The American Journal of dermatopathology
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Two patients suffering from ichthyosis with unusual ultrastructural features were examined. One was a 14-year-old boy with ichthyotic skin since birth. The ichthyosis was initially erythrodermic and later presented as follicular hyperkeratosis. ⋯ Although apparently not consanguineous, both families came from the same relatively isolated rural area and autosomal recessive inheritance seems likely. Light microscopy did not yield diagnostic features, but the ultrastructural findings in the granular and horny cells showed diagnostic lamellar membrane packages. Identical ultrastructural features have previously been published in one prematurely born baby who died soon after birth and once in a prenatal diagnosis in the same family; the disease was termed "ichthyosis congenita type IV".
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Few cases of actinic granuloma of the conjunctiva have been reported. A 39-year-old woman developed a pinguecula. A biopsy study revealed actinic granuloma histopathologically. This case is an example of the interface between dermatology and other fields, and helps to confirm the existence of actinic granuloma of the skin as a distinct entity.
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Review Case Reports
Hairy polyp of the oropharynx. A case report with speculation on nosology.
The hairy polyp of the oronasopharynx is a rare congenital malformation that has been classified as a dermoid, teratoid, teratoma, or hamartoma in the past. A case of oropharyngeal hairy polyp is presented that occurred in a male neonate with severe intermittent respiratory obstruction. The precise nosology of this unusual malformation is discussed, with the speculation that it is classified as a choristoma.
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A 16-year old girl developed multiple, well-demarcated, extremely painful, hyperkeratotic nodules on her left sole. Histologic examination revealed a cornoid lamella and transepidermal elimination of blood vessels and collagen fibers which may be caused by the acceleration of keratinization. The pain and tenderness may have been partially related to epidermal disruption.