Nail Unit Glomus Tumor with Myxoid and Symplastic Change Presenting with Longitudinal Erythronychia

Glomus tumors are soft tissue neoplasms, which are most frequently encountered in the nail unit and generally straightforward to diagnose by histopathology. The typical clinical presentation is that of a circular violaceous or erythematous lesion within the nail bed. However, there are rare variants...

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Main Authors: Diego R. Da Silva, Kevin J. Gaddis, Stephen Hess, Adam I. Rubin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-06-01
Series:Dermatopathology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/488980
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spelling doaj-79e36c14634c4084b680282dc95454022021-01-02T11:32:56ZengMDPI AGDermatopathology2296-35292018-06-0152747810.1159/000488980488980Nail Unit Glomus Tumor with Myxoid and Symplastic Change Presenting with Longitudinal ErythronychiaDiego R. Da SilvaKevin J. GaddisStephen HessAdam I. RubinGlomus tumors are soft tissue neoplasms, which are most frequently encountered in the nail unit and generally straightforward to diagnose by histopathology. The typical clinical presentation is that of a circular violaceous or erythematous lesion within the nail bed. However, there are rare variants of glomus tumors which may pose diagnostic challenges because of the presence of unusual histologic features. Herein we report such a glomus tumor that demonstrates the rare combination of both myxoid and symplastic change. The clinical presentation of longitudinal erythronychia, as seen with this case, can occur with glomus tumors, but it is unusual, as longitudinal erythronychia on a single nail usually is caused by an onychopapilloma. The distinct nuclear atypia characteristic of symplastic change can raise alarm for a malignant process but the clinical course is benign. It is essential for dermatopathologists to be aware of this unusual variant of a glomus tumor in order to avoid overdiagnosis of atypia, which could result in unnecessary aggressive surgery. While unusual, there is good clinicopathologic correlation of the glomus tumor presenting with longitudinal erythronychia.https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/488980Glomus tumorLongitudinal erythronychiaMyxoid changeSymplastic change
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diego R. Da Silva
Kevin J. Gaddis
Stephen Hess
Adam I. Rubin
spellingShingle Diego R. Da Silva
Kevin J. Gaddis
Stephen Hess
Adam I. Rubin
Nail Unit Glomus Tumor with Myxoid and Symplastic Change Presenting with Longitudinal Erythronychia
Dermatopathology
Glomus tumor
Longitudinal erythronychia
Myxoid change
Symplastic change
author_facet Diego R. Da Silva
Kevin J. Gaddis
Stephen Hess
Adam I. Rubin
author_sort Diego R. Da Silva
title Nail Unit Glomus Tumor with Myxoid and Symplastic Change Presenting with Longitudinal Erythronychia
title_short Nail Unit Glomus Tumor with Myxoid and Symplastic Change Presenting with Longitudinal Erythronychia
title_full Nail Unit Glomus Tumor with Myxoid and Symplastic Change Presenting with Longitudinal Erythronychia
title_fullStr Nail Unit Glomus Tumor with Myxoid and Symplastic Change Presenting with Longitudinal Erythronychia
title_full_unstemmed Nail Unit Glomus Tumor with Myxoid and Symplastic Change Presenting with Longitudinal Erythronychia
title_sort nail unit glomus tumor with myxoid and symplastic change presenting with longitudinal erythronychia
publisher MDPI AG
series Dermatopathology
issn 2296-3529
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Glomus tumors are soft tissue neoplasms, which are most frequently encountered in the nail unit and generally straightforward to diagnose by histopathology. The typical clinical presentation is that of a circular violaceous or erythematous lesion within the nail bed. However, there are rare variants of glomus tumors which may pose diagnostic challenges because of the presence of unusual histologic features. Herein we report such a glomus tumor that demonstrates the rare combination of both myxoid and symplastic change. The clinical presentation of longitudinal erythronychia, as seen with this case, can occur with glomus tumors, but it is unusual, as longitudinal erythronychia on a single nail usually is caused by an onychopapilloma. The distinct nuclear atypia characteristic of symplastic change can raise alarm for a malignant process but the clinical course is benign. It is essential for dermatopathologists to be aware of this unusual variant of a glomus tumor in order to avoid overdiagnosis of atypia, which could result in unnecessary aggressive surgery. While unusual, there is good clinicopathologic correlation of the glomus tumor presenting with longitudinal erythronychia.
topic Glomus tumor
Longitudinal erythronychia
Myxoid change
Symplastic change
url https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/488980
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