Galli-Galli disease is a rare acantholytic variant of Dowling-Degos disease, with few cases reported in the literature. We describe a case of Galli-Galli disease and review the literature.
O conceito de dermatoses neutrofílicas engloba diversas entidades que partilham aspetos clínicos e histológicos. Recentemente descrita, a dermatose neutrofílica do dorso das mãos é uma patologia com etiologia desconhecida que se assemelha, clinicamente, a uma variante localizada da Síndrome de Sweet com lesões predo- minantemente localizadas no dorso das mãos e com presença variável de sintomas gerais acompanhantes. Do ponto de vista histológico é caracterizada por um denso infiltrado inflamatório neutrofílico, sendo variável a existência de achados de vasculite. Os autores apresentam dois doentes com dermatose neutrofílica do dorso das mãos e discutem os aspetos clínicos, laboratoriais, histopatológicos e a as opções terapêuticas desta entidade. A dermatose neutrofílica do dorso das mãos é um conceito em evolução, que partilha diversos aspetos comuns com outras dermatoses neutrofílicas, sugerindo um espetro continuo deste grupo de doenças. PALAVRAS-CHAVE – Dermatose da mão; Síndrome de Sweet.
Malignant melanoma can present a variety of histopathological patterns. Cartilaginous change in the absence of osteogenic differentiation is extremely rare in malignant melanoma, being among the least frequent of the wide range of melanoma histologic patterns. We report a case of a 47-year-old woman with a subungual nodule on her right great toe for many years. Histopathological examination of the lesion led to a diagnosis of malignant melanoma with cartilaginous differentiation devoid of concomitant osseous areas. It would appear that this unusual form of melanoma has a predilection for acral location, particularly the subungual region. Malignant melanoma with chondroid stroma should therefore be considered in the differential diagnosis of cartilaginous lesions of the toes and fingers. Careful examination of the overlying epidermis and identification of an in situ component of melanoma may be necessary in order to establish the correct diagnosis.
Introduction: Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS) is a surgical method of treating skin tumors that consists of histological control of the tumor margins using horizontal slices in thin, freshly frozen layers. This technique is a preferred indication for cutaneous facial tumors (basal and squamous cell carcinoma, among others) associated with higher risk of recurrence, recurrent tumors, tumors with undefined clinical margins, when there is perivascular and perineural involvement or with aggressive histological subtypes. Methods: The authors carried out a retrospective study of a 6-year period (from July 2012 until June 2018) at a Portuguese hospital – Egas Moniz hospital, to define the characteristics of patients undergoing Mohs micrographic surgery and to evaluate the advantages of this technique. The following factors were analyzed: age, gender, provenience, diagnosis, tumor location, number of stages of MMS, type of reconstruction of the surgical defect, follow-up and recurrences. Results: A total of 835 tumors were excised, 459 in male patients and 376 in female patients. The mean age at surgery was 71 years old (range 23- 95 years). Most of the lesions submitted to MMS were basal cell carcinomas (87%) and the most common location was the nasal pyramid (43%). In 44% of the cases, it was necessary to perform more than one micrographic stage. Half of the surgical defect closures were performed by graft or skin flap. Considering patients with a follow up equal or superior to 3 years, the recurrence rate was 4.9%. Discussion: The most frequent diagnosis was basal cell carcinoma, reflecting the importance of MMS in this type of skin malignancy, in both primary and persistent/recurrent lesions. Compared to other European surgery reviews, our recurrence rate is within normal range. This fact is particularly relevant, if we consider that our institution receives patients sent from hospitals and dermatologists from all over the country, specially selected for tumor aggressiveness or previous relapse. More than half of these patients were referred from other centers and consisted of persistent/recurrent basal cell carcinomas. The follow-up at recurrence for MMS was 27.9 months, supporting that a long follow-up of these patients is necessary. Conclusion: MMS allows lower rates of recurrence compared to simple surgical excision, so its practice should be encouraged in selected tumors. The surgical control of the margins instead of the “blind margins” is an advantage in saving healthy tissue and allows the complete excision of the tumor in the same surgical time.
based SEER-based classification tree of ≤ 1Á0-mm melanoma after 10 years of follow-up, supporting their generalizability. 5 Ultimately, a prognostic model that provides an individualized absolute risk of melanoma outcomes is likely to be most informative to clinicians and patients for medical decisionmaking. Additional research is needed to understand how to best integrate costly and/or potentially hazardous tests to the prediction of thin melanoma outcomes. However, at a minimum, they should clearly be shown to provide a net benefit beyond clinicopathological factors.
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