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Ichthyoses—A Clinical and Pathological Spectrum from Heterogeneous Cornification Disorders to Inflammation

Dieter Metze, Heiko Traupe, Kira Süßmuth

2021Dermatopathology23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Ichthyoses are inborn keratinization disorders affecting the skin only (non-syndromic) or are associated with diseases of internal organs (syndromic). In newborns, they can be life-threatening. The identification of the gene defects resulted in reclassification and a better understanding of the pathophysiology. Histopathologic patterns include orthohyperkeratosis with a reduced or well-developed stratum granulosum, hyperkeratosis with ortho- and parakeratosis with preserved or prominent stratum granulosum, and epidermolytic ichthyosis. Another pattern features "perinuclear vacuoles and binucleated keratinocytes", which is associated with keratin mutations. Some ichthyoses are histologically defined by psoriasis-like features, and distinct subtypes show follicular hyperkeratosis. In addition to histological and immunohistochemical methods, these patterns allow a better histopathologic diagnosis.

Topics & Concepts

Stratum granulosumHyperkeratosisPathologyIchthyosisPathologicalPalmoplantar keratodermaDermatologyKeratinBiologyLamellar ichthyosisParakeratosisEpidermolytic hyperkeratosisDyskeratosisEpidermis (zoology)MedicineStratum corneumAnatomySkin and Cellular Biology ResearchDermatological and Skeletal DisordersGenetic and rare skin diseases.
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