such as S-100 protein, neuron specific enolase, epithelial membrane antigen, HMB-45, Leu 7, Desmin, and alpha smooth muscle actin. However, the histopathological findings suggest that the lesion is a melanocytic or neurogenic tumor, possibly a congenital melanocytic nevus or a cellular neurothekoma, though a definite diagnosis could not be made.