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Trichoepithelioma on the Finger: A Rare Location and Dermoscopic-Histopathologic Correlation.

Fatima Mayo MartínezRuggero MoroVictor TravesBeatriz LlombartCelia Requena
Published in: The American Journal of dermatopathology (2022)
Trichoepithelioma is a benign adnexal neoplasm of follicular germinative cells, with bulbs, papillae, and sheaths of perifollicular connective tissue as signs of follicular differentiation. Accordingly, trichoepithelioma may arise in any hair-bearing location, mostly on the face. That is why trichoepithelioma cannot appear in glabrous skin, and, although the dorsum of the hands and feet are a hair-bearing area, acral location is exceptional. We report the first case of trichoepithelioma localized in the finger of a 79-year-old man. It was a brown-pink, firm, 7-mm diameter, solid papule on the dorsal aspect of his left index finger. The lesion was completely asymptomatic, and he remembered to have it for many years. We describe this case highlighting its rare anatomical location and correlate its dermoscopic features with the histopathological appearance.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • spinal cord
  • oxidative stress
  • low grade
  • cell proliferation
  • cell death
  • wound healing
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • high grade