| Literature DB >> 19707480 |
Maria Rita Bongiorno1, Mario Aricò.
Abstract
We present a rare case of a 34-year-old patient with persistent, progressive, acquired leukonychia totalis and partialis. Idiopathic acquired leukonychia is a rare chromatic disorder of the nail not associated with other abnormalities and discernible etiology. Our case report did not link the inheritance of leukonychia with diverse clinical syndromes. To our knowledge, only five cases of idiopathic, acquired, true total leukonychia were found in literature. This case was the sixth patient with asymptomatic idiopathic, white fingernails, and toenails without a hereditary cause.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19707480 PMCID: PMC2729487 DOI: 10.1155/2009/495809
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Med
Classification of true leukonychia.
| (A) Hereditary |
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| (B) Acquired |
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Figure 1(a)-(b) Both hands had opaque nail plates characteristic of leukonychia totalis. (c)-(d) The patient toenails exhibited leukonychia totalis and partialis.
True acquired idiopathic leukonychia.
| Authors | Presentations | Active disease (years) |
|---|---|---|
| Claudel et al. [ | Leukonychia totalis and partialis | 2 |
| Grossman et al. [ | Leukonychia partialis to a combined partialis and totalis | 3 |
| Stewart et al. [ | Leukonychia totalis and partialis | Unrelated |
| Park et al. [ | Leuconychia partialis to leuconychia totalis | 13 |
| Butterworth [ | Leukonychia totalis and partialis | Unrelated |
| Our case | Leuconychia partialis to leuconychia totalis | 11 |