Dermal and Subcutaneous Tumors
Mastocytosis 
Urticaria pigmentosa 
    * Local and systemic accumulations of mast cells
    * Persistent pigmented itchy skin lesions
    * Urticate on mechanical or chemical irritation
    * c-KIT mutation
    * Birth to middle age, ½ < 6 mo
    * Macules, papules, nodules, plaques, vesicles
    * Lesions persist and gradually become chamois- or slate-colored
    * Darier’s sign, pruritis
    * Severe symptoms may result from massive liberation of histamine from mast cells after ingestion of known mast cell degranulators
    * Spontaneous resolution is likely in those pts whose disease began in childhood
Solitary mastocytoma 
    * May be present at birth, may develop during the first weeks of life
    * Brown macule that urticates upon stroking
    * Smooth or peau d’ orange
    * Dorsum of the hand near the wrist
    * Edema, urtication, vesiculation may be observed
    * Generalized eruption, childhood type
    * Pseudoxanthomatous mastocytosis
    * Diffuse cutaneous mastocytosis
    * Generalized eruption, adult type
    * Erythrodermic mastocytosis
    * Telangiectasia macularis erupta perstans
    * Systemic mastocytosis
    * Familial urticaria pigmentosa
    * Giemsa, azure A, or polychrome toluidine blue
    * Local anesthetic adjacent to the lesion, without epi
    * Dx is bx confirmed
    * Histamine metabolites methylhistamine and methylimidazole acetic acid
Prognosis and treatment 
    * In all forms without systemic involvement the prognosis is good
    * Solitary lesions usually involute within 3 years
    * H1 and H2 blockers
    * PUVA
    * Intralesional and topical steroids
    * Avoid physical stimuli
Abnormalities of neural tissue
Solitary neurofibroma 
    * Soft, flaccid, pinkish white, 2-20 mm
    * Invaginates on pressure, “buttonholing”
    * Solitary or multiple
    * Distinctive histopathologic findings, fibrils, cellular proliferation, and degenerative changes
    * Sx excision
Granular cell tumor 
    * Well-circumscribed, solitary firm nodule, with a brownish red or flesh tint
    * Usually solitary, 10-15 % multiple
    * 1/3 of cases have occurred on the tongue
    * May occur anywhere on the body
    * Grows slowly
    * Cells stain positively with vimentin, neuron-specific enolase, S-100, and myelin protein
    * Malignant granular cell tumor is rare
Neuroma cutis 
    * Three true neuromas exist in the skin and mucous membranes: traumatic neuroma, multiple mucosal neuromas, and solitary palisaded encapsulated neuromas
    * Traumatic neuromas occur commonly on the fingers, tender and painful
    * Multiple mucosal neuromas occur as part of multiple mucosal neuroma syndrome
    * solitary palisaded encapsulated neuromas occur commonly on the face, resembles BCC
neurothekeoma 
    * Nerve sheath myxoma
    * Benign tumor of nerve sheath
    * Mitotic figures and nuclear atypia are sometimes observed
    * Intradermal or subcutaneous
    * Histologically are divided into two subtypes: myxoid and more common cellular variant
schwannoma 
    * neurilemmoma
    * Usually a solitary nerve sheath tumor
    * Most often seen in women
    * Occur almost exclusively along the main nerve trunks of the extremities
    * Soft or firm nodules, may be painful
    * May be multiple
    * May be assoc. with NF-1 or NF-2
    * Occur in many other organs
    * excision
Infantile neuroblastoma 
    * The most common malignant tumor of childhood
    * Cutaneous nodule are most often seen in the younger patients
    * Blue nodules the when rubbed form a halo of erythema
    * Periorbital ecchymoses and heterechromia
    * Good prognosis for patients with skin involvement, spontaneous remission
ganglioneuroma 
    * Rarely described in the skin as an isolated entity
    * Arise most often in von Recklinghausen’s neurofibromatosis
    * Occur in childhood
Nasal glioma 
    * Cephalic brainlike heterotopias
    * Rare, benign congenital tumors
    * Easily confused with hemangiomas
    * Firm, reddish blue lesion on the nasal bridge
    * No connection with the subarachnoid space
    * Radiography and neurosurgical consultation
    * Does not involute spontaneously
Cutaneous memingioma 
    * Psammoma
    * Results from the presence of meningocytes outside the calvarium
    * Small, hard, fibrous, calcified nodules occurring along the spine, in the scalp, and on the forehead
    * Usually seen within the first year
    * No distinctive appearance, dx by histo
Encephalocele and Meningocele 
    * Primary defect in the neural tube
    * Present in infancy along the midline
    * Compressible masses that may transilluminate or enlarge with crying
    * Midline masses require intensive radiologic and neurosurgical evaluation before biopsy
chordomas 
    * Slow-growing, locally invasive
    * Firm, smooth nodules in the sacralcoccygeal region or at the base of the skull
    * Arise from notochord remnants
    * May metastasize late in their course
    * Wide excision and postoperative radiation therapy
Abnormalities of Fat Tissue
lipomas 
    * Subcutaneous tumors composed of fat tissue
    * Most commonly found on the trunk
    * Also neck, forearms and axillae
    * Soft, single or multiple, lobulated and compressible
    * Growth to size and remain stationary
    * again be careful of sacrococcygeal lipomas
    * Lesion may be left untreated or excised
    * Solitary lesions reaching greater than 10 cm should be investigated for malignancy
    * Multiple lesion may be painful if growing rapidly
    * Madelung’s disease, benign symmetric lipomatosis
    * Dercum’s disease, assoc with weakness and psychiatric disturbances
    * Familial multiple lipomatosis, AD inheritance
    * Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome
    * MEN 1
    * Frohlich’s syndrome
    * Gardner’s syndrome
angiolipoma 
    * A painful subcutaneous nodule just slightly above the level of the skin
    * Has all other typical features of a lipoma
    * Seen in young adults who have multiple painful lumps in the skin
    * Multiple subcutaneous angiolipomas have no invasive or metastatic potential
Neural fibrolipoma 
    * Overgrowth of fibro-fatty tissue
    * Occurs along a nerve trunk and often leads to compression
    * Slowly enlarging subcutaneous mass with tenderness and decreased sensation or parasthesia
    * Median nerve is most commonly involved
    * MRI, no effective treatment
Spindle-cell lipoma 
    * Asymptomatic, slow growing subcutaeneous tumor
    * Predilection for the back and neck and shoulders of older men
    * Consists of lobulated masses of mature adipose tissue
Painful Piezogenic pedal papules 
    * Transitory, soft, sometimes painful papules on the sides of the heels
    * Elicited by weight-bearing and disappearing when this is stopped
    * Occur in at least 75 % of normal individuals
    * Suitable supportive shoes may alleviate discomfort
    * May occur on the wrist
Nevus lipomatosus superficialis 
    * Soft, yellowish papule or ceribriform plaques, usually of the buttock or thigh, less often the ear or scalp
    * A wrinkled surface characterizes this tumor
    * Onset prior to age of 20
    * Nevus lipomatosus superficialis
Folded skin with scarring 
    * Rare, aka Michelin Tire Baby Syndrome
    * There are numerous deep, conspicuous, symmetrical, ringed creases around the extremities
    * The underlying skin may manifest a smooth muscle hamartoma, a nevus lipomatosis, or elastic tissue abnormalities
    * AD, sporadic or an isolated finding assoc with congenital facial and limb abnormalities
Diffuse lipomatosis 
    * Characterized by an early age of onset, by the age of 2, diffuse infiltration of muscle by and encapsulated mass of mature lipocytes
    * Progressive enlargement and extension
    * Usually involves a large portion of the trunk or extremity
Hibernoma 
(lipoma of brown fat) 
    * A form of lipoma composed of finely vacuolated fat cells of embryonic type
    * Have a distinctive brownish color and a firm consistency
    * Benign and usually occur singly
    * Chiefly in the mediastinum and the interscapular region
    * Onset usually in adult life
Pleomorphic lipoma 
    * Occur for the most part on the backs and necks of elderly men
    * Occasional lipoblast-like cells and atypical mitotic figures may require differentiation from a liposarcoma
    * Behave in a perfectly benign manner`
Benign lipoblastomatosis 
    * Frequently confused with a liposarcoma
    * Affects exclusively infants and young children, 90% < age 3
    * Commonly involves the soft tissues of the upper or lower extremity
    * A circumscribed and a diffuse form can be distinguished
    * TOC- complete local excision
liposarcoma 
    * One of the less common mesenchymal neoplasms of the soft tissue
    * Usually arise from intermuscular fascia
    * Do not arise from preexisting lipomas
    * Usual course is an inconspicuous swelling of the soft tissue with gradual enlargement
    * When a fatty tumor becomes greater than 10 cm DX should be considered
    * Upper thigh is the most common site
    * Adult males are mostly affected
    * May be well or poorly differentiated
    * Tx is adequate radical excision
    * For metastatic liposarcomas, radiation therapy may be effective
Abnormalities of smooth muscle
leiomyoma 
    * Smooth muscle tumors
    * Characterized by painful nodules
    * Singly or multiple
    * Benign
    * Treatment is directed toward the removal of the pain source
    * Simple excision is best
    * Solitary cutaneous leiomyoma
    * Multiple cutaneous leiomyomas
    * Solitary genital leiomyoma
    * angioleiomyoma
Grouped leiomyomata of the back
Congenital smooth muscle hamartoma 
    * Typically a skin colored or slightly pigmented patch or plaque with hypertrichosis
    * Often present at birth
    * Usually seen on the trunk, lumbosacral area in 2/3
    * Michelin tire baby syndrome may result from a diffuse smooth muscle hamartoma
    * Clinically may mimic a mastocytoma, pseudo-Darier’s sign is seen in 80%
    * No treatment is necessary
leiomyosarcoma 
    * Of soft tissue origin are extremely rare
    * May occur as metastasis from internal source
    * Appears in the dermis as a solitary nodule, good prognosis
    * Subcutaneous lesions have a guarded prognosis, with fatal hematogenous metastases in 1/3
    * WLE or Mohs
Miscellaneous tumors and tumor-associated conditions
Cutaneous endometriosis 
    * Brownish papules in the umbilicus or lower abdominal scars after gynecologic surgery
    * Tender or painful lesions
    * Bluish black from cyclic bleeding
    * Usually misdiagnosed as malignant metastases
    * Surgical excision
    * Preoperative tx with danazol or leuprolide may reduce size
teratoma 
    * May develop in the skin but are most common in the ovaries or testes
    * No characteristic clinical features
    * Tissue representing all three germ layers are present
    * Occasionally malignancy may occur
Metastatic carcinoma 
    * 5 to 10% of patients with cancer develop skin metastases
    * Usually present as numerous firm, hard, or rubbery masses
    * Predilection for chest, abdomen or scalp
    * Sister Mary Joseph nodule, metastatic tumor localized to the umbilicus, most common primary sites include the stomach, large bowel, ovary and pancreas
    * A poor prognosis is usually the rule
    * The involvement of the skin is likely to be near the area of the primary tumor
    * Breast cancer is the type most commonly metastatic to the skin in women and melanoma followed by lung cancer in men
    * Metastatic lesions are uncommon in children
Paraneoplastic syndromes 
    * Some cancers produce findings in the skin that indicate to the clinician that an underlying internal malignancy may be present
    * Bazex’s syndrome, characterized by violaceous erythema and scaling of the fingers, toes, nose, and aural helices.
    * Secondary to a primary malignant neoplasm of the upper aerodigestive tract
Bazex’s syndrome
    * Necrolytic migratory erythema, seen with glucagon-secreting tumors of the pancreas
    * Erythema gyratum repens, erythema with characteristic wood-grain-pattern scales, is almost always associated with and underlying malignancy
    * Hypertrichosis lanuginosa aquisata, most common with lung and colon ca
EGR
Hypertrichosis lanuginosa
    * The sign of Lesser-Trelat, the sudden appearance of multiple pruritic seborrheic keratosis, associated with and internal malignancy
    * Trousseau’s sign, migratory thrombophlebitis, pancreatic ca
    * Pityriasis rotunda
    * Tripe palms
    * Several others with less frequency
carcinoid 
    * Characterized by distinctive involvement of the lungs, heart, gastrointestinal tract and the skin
    * Cutaneous flushing lasting 5-10 minutes
    * Involves the head and neck producing a scarlet color
    * Cyanosis may be present
    * Episodic flushing continues for months or years
    * The release of excessive amounts of serotonin and bradykinen into circulation produces attacks of flushing of the skin, weakness, abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting, sweating, palpitation, diarrhea and collapse
    * Tumor arises from the argentaffin Kulchitsky chromaffin cells of the appendix or terminal ileum (gi, lungs, ovaries, testes)
    * The diagnosis may be established by finding high levels of 5-hydroxyindolacetic acid (5-HIAA) in the urine
    * Tx- primary tumor should be removed, and excision of metastatic lesion should be considered
    * Chemotherapy
Dermal and Subcutaneous Tumors.ppt
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