We present an 84-year-old white male patient who, during a 2-year period, developed successively tumor infiltrations of an angiosarcoma in his face. The tumor started at the right lower eyelid, later appeared on the nose, the front, the cheeks and the earlobes. The first clinical impression was that of a rosacea. The tumors where successfully treated by soft X-rays, the total doses ranging from 4,800 to 5,600 cGy.
Among 308 photochemotherapy (PUVA)-treated patients, 15 psoriatics and 1 case of mycosis fungoides developed persistent disseminated hyperpigmented small spots at the trunk and limbs as a side effect of the therapy. The histological, histochemical and electron microscopical studies performed on 5 of the patients revealed a greatly increased number of melanocytes in the macules, hyperactivity of the melanocytes and increased transfer of pigment to dermis and keratinocytes. Moreover, binucleated cells were found as well as multifarious signs of melanocytic damage in varying degrees. Similar alterations but less pronounced were observed in the intermacular skin. Some of the changes could be recognized even 7 months after the treatment had been stopped. The PUVA spots are compared with other etiologically light-dependent hyperpigmentations.
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