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1/6. Encephalotrigeminal angiomatosis. We report an unusual case of encephalotrigeminal angiomatosis in which the facial and oral angioma was bilateral, and several teeth were congenitally absent. The developmental nature of the anomaly is reviewed. Encephalotrigeminal angiomatosis is commonly referred to as the sturge-weber syndrome, after Sturge and Weber who first described this affliction in 1879. The main clinical features of this syndrome are 1. venous angiomatosis of the leptomeninges of the cerebral-cortex, usually unilaterally 2. ipsilateral facial angiomatosis that often follows in outline the distribution of the trigeminal nerve (Fig 1) 3. ipsilateral gyriform calcification of the cerebral cortex 4. epileptic convulsions (contralateral focus) or other seizures 5. ocular defects (choroidal angioma, glaucoma hemianopia) 6. mental retardation 7. contralateral hemiplegia 8. obesity 9. oral mucosal and gingival involvement. Other less typical features are 1. association with hypomelanosis of 1 to 10 2. leptomeningeal angioma contralateral to the facial nevus 3. leptomeningeal angioma without facial vascular naevus 4. association with gastro intestinal hemorrhage 5. paranasal sinus enlargement. This syndrome that affects males and females equally, is a rare congenital disorder, apparently hamartomatous in nature, from persistence of a primitive embryonal vascular plexus. During the sixth week of intra-uterine life this plexus develops around the cephalic portion of the neural tube and under the ectoderm in the region destined to become facial skin. In the sturge-weber syndrome, the vascular plexus fails to regress, as is normal during the ninth week, resulting in angiomatosis of the related tissues. Variation in the degree of persistence or regression of the vascular plexus accounts for unilaterality or bilaterality of involvement, and also for an incomplete syndrome in which the leptomeninges, but not the facial tissues are affected. Leptomeningeal angiomatosis is the primary abnormality of encephalotrigeminal angiomatosis, all other features of the syndrome probably being secondary to this. Calcification of the cortex is a poorly understood phenomenon which may result from stasis of blood in the angioma, associated with altered local metabolism. epilepsy and other neurological seizures, and mental retardation are probably, in their turn, secondary to the cortical calcification. The most striking clinical feature of the sturge-weber syndrome is the facial vascular naevus which generally follows the distribution of innervation of one or more divisions of the trigeminal nerve, whence the term encephalotrigeminal angiomatosis. However, the naevus may be more extensive, down the neck and even onto the chest. The oral tissues underlying the affected facial tissues are invariably also angiomatous and may be considerably enlarged as a result. Alterations in eruption of teeth have also been noted. Histologically, affected soft tissues are very vascular, resembling a pyogenic granuloma or a capillary, or cavernous hemangioma. Yukna, Cassingham and Carr noted that affected bone was partially replaced by a delicate fibrous tissue containing thin-walled vascular spaces. Neither inflammatory cells, nor fatty or haemopoietic marrow was noted.
- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1 keywords = disorder (Clic here for more details about this article) | alopecia areata is a common form of nonscarring hair disorder of unclear etiology. Cases with alopecia areata sparing congenital melanocytic nevi have been described. It is explained by the Renbok phenomenon or inverse Kobner phenomenon, which refers to normal hair growth in the psoriatic lesions observed in patients with psoriasis and alopecia areata. We report a 30-year-old man presenting with rapidly progressing alopecia areata universalis, which spared a large nevus flammeus on the left parietal scalp. Our case gives further evidence to the notion that nevus as genetic mosaic may show genetically determined resistance to alopecia areata.
- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1 keywords = disorder (Clic here for more details about this article) | proteus syndrome is a variable and complex disorder characterized by multifocal overgrowths affecting any tissue or structure of the body. We present a girl aged 3 years and 8 months with an epidermal nevus, port-wine stain, macrodactyly with gigantism of the feet, lymphohemagiomas and multiple lipomas.
- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1 keywords = disorder (Clic here for more details about this article) | 4/6. Facial disfigurement: a self-psychological perspective on the "hide-and-seek" fantasy of an avoidant personality. The author presents the self-psychological treatment of a patient who was born with a facial disfigurement. At the onset of treatment, the patient met the diagnostic criteria for avoidant personality disorder. The disfigurement predisposed the patient to perceive herself as defective and flawed. This sense of being flawed was exacerbated by early losses and selfobject failures. The formulation presented focuses on the patient's "hide-and-seek" fantasy, which expresses both archaic grandiosity and omnipotence. The patient's emotional hiding and seeking is an apt description of her avoidant behavior, in general, and the transference, more specifically.
- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1 keywords = disorder (Clic here for more details about this article) | 5/6. Lipofibromatous hamartoma of the median nerve associated with macrodactyly and port-wine stains. Lipofibromatous hamartoma of the nerve is a very uncommon congenital tumor. An association between this condition and vascular malformations is not well known. We present an 11-year-old girl with a lipofibromatous hamartoma of the right median nerve with macrodactyly. She had small red macules on her right neck, chest, and arm, which were diagnosed clinically as port-wine stains. The specimens of the enlarged nerves showed fibrous and fatty growth surrounding the nerve bundles and proliferation of the small veins. We suggest that this disorder can be accompanied by a vascular malformation.
- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1 keywords = disorder (Clic here for more details about this article) | 6/6. Phacomatosis pigmentovascularis type II. Phacomatosis pigmentovascularis (PPV) is described as the association of cutaneous vascular malformations and different pigmentary disorders. The different associations are classified into four types, with localized and systemic forms. The constant alteration in each type is a nevus flammeus. Associated pigmented abnormalities are nevus pigmentosus and verrucosus in type I, blue spots in type II, nevus spilus in type III, blue spots and nevus spilus in type IV. Type II is the most frequently reported. In this type, half of the patients have visceral involvement, more often Klippel-Trenaunay or/and sturge-weber syndrome. We report two cases of phacomatosis pigmentovascularis type II. The particularity of the first case is the association with a cranio-cervical junction malformation (Arnold-Chiari type I), which to our knowledge, has never been described with PPV. The second case presents with a bilateral scleral melanosis without visceral involvement. Definition of visceral involvement and ophthalmologic manifestations are discussed.
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